updating cart, please wait...
Various Artists


20 previously unreleased tracks from Olympia, the Northwest, and beyond. Epics marches to hushed soundscapes, pseudo surf to circus music, punk to electroclash. Featuring the likes of: Little Angry, If It Ain’t Breakfast Don’t Fix It, Firs of Prey, Letters, Poppet, Twig Palace, Corespondents, Kickball, Broken Water, Legs the Crab, Angelo Spencer et Les Hauts Sommets, Gunmothers Head, Eleanor Murray, St...[ continued ] Firs of Prey- What You Say

This issue of 8-Track Mind comes after a ten year (!) hiatus and is by far one of the best zines I’ve read in a long time. No longer purely an 8-track fanzine, it is now a look at the future of paper media and analog technologies in the digital present. Editor Russ Forster asks 14 people who have been creating for long enough to be considered legends (from filmmakers to authors, magazine publishers to members of punk bands) the simple question “zines vs...[ continued ]

A book of interviews with exceptional folks who have taken their DIY and punk ethics into adulthood. People who have done, and are doing, the kind of things their younger selves would be proud of. Amazing folks like Anne Elizabeth Moore (Punk Planet, Unmarketable, Cambodian Grrrl) and Ian Mackaye (Minor Threat Fugazi, Dischord) are just two of the amazing interviewees within.

Full Line-Up: Amy Watson, Nate Powell, Jennifer Blowdryer, Matt Gauk, Richard the Roadie, Urban Hermit, Sander Hicks, Will Meek, Ian Lynam, Joshua Ploeg, Aaron Smith, Fly, Ben Weasel, Ramsey Weasel, Dylan Williams, Wells Tower, Al Burian, Dave Roche, Ben Holtzman, Cristy Road, Dave Rosenstraus, Brea Grant, AC Thompson, AK Press, Jenna and Karen Hixon, Jennifer Klausner, Todd Taylor, Siue Moffat, Philly Stands Up, Boxcar Books, Chris Clavin, Abby Banks, Icky Apparatus, Erin Yanke, Josh Hooten, Josh Kahn Russell, and Robnoxious...[ continued ]

Breakcore and 8-Bit/Chiptune artists team up to make a compilation that raves as much as it destroys. An all-star cast of Mochipet, TheH8rs, Foxdye, Selector Catalogue, Graz, and Shitmat bring you the banginest, bestest, core-iest 12” ever. A FKDP Records and Reactionary Records collaboration.

[ continued ]
Foxdye- Tacompton MDMA Booty Bang (Excited Mix)

A clean, accessible guide to making DIY events happen. Perfect for those just getting into organizing DIY events and with reminders and ideas that even the seasoned organizer can benefit from. A strong focus on house shows and radical communities, but a lot of ideas that can function in a lot of DIY event situations. Put together by Neil Campau (of World History) and edited by a ton of really great folks- Zoe Boekbinder, CJ Boyd, Danah Olivetree, and Jamie Menzel, just to name a few...[ continued ]

Packed full of interviews with contemporary female artists, this issue of Colouring Outside the Lines is the result of years of work. Featuring conversations with: Lauren Denitzio, Fly, Megan Kelso, Chandler O'Leary and Jessica Spring, Allyson Mitchell, Caroline Paquita, Summer Pierre, Lindsay Starbuck, and Anke Weckmann. Plus a full-color spread of art by featured artists! Each issue also comes with a limited edition letterpressed bookmark by Jessica Spring...[ continued ]

This wonderfully unique collection features essays from game show winners, losers, writers, producers, and fans. This interesting assortment of unlikely zinesters spans a huge range of ages and backgrounds. The result is a fascinating and hilarious read that also functions as an informal sociological analysis of the long-running, and completely odd, cultural phenomenon of game shows.

Edited by[ continued ]

From farms, to the Olympia Film Society, to Razorcake Magazine, to Cambodian friends in Bangladesh, to community garden cooperatives- the voices in this zine give representation to lots of different ways to feel like a part of a community. One of our bestsellers. Edited by Nicki Sabalu. 40 pages, half-letter size.

DIY or Don’t We’s third issue focuses on food and the way it makes a community. Finding ways to work with few ingredients to feed many people, farming as a person of color, reclaiming the kitchen while still fighting prescribed gender roles, soup kitchens, movements for food sovereignty, seed exchange, love letters, and more.

As so beautifully said in the introduction, “It makes sense that food and community would be naturally entwined, maybe even inextricably so...[ continued ]

This is a zine “about doing things together as friends, family, collectives, and communities.” In this issue there are stories about organizing a feminist collective, spending time with a Palestinian farmer and the story of the struggle to keep his land, starting a cooperative community space, gathering fruit and making jam, forming an arts collective, and finding community through burlesque...[ continued ]