Itās all grey skies and scattered showers on the Bruckner Expressway, passing through Queens and crossing the East River into the South Bronx. If you look out the passenger window you can see the steel and stone structures of Rikers Island Correctional Facility. If you didnāt know it, you might think it was just more ā¦
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Itās the last weekend of theĀ Vans US Open of Surfing, but weāre not ready to go just yet!Ā
Weāve still got some of our favorite workshops over the week to share ālike the fun folks over at SKATEISM who hosted a zine making workshop at Van Doren Village.Ā WeĀ caught up with Tobias from SKATEISM to find out what folks created, more about the zine making process, and what special gift they're giving out on this final weekend.Ā
Introduce yourselves and tell us a little bit about Skateism.
My name is Tobias Coughlin-Bogue, and Iām the online editor for SKATEISM. The magazine was founded by Christos āMochā Simos and Oisin āOshā Tammas in Athens. It began as just a little local Athens skate blog in 2012, but when Osh signed on they started doing more English-language posts and international coverage. Moch is one of the only out skaters in Greece, and at some point he and Osh realized that the stories they were most interested in telling centered around that⦠as well as some other areas of skateboarding they felt had been neglected like skate charity, global scenes, and womenās skateboarding. They also realized they wanted to make a magazine, as a place for underrepresented populations in skateboarding to see themselves in a proper print publication. Two years and four issues later, thatās exactly what theyāve done and weāre very proud to present Issue #4 as the Pride issue, focusing on the experiences of LGBTQ+ skaters.
Take us through your workshop and what were you doing with attendees at the Vans US Open?
Essentially we facilitated everything to make a zineĀ except shooting photos or binding the final copies. We had prints of images on hand for people to cut and glue onto cardstock, creating whatās called a āmasterā page. Masters are what zinemakers make photocopies of that they then bind together into their final zine. We started the workshop by talking a little bit about what zines are and why we think theyāre so cool. We covered the zinemaking process, and then dived right into it.
What about zinemaking do you think is super fun and accessible?
Zinemaking was a fundamental part of the pre-internet skate culture. While it isnāt exactly a necessity anymore, when it comes to communicating our own unique visions of skateboarding itās still super fun to do. It forces you to take all the things that catch your eye at an event like the US Open, that might be a quick Insta story or something, and put them all down on a page together in a thoughtful way.Ā Plus we like writing about skating, and zines incorporate a lot more text than some of the forms of storytelling we do on social media these days.Ā
As far as being accessible, well zines were kind of the social media in skateboarding (and punk and queer scenes too) before social media existed. They were cheap to make and there was a broad network of people sharing and exchanging them around the country, all interested in the same kind of subcultural topics. If you had an idea you wanted to share, you could just paste the images and words that capture it best to some backing paper and get to photocopying. Then mail it out to a distro or drop it off at the skate shop and ā boom ā youāre a publisher.Ā
Obviously a lot more work goes into what we do with something like SKATEISM, which takes hours and hours of reporting and editing and designing to make, but I at least got into the world of skate media via zines, and I have a huge soft spot for them. For what I do, and what a lot of people getting into media these days do, learning to publish fast and loose is actually really helpful, because thatās the pace digital media operates at.
What type of materials did you have on-hand for folks to work with?
We shot a few photos of the first weekend of the event on Kodak Fun Savers (a very accessible and enjoyable way to source art for your zine!), and made photocopies of the best exposures. Plus, we had copies of some pages from past issues of SKATEISM⦠And of course all the scissors, glue, card stock, staplers, and other stuff folks needed to put together their own master pages. We encouraged attendees to supplement the images weāve provided with writing and drawing that documents their own experience at the event!
Are there any rules to zinemaking?
Have a good time doing it and donāt be hateful. Thatās about it.
Any tips youāve learned over the years for readers who may want to try creating a zine on their own?
Just start doing it. To borrow a concept from Ira Glass, you know what you like to see on the page, so keep trying until the stuff you make starts to look like that. Donāt stress out too much if it doesnāt work out at first. Technically speaking, itās really important to think in terms of spreads (two individual pages facing each other is one spread), and understand that a magazine is essentially a bunch of sheets of paper stacked up, stapled, and folded in half. Making sure that the individual pages in the spreads line up correctly can be tricky, so it might help to take a bunch of blank sheets of paper, bind them, write page numbers on them, then remove the staples and use them as a template for what to paste on each master page as youāre working.
What other zine techniques can people incorporate besides cutting and pasting?
Doing it by hand is obviously the classic method, and will get you the most zine scene cred. But I am not ashamed to admit that, after two issues of cutting and pasting my first zine, I started scanning my photos and putting it all in InDesign. There is no shame in using layout software, and it will give you a whole new appreciation for how much thought and effort goes into every single print publication you ever read. Itās not just what theyāre writing and which photos theyāre publishing, but where on the page that stuff is, where it is in relation to the other stuff, what color and font things are, what angles theyāre tilted at, what the background is, and so on... Itās definitely a different look and feel than handmade, but now that design software is so accessible, we think itās every bit as DIY.
What did participants create and walk away with after the workshop?
Well, besides hands on experience making zine master pages, weāre going to take our favorite masters and make a limited run of a compilation zine to give out on the final weekend of the event.Ā
So weād like anyone who enjoyed the workshop to come back and grab a copy of that! And failing that, just a better understand of the zinemaking, DIY ethos that skateboarding was built on. Skateboarders have always made their own spots, their own rules, and their own fun. That definitely applies to their media too.
Who are some of your favorite zine makers?
In the areas weāre focused on, you canāt not mention Xem Skaters by the Swedish nonbinary skater Marie Dabbadie. Theyāve been making a rad, unapologetically genderqueer zine for years, and have done loads to change the conversation around gender in skateboarding. Of course, The Skate Witches are killing it too. In terms of general zines that I like, I grew up volunteering at the Zine Archive and Publishing Project in Seattle, which had copies of really rare ā90s skate zines like Pool Dust, so I tripped out on those a lot growing up. Not ācause Iāve ever actually skated a real pool, just because they had this really scrappy, no bullshit aesthetic and made skateboarding look so cool.Ā
Recently, I was on a team for Thrasherās āZine Thingā Challenge in Seattle, which gave people two weeks to shoot a zine with Fun Savers; two weeks to do writing, editing, and layout; and then gave awards in different categories. Looking through the compilation book of all the entries still blows my mind. Itās a great reminder that skateboarding is full of cool, creative people, and everyone has a wildly different experience of it. I still canāt pick a favorite, although Leo BaƱuelos' āSkaters in Dragā article is pretty legendary.
Three words that describe what Skateism is all about?
The underground and overlooked. Sorry that's four!
Who or what were you most excited to check out at the Vans US Open?
Personally, Iām excited to finally skate Cherry Park (nearby). But thatās just because my joints are falling apart and I can only skate low ledges.Ā At the Open, I was excited to see all the pros skate the course, especially the women. Womenās skateboarding has been growing at an insane pace in the last few years, and the level of talent is out of control. When I started skating, I never thought I would see little girls back-smithing huge hubbas and female pros filming back-tail-kickflip-outs for their video parts, but here we are. The rate of progression is so exciting to me, and I feel like people will definitely be throwing down for the event.
#Repost @skateism ć»ć»ć» Trick of the year š¤ OG natas spin @jaakkoojanen this was crazy! #skateism https://www.instagram.com/p/BzDwmmIlA7d/?igshid=pa2cvgw33nby
Ross Landenberger has been traveling across the U.S. for the past two years to document the lives of LGBTQ skateboarders.
This article and Landenbergerās project are refreshing and damning.
Skateboarding has long been a counter-culture sport full of ostracized, troubled, and poor kids.Ā But in its hyper-masculine hierarchy, LGBTQ's canāt possibly be part of that mix? Seriously?Ā
The sport is a huge draw for queer people preciselyĀ because of its notoriety, athleticism, creativity, and culture. And like society in general, itās becoming quite clear that theyāre a big part of the sport.
Some of Ross Landenbergerās photos can be seen on his website. If youāre interested in some skateboarding diversity, check out the great Skateism.
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