Emigre #46

Fanzines and the Culture of DIY (1998)


64 pages, 8.375 x 10.875.

Edition of 50,000.

Printed at American Web, Denver, CO.

Designer and editor: Rudy VanderLans.

Emigre Fonts: Zuzana Licko.


CONTENTS:

Rudy VanderLans, Introduction: Fanzines and the Culture of DIY.

The Readers Respond, (mail, including Michael Shea).

Daniel X. O’Neil, Calorie Count: Zine Publishers and Ideal Economic Strategies for the Next Capitalist Century (essay).

Teal Triggs, Typo-Anarchy: A New Look at the Fanzine Revolution (essay).

Rudy VanderLans, Your Mag Kicks Ass!, (interview with Heckler magazine’s John Baccigaluppi.).

The Emigre Catalog, (including Keedy Sans typeface family by Jeffery Keedy, and Democratica typeface family by Miles Newlyn).

Bill Gubbins, Real Love or, Fanzines ? Love Unlimited! The Media That Loves You Back! And the Antidote to Objectivity to Boot! (essay).

Denise Gonzales Crisp, Speculations: A Book Review Gone Awry, a Search for Meaning, Some Letters, RuPaul, and Other Transformations (response to current work by Thirst).

Rudy VanderLans, Rust Belt (interview with Kristina Meyer and Matthew Fey of Orangeflux).

Ella Cross, Picks (essay).

Lene Osberg, Stewart Greenway, Will Nice, Jutta Ottman, Mike



I have several issues of this magazine up for auction. If you buy more than one issue, the corresponding amount will be deducted from the shipping.


Emigre, Inc. is a digital type foundry based in Berkeley, California. Founded in 1984, coinciding with the birth of the Macintosh computer, the Emigre team, consisting of Rudy VanderLans and Zuzana Licko, with the addition of Tim Starback in 1993, were among the early adaptors to the new digital technology.

From 1984 until 2005 Emigre published the legendary Emigre magazine, a quarterly publication devoted to visual communication. Emigre created some of the very first digital layouts and typeface designs winning them both world-wide acclaim and much criticism. The exposure of these typefaces in Emigre magazine eventually lead to the creation of Emigre Fonts, one of the first independent type foundries utilizing personal computer technology for the design and distribution of fonts. They created the model for hundreds of small foundries who followed in their footsteps.

As a team, Emigre has been honored with numerous awards including the 1994 Chrysler Award for Innovation in Design, and the 1998 Charles Nypels Award for excellence in the field of typography. In 1993 they were selected as a leading design innovator in the First Annual I.D. Forty. Emigre is also a recipient of the 1997 American Institute of Graphic Arts Gold Medal Award, its highest honors. In October 2010 the Emigre team was inducted as Honorary members of the Society of Typographic Arts, Chicago, and in 2013 Licko received the prestigious Annual Typography Award from the Society of Typographic Aficionados. Most recently Emigre received the 29th New York Type Directors Club Medal. Watch the video tribute shown at the presentation of the TDC Medal in the Rose Auditorium at The Cooper Union in New York City in July 2016.

Complete sets of Emigre magazine are in the permanent collections of: