Design zine covers in your browser with Morphic's AI image generator. Generate a cut-and-paste collage cover, a ransom-note title, or a xerox-grit sticker-clutter front. Drop the finished art into the Canvas to add a title or issue number.

Zine cover elements you can design

Zine cover layouts you can compose

Collage cover layout

A cut-and-paste collage of photocopied scraps and torn cut-outs taped at odd angles, high-contrast texture and a ransom-note title band reserved across the top.

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Collage cover layout

Xerox portrait cover

A blown-out high-contrast photocopied portrait with breaking halftone dots, a gritty copy texture and a hand-lettered strip reserved at the base for a title.

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Xerox portrait cover

Sticker-clutter cover

A crowded field of hand-drawn punk stickers and invented slogans overlapping across the sheet, layered doodles and a small clear box reserved for an issue number.

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Sticker-clutter cover

Doodle-border cover

A wobbling ballpoint doodle border of stars, eyes and arrows ringing the sheet, an open central space reserved for a hand-drawn title and a fold crease down the middle.

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Doodle-border cover

Make Zine cover in three steps

  1. 01

    Describe your Zine cover

    Describe the Zine cover you want, in plain words.

  2. 02

    Generate the image

    Morphic generates a clean, ready-to-publish image on your canvas in seconds.

  3. 03

    Refine your Zine cover

    Tweak the prompt, regenerate variations, then download or share the frame.

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FAQs

What defines the zine cover look?
The zine cover is defined by three signature traits: cut-and-paste collage of photocopied scraps, ransom-note type from mismatched cut-out letters, and gritty high-contrast xerox texture. Keep the paste-up rough and the layers overlapping and the image reads as a classic DIY zine.
Where can I make zine covers with AI?
You can create zine covers with AI on Morphic, right in your browser. Open the Image tool, describe the cut-and-paste collage, the ransom-note title, and the xerox texture, and Morphic generates the cover. No installs and no design software are needed.
How do I get the cut-and-paste xerox texture?
Name the texture directly in your prompt: "photocopied scraps, torn edges, taped at odd angles, blown-out black and white, breaking halftone dots, visible fold creases." Calling out the paste-up and the copy grit is what gives the cover its hand-made zine character.
How do I keep a set of zine covers consistent?
Use Morphic's Style Transfer workflow to lock the collage texture and the ransom-note type style from your first cover, then reference that style card across the set. Each issue carries a different image while the whole run keeps one texture and one paste-up style.
Can I add a title or issue number to a zine cover on Morphic?
Yes. Generate the cover with a clear box or band reserved for text, then open the Canvas to place a title or issue number. Keeping the type as a layer lets you adjust the wording without regenerating the artwork. Keep every logo and slogan original.
Do I need design skill to make zine covers?
No. Morphic runs in your browser and takes plain-language prompts, so anyone who can describe a collage, a ransom-note title, and a xerox texture can produce a finished DIY zine cover. No scissors, glue, or photocopier are required.