New launches

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In preparation for the release of their all-new relaunch under new(ish) management, grafik has quietly released “the missing issue”, number 187, which was about to go to the printer when the parent company went into administration. Instead of in its lusciously large format, with thick paper you could stop a bullet with, this time it’s a PDF (that only seems to open in my browser – not sure if that’s a fault on my end, or security settings on the PDF).

It was a redesign of sorts, art directed by Michael Bojkowski, who is also designing the new grafik, so it gives us an idea of where next month’s relaunch might be heading. They’ve also replaced ad pages with elegant close-ups of their logo’s typography.

Bits of it remind me of Bojkowski’s excellent print-on-demand publications zine and lineread, combined with some of It’s Nice That‘s rhythm in the front third (albeit with more variety in its treatment of text and images). The feature well is about fashion, including top designer types highlighting their favourite illustrators, who are then showcased (though perhaps not as much as I’d like). Finally at the back, the review section now includes a magazine roundup, written by Mr Bojkowski himself.

Something of a must read. Just don’t get too upset about the events and exhibitions from last July that you missed out on.

Click here to read grafik 187

Zinesters share their NYC
If anyone knows how to make the most of a tiny budget…

Harper’s Bazaar in “we scratch advertisers’ backs” non-shocker
Surely this is the most open secret since the grassy knoll?

South African teen magazine uses creative commons licenses
But how easy do they make it for the content to be remixed?

New magazine launches for pole dancers
Simply tuck $10 into the waistband of your nearest newsagent

Playboy goes all Willy Wonka
I said Wonka

Magazero offers free magazines anywhere around the world
As in beer

Pop‘s editor in chief resigns
Since its relaunch, it’s been a great magazine, and a glorious physical object. Hope her departure doesn’t change things. Her first cover star, lest we forget, was teenage blogger Tavi Gevinson, who is now working on a magazine with Sassy founder Jane Pratt

Magazines help children buy cigarettes
Face recognition software hits a glitch

A last look at Interni‘s Russian edition
Recently closed by its publisher, there’s some great architecture and design spreads in that link to enjoy

1960s French magazine covers have a lot of cheek
Speaking of which…

BUTT towels are now on sale
The funniest thing I saw at this year’s NY Art Book Fair

A history of Apple tablets
It’s been a long time coming. Check out the Macintosh Folio, designed by Jonathan Ive

Opium100 needs your help
Make ‘em laugh, make ‘em laugh

Ann Summers releases Cosmo tie-in range
Because diamonds are no longer a girl’s best friend. Men have to make do with Loaded’s Stamina Shot

Variety releases “slanguage” glossary
What the infopike has been waiting for

Lovely-looking new design mag launches
In an edition of only 100, sadly. Fortunately, its content is also here, and features many Magtastic Blogfavourites, including Jörg Koch and Mark Kiessling

Interview with Mono.kultur‘s Kai
The new issue is unsurprisingly gorgeous

Some Magazine looks interesting
Features unusual use of the comma,

Punk zine archive
Anarchy in the PDF

Put A Egg On It #3 announced
Lifetime subscriptions are available

Bidoun runs beautiful, individualised covers
They printed 5,000 copies, and stapled to the cover of each a photograph from a Cairo fleamarket

Stack America now offers six-month subscriptions
In case you need your independent magazine fix in smaller installments. Get ready for more seasonal offers from December 1st

The W word

It’s not often that the mere name of a magazine evokes a reaction, but, well…

According to the editor’s letter from issue one, “The word is as old as the gods (or at least some of their earliest linguistic references) and its proto-Germanic root, *khoraz (fem. *khoron) means “one who desires.” We at Whore! magazine propose that the meaning of the word be returned to its venerable origins, at least for the purposes of these pages.”

Made in San Francisco, it slots in, so to speak, alongside Filament as a feminist-angled erotic publication.

Madame M’s blog likes the first issue. More information via their SFW website.

A few months ago, when a volcano erupted and I was stuck in Dublin, I said this:

This is an open call to designers, writers, photographers, illustrators, art directors and anyone else who is stranded by the ash cloud, and would like something to do.

If there’s one thing my ol’ ma taught me, it’s that when life gives you volcanoes, make magazines. And so we shall.

I’m nothing if not a man of my word, thus Stranded magazine is now on sale. The concept, commissioning and editing are all me; the design is all Matt McArthur, who was stranded in New York. We’ve yet to meet or even speak on the phone, but we worked together marvellously thanks to the wonders of modern gin communication.

As for the words and images.. they’re courtesy of more than fifty fantastically talented people I’ve never met, all of whom were similarly stuck and mercifully, I presume, as bored as I was in trying not to spend any money while stuck somewhere unexpected. They fulfilled commissions, they answered surveys, they ordered cocktails and they took photographs of their temporary beds. In a few cases, they caught their flights before they could complete their briefs – and I’ve included some of those too.

What we’ve made of it all is an 88-page souvenir of a moment in time when a non-life-threatening crisis hit the world, one for which nobody was to blame, and nobody knew how long it would last. People scrambled to find alternative routes home, any way, any how, or tried to make the best of wherever fate had placed them. It was a moment of unplanned disruption, never to be repeated in quite the same way.

The perfect subject for a magazine, in fact.

The print edition is on sale now, and ships worldwide. It costs $18.95+shipping – which is the base price charged by MagCloud (including a discount for being a charity mag and including their ad on the back page – much appreciated guys) plus $5 on top, all of which goes directly to the PayPal account of the International Rescue Committee, to help those more permanently stranded around the world. A digital edition is in the works, though it’s primarily been designed for paper and ink.

We’re inordinately proud of the whole thing, so why not pick up a copy or two? (Twenty or more gets a 25% discount, you know)

And please help us spread the word. We want to raise as much money as we can for the IRC – and hey, it’s a great magazine too. Everyone should own a copy, in case of eruptions.

Questions? Ask me here.

Q: What do you get if you cross the internet and magazines?
A: Ivan Pope.

Pope is a former zinester who created the world’s first internet magazine, The World Wide Web Newsletter (later 3W Magazine), in 1993. He later went on to help launch the first consumer magazine about the web, .net, and also invented the cybercafé as part of an installation at the ICA in London.

He’s now turned his entrepreneurial zeal to creating Magazero, an online magazine store dedicated to “gathering the best, freshest, strangest, most inaccessible, juciest, loveliest independent magazines from around the world and bringing them into your life.”

Magtastic talked to him about the future of magazine selling, setting up a competitor to Stack, and the glory of the magazine ecosystem.

What made you want to set up an online magazine shop?
I’ve wanted to open a magazine shop for about fifteen years now. In the nineties, I had an internet business with an office in New York (domain names; I sort of invented that industry). I used to spend a lot of time there and one thing I loved were the magazine shops with floor to ceiling racks of every magazine you could imagine. I always thought it would be a great thing to open something similar in the UK.

Read the rest of this entry »

Eulogy is a magazine about death and life
Its website includes a category inevitably titled “Late News”. Eulogy calls itself “the world’s first magazine to celebrate life and death” – though in fact it’s not the only magazine to focus on death and people. Now online only, Obit began life as a print project

A new magazine about Lads, Men and Menswear
Previews suggest that Client has emerged from a strong diet of Fantastic Man‘s typography and Butt‘s photography

Snow Magazine Cafe – now open in Tokyo
Also teases about a new magazine from the OK Fred team

Madrid exhibition celebrates the work of Rodrigo Sánchez
He’s the designer of the covers of Metropoli, the weekend arts supplement from El Mundo in Spain. More of his lovely work here (via Quintatina)

Colors back issues released on the iPad
Oh my. Firstly, this is almost certainly the start of a trend. Secondly, Colors is a great mag for this, especially if the images are hi-res enough to be zoomable. And thirdly, I would *love* to create an archival magazine-themed partworks on the iPad. Publishers/rights holders get in touch. Speaking of which…

Ten essential iPad apps for publication designers
Covers the right bases, with a couple I didn’t know in there

UK’s September issues digested
Because August means heavy lifting

New play takes place on the sub-editor’s desk
I would hate to be the person who had to proof the program credits. You just know what kind of people will be reading them

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