Category: Blog

Your blog category

  • Announcing KC Zine Con #10

    We’re going to a party, it’s a birthday party…
    It’s our birthday party, happy birthday Zine Con!

    You’re invited to join us
    October 11th and 12th, 2025
    at Goofball Sk8boards for
    KC Zine Con #10

    Day 1 - Oct. 11, Day 2 - Oct. 12 @ Goofball Sk8 - Apps open May 1 at 10am on kczinecon.com

    You’re invited to celebrate (over) ten years of ZINES in KC at KC Zine Con, the Midwest’s DIY Publishing Fest. At KC Zine Con, anyone can come and wander the tables, chat with the incredible artists, learn at workshops and panels, make a whole host of new friends, and get tons of zines! Masks will be required – thank you for helping us make KCZC accessible to all.

    Want to share your zines at KCZC? Have an idea for a rad workshop, skillshare, or presentation?

    Applications for tabling and programming proposals will open on May 1st at 10am right here at kczinecon.com – you can apply to table on either Saturday or Sunday.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    • What do I need to table at KC Zine Con?
      Zines to sell, trade, and/or share for free! KC Zine Con is an exhibition for zinesters, independent publishers, small press distributors, and creators of comix, chapbooks, newspapers, anthologies, tracts, pamphlets, and DIY radical readables of many forms. Although similar, it is NOT a comic book convention, craft fair, or fine arts market. With that in mind, we ask that you use your table to primarily promote zines. If you want to feature other DIY arts you’ve created (such as stickers, buttons, patches, prints, screenprints, figures, etc.) that’s alright, as long as you’re primarily selling zines. The majority of your table’s content must be zines – this means you need to be sharing more zine titles than all of your other DIY art combined. This is a zine fest, let’s keep it zine-y!
    • What questions will be on the application?
      On the table application, we will ask for your name, pronouns, email, where you’re from, a description of your zines, a picture to represent your zines on the virtual table page (we recommend it be cropped square, and it must be smaller than 500px x 500px), the categories your zines fall into (perzine, art, poetry, politics, etc.) and any website/social media links you’d like included on your virtual table. We will also ask if you would prefer to table on Saturday (10/11) or Sunday (10/12), and have you confirm that you have read and agree to abide by our policies.
    • What is a virtual table?
      Each year, we create a listing on our website of all of the tabling zinesters, along with links to where you can check out their zines. Each zinester gets space for their name, one picture, a short description, and any website/social media/shop links they have. This is what we call their virtual table.
    • I want to sit next to my friends; how can I request that?
      Once table applications are closed and acceptance emails are sent out, we will follow-up with a separate form where you can request who you’d like to sit by. Please wait until that form is sent to you to request who you’d like to sit next to, and use the form (and only the form!) to make your table neighbor requests… this helps us keep everything organized. Thank you!
    • When will I hear if I got in? When will acceptance letters be sent?
      We are hoping to send out acceptance letters in mid-June. You should know by July 1st at the latest if you have been accepted to table and what day you’re tabling on, or if you’re on the wait-list.
    • How much does it cost to table at KC Zine Con?
      KC Zine Con is a volunteer-run organization that relies on your support to fund programming and our annual convention! Since 2018, we have been able to make table fees sliding scale/pay-what-you-can, and we are happy to say that this will continue in 2025. The sliding scale for table payments is:
      Only a virtual table: $5 – $15
      Half table: $20 – $30We will not be taking any table payments until application acceptance letters are sent. You will be notified by email if you application has been accepted in mid-June.

  • Announcing KCZC #9

    We’re back – and bigger than ever! You’re invited — join us on Saturday, June 22 AND Sunday, June 23 for the Midwest’s 9th Annual DIY Publishing Fest. That’s right… KCZC is a two-day event now! We’ll be returning to Goofball Sk8boards in Waldo KCMO for two days full of zines, friends, and fun. At KC Zine Con, anyone can come and wander the tables, chat with the incredible artists, learn at workshops and panels, make a whole host of new friends, and get tons of zines! Masks will be required – thank you for helping us make KCZC accessible to all.

    KC Zine Con #9
    June 22 & 23, 2024
    11am – 5pm

    Want to share your zines at KCZC? Applications will open on March 26th right here at kczinecon.com – apply to table on either Saturday or Sunday.

  • News Archive

    Here is an archive of KCZC new stories, prior to 2024.

    3/14/2023- KCZC #8 Applications

    Applications for KCZC 8 open 1 week from today on Tuesday March 21st 2023!

    3/4/2023- KC Zine Con #8

    We’ve got some big news to announce: the epic return of KC Zine Con will be on June 3rd, 2023! 

    10/30/2022- Zine Trunk or Treat – Part 2: Return of the Zinesters

    Everyone’s favorite KC Area Zine Trunk-or-Treat is back!

    2/21/2022 – KC Zine Con #7

    We’re back… and we’re in June now! Save the date for KCZC #7 on 6/11/2022.

    6/16/2021 – Zine Scouts

    Hey zinesters, we’ve got some news to break! The bad news is we won’t be having a zine fest this year. The good news is we’re putting together a great calendar of in-person and virtual events to tide you over until KC Zine Con returns in 2022!

    5/5/2021 – Take our Survey

    Hey friends! It’s time to start planning KCZC #7, and a lot has changed since September. We’re looking for your feedback on last year’s first even Virtual Zine Con, as well as your thoughts on what Zine Con might look like this year.

    8/29/2020 – KCZC #6 Workshops Announced

    Kansas City Zine Con (KCZC) organizers are getting ready for this weekend’s sixth-annual zine fest, a celebration of DIY publishing. The annual festival will feature livestreamed panels, Zoom workshops, and a virtual table experience where the public can visit the shops and portfolios of participating zinesters.

    7/24/2020 – List of KCZC #6 tablers

    We’re excited to announce the zinesters who will be tabling virtually at KC Zine Con #6! This exciting collection of DIY artists, writers, thinkers, schemers, and dreamers will be slinging zines online on September 5th and 6th, during our virtual zine fest event.

    7/6/2020 – Applications open for KCZC #6: a virtual zinefest!

    Starting on Monday, July 6th, we will be opening virtual table applications, poster submissions, and proposals for zine-centric workshops, presentations, panels, skill-shares, and performances of any type. Anyone can apply, regardless of location!

    4/11/2020 – Announcing KCZC #6: a virtual zinefest!

    Due to safety precautions surrounding COVID-19, your KC Zine Con organizers have decided to shift our planning focus to hosting a virtual Zine Con 6 event in 2020! This is keeping to our commitment to being a Safer Space. You can also expect us to update this policy to be better-suited for our virtual Zine Con 6 when the time comes.

    8/20/2019 – The KCZC #5 programming schedule is live!

    Kansas City Zine Con (KCZC) Organizers revealed the official festival schedule for KCZC #5. A day of hands-on-workshops and activism is planned for the fifth-annual festival on Saturday, August 31st, 2019 at Pierson Auditorium on the UMKC campus. The event is free to attend. This year’s festival places a special emphasis on allyship and creating an affirming environment for transgender members of the zine community.

    7/26/2019 – A statement about our KCZC #5 location

    Thank you for your patience and understanding while we’ve been deliberating where to host KC Zine Con #5. As many of you may, or may not, know this year’s Zine Con location has been up in the air due to a hate speech event that was allowed to occur on the UMKC campus this past April. The event resulted in physical violence against trans people in many forms during and after. Many members of our community were directly affected by these events and were traumatized by the University’s inadequate response. Additionally, the University has stated that they are unable to ban hate speech on their campus due to “free speech” policies, which has left many within our community unsafe. Read More

    4/22/2019 – KCZC #5 will be on August 31st, 2019

    KCZC Organizers announced today that the fifth-annual KC Zine Con – the Midwest’s DIY Publishing Festival – will be held on Saturday, August 31st, 2019 at Pierson Auditorium on the UMKC campus

  • KC Zine Con #5 Location

    Thank you for your patience and understanding while we’ve been deliberating where to host KC Zine Con #5. As many of you may, or may not, know this year’s Zine Con location has been up in the air due to a hate speech event that was allowed to occur on the UMKC campus this past April. The event resulted in physical violence against trans people in many forms during and after. Many members of our community were directly affected by these events and were traumatized by the University’s inadequate response. Additionally, the University has stated that they are unable to ban hate speech on their campus due to “free speech” policies, which has left many within our community unsafe.

    Sadly, the KC community at large is still unaware of what occurred on campus.  Fortunately, our zine community does not fall into that category. We are so grateful for the folks who brought this event and the unsafe conditions to our attention. It’s been so cool the way our community has responded to our requests for feedback and conversation. Deciding where we’ll have this year’s conference hasn’t been easy, and we’re so grateful for those who helped inform our decision-making process.

    We have spent the past few months talking to community members, investigating the University’s actions, and searching for a new venue. As outlined in a document by a group of trans community members, students, and activists, the University’s handling of the hate speech event on April 11 was questionable. Though we have met with administrators in attempts to clear up concerns, some things remain unclear.  It remains unclear if the University appropriately executed its own preferred name policy when releasing press statements. It remains unclear if the University appropriately handled perceived threats to student safety on campus in light of the hate speech event. It also remains unclear if the University’s charges and suspension of a student were ethical and morally justified. So far, UMKC’s response has been to form committees that would have stricter screening of what events will be allowed on campus and better training for the faculty sponsors of student groups. Another approach they are taking is to provide “resiliency” tools and support for students. While we acknowledge that the University’s work is better than none at all, we feel it falls short and skirts accountability.  

    UMKC’s allowance of the Hate Speech event on April 11 is sadly not surprising considering the law and political climate. Based on the precedent of how hate speech / free speech cases are decided in court, and due to pressure from the state of Missouri, UMKC could not legally deny the speaker of April 11. In addition, they may have lost federal research and grant funds had they done so. However, we know there is a risk of leaving hate speech unchecked on college campuses. Just as with sexual harassment in the workplace, calls for tolerance and free speech are inadequate responses to hate speech. Targets of violent communication can become more vulnerable to harassment in general. Hate speech helps create a culture of hostility wherein violence is normalized and condoned.

    We cannot in good faith hold up values of equity, care, and inclusion while condoning a culture of hostility towards any marginalized group. We cannot equate dialogue, reasonable debate, and free speech with harassment and intimidation. Our judicial system and universities can’t stand up to harassment if college administrators must allow hate speech and harassment under the guise of free speech.

    Upon many hours of discussing and reflecting, we have concluded that while universities are symbols of access to knowledge, community, and resources, we feel that their inherent bureaucracy and state-funding directly conflict with the ethos of zines. Part of why zines are so empowering is that they have no one to “answer” to. Subverting mainstream channels around publishing and “doing it yourself” is how zines and zine culture came to be. Creating alternatives that help build a DIY community are how we create room for our individual and collective uncapitalized voices. If our judicial system is unwilling to criminalize hate speech and protect our most marginalized groups, then we must do better as a community to protect each other. At the end of the day, everyone is harmed when a certain minority group is harassed and treated as insignificant. We are all responsible for keeping our neighbors out of harm’s way. Additionally, according to data from last year’s tabler survey, we learned that the majority of our zinesters identify as queer. Thus, a radical, queer event like ours no longer seems to fit alongside, or within, a giant like UMKC.

    We regret that, due to the logistics of planning an event the scale of ours, we do not have the resources at this time to move KC Zine Con #5 to a different venue. The festival will continue this year, as planned, on August 31st at Pierson Auditorium. We acknowledge that some may not feel safe attending this year, and we are deeply sorry to anyone who cannot participate at UMKC.  Please come to our Open Mic the evening before, and all the other events we host around town throughout the year to connect with other zinesters! The zine community needs all of us. Zine Con exists because of you—everything we do, we do for the community.

    We have plans to explore other venues for the future, and we are putting together a fundraising plan in order to secure a new venue for KCZC #6. UMKC is our third venue in five years, but as Zine Con grows and changes, our venue requirements do too!

    A benefit of staying at Pierson this year is it means our venue costs are low and we have the opportunity to use this capital to contribute donations to local trans-affirming organizations. We also want to be able to pay those who have done so much emotional and community labor to inform us in our decision-making process. We know it’s difficult for people to relive traumatic events, and we are so grateful to those who brought their concerns to our attention.

    We are hoping that in this final year at UMKC we can act as a trans-affirming space on campus. Trans, non-binary, and queer people deserve to feel safe and welcome on campus. By remaining on campus this year, we are able to create a safer space for the trans and queer community, even if just for one day. Remaining on campus this year helps us make our stance more visible: we will not tolerate hate and harm under the guise of free speech. At the end of the day, everyone is harmed when a certain minority group is treated as less than. We are all responsible for keeping our neighbors out of harm’s way.  We are also working on scheduling training for ourselves and the volunteers to best implement our Safer Spaces Policy. We feel these measures strengthen our ability to provide a safer space on UMKC campus. However, we understand if people still will not be able to attend this year’s festival. We are hoping to use KCZC #5 as an opportunity to come together and voice our concerns, and to send a message to administrators that more work still needs to be done. We will have a petition the day of to gather signatures to express our stance as an organization, and we would also love any other ideas you have around using our event to elevate our LGBTQIA+ solidarity. We are looking for folks who might be interested in leading direct actions and trainings to help educate our zine community on advocacy and accountability. In the meantime, please consider getting involved by educating yourself about the events of April 11 and signing the petition set forth by trans community members.

    We also remain committed to our partnership with the UMKC LaBudde Library and GLAMA (Gay and Lesbian Archive of Mid-America). Stuart Hinds and his team have been passionate and kind advocates for KCZC ever since our first fest 5 years ago. LaBudde has a wonderful zine collection and truly understands the importance of zines. We appreciate all the work they have done for us, and are forever grateful that, for three of our five iterations, they have afforded us a free venue at Pierson Auditorium. While money is obviously not the driving force behind zines and our events that celebrate them, the fact that we have had access to a free venue has resulted in our ability to compensate the people who host workshops, our ability to host free workshops in various public spaces throughout the year, and it is why we were able to implement a sliding scale table fee this year. Other benefits of hosting KCZC at UMKC have been the ability to give tours of the Special Collections Archive on campus, the building is ADA-compliant, there’s lots of free parking, it is easy to access using public transportation, and the facilities are large enough to comfortably accommodate our 100+ tablers (as well as workshops). We will continue to work with LaBudde in the future and know that without their support, KCZC would not have grown to what it is now.

    An independent publishing fest, of course, embraces freedom of speech and expression, and we want everyone who enters KCZC to feel safe to be exactly who they are without fear of violence. That is why we take the stance that hate speech is not free speech. KCZC prides itself on being an inclusive and accessible event to all people, while maintaining a firm Safer Spaces policy that does not allow hate speech and intolerance in any form.

    We affirm that zines are representative of what free speech truly is.

    We believe in the power of zines to give a voice to the underrepresented, to change the world, to speak truth to power.

    We affirm that hate speech is not, and never will be, free speech and that hate speech has no place in the zine community.

    We commit to keeping KC Zine Con a safer space, free from violence and harassment.

    The fest is coming up quick and there is still so much work left to be done! We are unveiling our poster over the next few days, and need your help in spreading the word.

    We welcome your ideas on how we can make this year’s Zine Con visible in terms of being a trans positive and affirming event. Please contact us at kczinecon@gmail.com if you have ideas for speakers, panels, workshops, or actions that you would like to see happen or help create. We are also, as always, looking for volunteers to help the day-of—drop us a line if you’d like to help out. We rely on the community support and your funding to exist. If you have a lead for a future venue that would be willing to cut us a deal, please let us know. If you would like to sponsor or support us, please let us know.

    We appreciate your support to continue to make this happen in a way that affirms and supports our community members of all identities.