Stranded magazine

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A year ago today, Europe was dealing with a large invisible cloud looming over its airspace, and I was coming up with a crazy idea.

In the year since, Stranded magazine has been talked about on BBC online and radio, in The Independent, Conde Nast Traveler, El Pais, Wired, Nieman Lab… and so on. This showcase in crowdsourced creation, awesomely designed by Matt MacArthur, is, of course, still available.

Though the eruption and the photos/illustrations/writing all occurred a year ago, the magazine actually went on sale in September, which is how long it took Matt and I to pull all the content together. Here’s the stats from the magazine so far:

That $1,380 isn’t profit to me – it’s what the magazine has so far raised for the International Rescue Committee, who help people more permanently stranded around the globe (in fact, due to the way MagCloud distributes the money, I’ve been hit with a higher tax bill because of it!)

Anyway, it’s a great cause, so if you don’t already have a copy, why not?

It’s been a fascinating year for magazines.

Read the rest of this entry »

The Volcanobook’s cover illustration is made of Icelandic ash
“The idea started when the Eyjó-ashcloud hit Europe in April 2010 for several weeks. Everyone was complaining about it and we felt the urge to turn it into something positive.” Sounds familiar. The insides compile the work of designers, illustrators, and vulcanologists. It looks great. *cough* Stranded has more pages and is cheaper */cough*

apartamento magazine has begun its own book publishing line
First title: The Story of a Mug by byggstudio

Zeit magazine – - supplement to weekly German newspaper Die Zeit – celebrates 40 years with 40 Claudias
Explanation: she’s 40 too, and also she has a new fashion line out

GmbH x The Modern Institute is a wonderful little mag store in Glasgow
Though can we finish with this whole “Mag x Something” style of branding please?

I’m looking forward to the new issue of 8
It’s a consistently terrific photojournalism mag – and I’m even more excited by this line: “If you’re an avid reader of 8, you will notice with this issue our experiments with the printed page. Next year will see us not only taking our themes further but bringing them to you each time in a new, specific, and subject-led format.” Yes, please

Newspapers are (finally) learning from magazines
Bob Newman unearths some winners

Conde Nast has some advice for iPad advertisers
Basically, “make it good, make it work, make it easy for them to buy your stuff”

“iPad whitepaper insults marketers’ intelligence”
Nxtbook’s Marcus Grimm quite reasonably points out that “your advertisers aren’t paying you for ROI tomorrow.”

Print culture from the Spanish Civil War
This isn’t a new link, but it’s new to me, and it’s fantastic. Click on “Browse the magazines” – includes fashion magazines, news magazines… all the pages including the ads. Interface is a little restrictive, but the designs still shine. You’re welcome

Stranded is now digital! Available exclusively via the Zinio platform alongside side projects with similar budgets such as Rolling Stone, National Geographic, Esquire and The Economist, it’s a clean $5, all of which goes to the International Rescue Committee.

Zinio’s reader is available on iPhone, iPad, PC, Mac, Game & Watch, all LG front-load washing machines (not the 89T washer-dryer) and ZX Spectrum.

And you can buy the Zinio edition of Stranded here.

For the story behind Stranded, click here.

The Last Newspaper exhibition opens at The New Museum
The catalogue is being published and handed out for free as it goes along, in a weekly newspaper format created by Latitudes. Here’s a video of the first one – at the end, they’ll all be bound together and sold as a limited-edition book. I have a piece in the second paper, out next week

Doux is a visually striking online-only mag from Argentina
An increasing number of great-looking mags are publishing exclusively on Issuu. Will they please hurry up and do a tie-in with MagCloud please?

Tabloid magazines don’t tell the truth
But how much can we trust Gawker?

Vag magazine is a web comedy about making a feminist magazine
Gags in the trailer are more about feminism than magazines. Still, worth a watch it seems

Scott Dadich, George Lois, Nate Williams, and Dublin – together at last!
Interviews from the OFFSET festival for your audible pleasure. More on that festival on the Blogsplosion soon…

Stranded is getting some lovely reviews
Here (“a zillion pages (official count)”), here (“so good I changed my tagline”), here (“una obra de 88 páginas fruto de las frustraciones y el tiempo libre de los pasajeros atrapados”), here (“it’s charming”), here (“makes me wish I’d been stranded”), here (“some truly incredible photography”), and oo, all over the place really. What do you mean you haven’t got a copy yet? All for a good cause, you know. (Digital edition to come, as soon as the lawyers have all done with their business)

Innovation presents the Newsslate prototype
The future appears to be an ever-doubling interactive publication that forces you to buy a bigger table in order to read the news

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.

As my faithful Twitter followers already know, Stranded magazine, the only publication made entirely by people unable to take flights home due to the volcanic ash cloud of April, is a couple of short weeks away from being on sale. It’ll be available both digitally and in print, with all proceeds to the International Rescue Committee.

Sneak previews available here… and it’s looking lovely. Keep watching the skies, people.

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