Zine Showcase #9
Salome Oberli
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I Had Too Much To Dream Last Night // $3.50 + shipping
An  illustrated collection of fourteen strange dreams in a 16 page, hand  stitched, black and white zine.  The illustrations and typography are  pleasantly sketchy and reminiscent of a dream-like state; this combined  with having the same title as one of my favourite songs (I Had Too Much To Dream (Last Night) by The Electric Prunes) results in me adoring this zine.
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Hours: Volume 1 / Issue 1 // £1 + shipping
Hours  is a wonderfully unique collaborative zine project encouraging  participants to experiment with analogue photography; a photographer is  randomly chosen to fill a roll of film within a twenty-four hour period,  the resulting photographs are then turned into an Hours publication.   Not only is this project fascinating, it is experimental with the  concept of zine making.  This glossy, full colour, 28 page zine is  astonishly cheap; not only should you purchase a copy but perhaps you  should consider participating as well?
Jupey
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Ollo Ichi Oh My Farm // $5
Loud,  obscure, strangely intriguing, oddly amusing and marvellously  presented.  36 neon pages filled with an illustrated story about a  farmer.  The incredibly distinct illustration work makes Ollo Ichi stand  apart from most zines and the esoteric story is so beautifully bizarre  you will want to pore over the pages again and again.
Featuring
(writers)
Cristina Cacioppo, Matt Carman, Alan 'Albo' Gamboa, Elliott Kalan, Joseph Kirkland,
Sarah Marshall, Laura Martin, Dan McCoy, Ben Shapiro, Alex Smith, Scott White and Kseniya Yarosh
(artists)
Leah Hayes, Jeremy Jusay, Anja Verdugo
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I Love Bad Movies: Volume One // $5 + shipping
I Love Bad Movies  is a collaborative project: Volume One is a 40 page, black and white  zine with twenty-one essays discussing bad movie favourites from "flop  classics" to hilarious quotes.  The zine best describes itself the  appeal of bad movies; mediocrity is the biggest sin of all.  Whilst big  budget films may have the money, it is often difficult to hit the mark  of success; more often than not films fall into the abysmal category of  "okay but nothing special".  A bad film, however, has the courage to  disregard the rules of film-making by abandoning itself to the whims of  its maker.  Terrible acting, excessive clichés, poorly written dialogue  and hilarious tag lines results in a film becoming so utterly terrible  it goes from bad to good.  I Love Bad Movies  is responsible for reigniting my passion for obscurely awful films and  possibly destroying any credibility I have when it comes to serious film  viewing.
Andy Scott
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Trouble
Short, sweet and what a fantastic title!  This tiny zine is a mere 8 pages of illustrated people.
 
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