Showing posts with label relevant magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label relevant magazine. Show all posts
Friday, June 20, 2014
Discover Britain
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
Sculpture Review
A test for me with a publication is if the articles are informative and "readable," and if I'm introduced to good work that inspires. I find the new format of Sculpture Review fulfills both these requirements.I commend Sculpture Review for the way it connects present day sculptors with past creators of the world's legacy of figurative sculpture. Each issue illustrates a theme seen from many angles. Living in Santa Fe, living in art, I enjoy the whole gamut of art magazines. The edgy, extreme, installations and multi-media-events world gets great coverage elsewhere. Sculpture Review stands out as highly informative about past and present-day sculptors who haven't abandoned the notion of beauty with meaning. SR looks at figurative sculpture in all eras and cultures. It covers enduring pinnacles of the past, their appreciation and preservation; and also looks at the many ways today's representational and figurative sculptors build and innovate on those estimable foundations. SR is the go-to magazine for us.
Read Best Reviews of Sculpture Review Here
Congratulations to the editing staff of Sculpture Review for all these new exciting articles, and for covering now a wide range in sculpture, from Antiquity to Contemporary.You are a great source of information for the art student, the artist, the scholar and the collector.Unlike stuffy art magazines intended for rarefied audiences, Sculpture Review is a real gem that speaks directly to a wider public of artists, collectors, and those interested in the role of art--specifically sculpture--in our culture and our lives. This magazine goes on the assumption that sculpture is as much a part of daily life as food and water and is something we can all discuss. Its quarterly, themed issues bring the work of developing artists, practicing professionals, and an occasional old master to readers' attention with engaging articles in a highly readable, lavishly illustrated format suitable for living room, library, and studio.
Friday, April 4, 2014
Paint Horse Journal
Tuesday, February 11, 2014
The Trail Rider (1-year)
Other great horse magazines in my mind are the Horse Journel, John Lyon's Perfect Horse, Horse Illustrated and Horse and Rider and through them, I stay up to date on training, products and horse care. Only Trail Rider gives me locations to ride at across the United States of America.Horse Illustrated (1-year auto-renewal)Horse & Rider (1-year auto-renewal)Horse Journal (1-year auto-renewal)beautifully done magazine, great articles, a little to much advertising for my taste but other than that I can't say enough good about it.
Buy The Trail Rider (1-year) Now
The first year he asked for it as one of his gifts. He enjoyed it enough to ask it to be renewed the next. He has Western Pleasure Quarter Horse breeding mares. Along w/ some he rides.just kinda a mediocre magazine, low quality paper, content is boring, graphics are boring, nothing in the issues that make me want to keep them beyond the first flip through. There are others that are better.This is not what I expected: it's home movies of various riders, those who can afford expensive getaways abroad & here in the States. And ads. And mostly about gaited horses. Blah blah blah...best mag out there for horse people is "Horse & Rider."Sunday, October 27, 2013
Catholic Answer
Sunday, October 13, 2013
Delicious Magazine
The amazing photography and use of bright colors within the magazine give it a great vibe and I look forward to reading it every month (it's almost like a fashion magazine for food :D). The recipes to be easier to make, but still as tasty, as other culinary magazines (I didn't renew my subscription to Food & Wine (1-year auto-renewal) since Delicious. has ruined me for all others ;)). I definitely make good use out of this magazine and am constantly trying and reusing recipes from here.
As the other reviewer as stated, you will need a conversion chart (or even a scale) to make these recipes since the measurements are Imperial but it's worth it!I love this magazine. The photos are gorgeous. The food and recipes look "delicious". It's well written and a joy to read. It's just so damned expensive here in the US, it's cost prohibitive to subscribe to.
Read Best Reviews of Delicious Magazine Here
I became familiar with this magazine while we were in South Africa. It really raised my cooking game. The recipes are so much more intricate (but not that much more difficult) and more varied than in the US food magazines.There's been a little bit of a dip, I think, since a new editor started; somehow her quest to "freshen it up" took some of the depth away from it, but I still think it's the best cooking/food magazine published. My second vote, surprisingly, is TASTE magazine, published by Woolworth's, which, in South Africa is a gourmet supermarket and classy department store. Both magazines really get your imagination going and inspire you to cook things that really are "over the top" without being ridiculously difficult. Given my work schedule, if I can't make it in 20 minutes (except for those very special occasions), I'm not interested.
Yes, the subscription is ridiculously expensive. It's something I consider an extravagance, but given how much of a positive effect it has had on our daily meals, and the fact that my husband doesn't even want to go to restaurants anymore "because your cooking is so much better," I figure we're coming out ahead economically. You can easily spend the same amount for a nice dinner these days and for the subscription cost of this magazine I get many, many more good meals out of it in a given year. I read it slowly, one page at a time, while eating. Always a pleasure.
If you just can't bring yourself to spend this much for the printed magazine, at least visit their website delicious.co.uk for some inspiration.
Tuesday, October 8, 2013
Bass Player
Tuesday, September 17, 2013
Architectural Digest (1-year auto-renewal)
1) The magazine is huge and cumbersome, largely due to the massive quantity of advertisements;
2) The magazine exclusively highlights gazillion dollar homes, that only are a factor for celebrities;
3) Stylistically, the magazine seems stuck in a rut of cluttered end tables and credenzas, overstuffed pillows, and no space on a wall unoccupied by a huge, gold, gilded framed picture from eighteenth century France.
I don't like clutter, and I don't like being ornate to make a house look rich. That's why I no longer think this is a magazine that I really need. For me I will read 'Architecture' for serious architectural commentary, and 'Dwell' for reasonable (and financially attainable) interior design commentary. Thanks, but no thanks.Architectural Digest is not an "architecture" magazine as many people believe it is. It began as an architecture magazine, but slowly became known for its coverage of building interiors that consumers wanted to see. This is true today, as the cover article is generally the about the interior of a famed actor, politician, designer, or artist's home. These articles are remniscent of a paper version of MTV's show "Cribs." While the articles about the interiors dominate, an accompanying photograph of the exterior tags along when appropriate. The articles discuss the ideas, sources, materials and inspiration behind the designs pictured. Each magazine generally has about one dozen such articles plus features.
The magazine caters to the needs of interior designers and those who can, or wish they could hire them. The magazine does not promote or favor either traditional or modern design.
AD (as it calls itself) is full of advertisements. Some people may find this irritating, but for a designer, decorator, or client searching for inspiration or sources this information is equally valuable as the articles and features. Ads are just as telling of where the industry is going and where it has been as any picture or text.
If you subscribe, do it because you know and want what AD is. It is expensive, thick, and very useful if you are interested with the cutting edge of interior design. Do not get it to learn more about architecture or for the quality or readability of its text. Pictures and advertisements are the game with AD.If you are still unsure, pick up one at the newsstand and check it out before you buy 12 issues most issues are like the others and "special" issues are frequent but not really that different from the norm.
Buy Architectural Digest (1-year auto-renewal) Now
I used to love Architectural Digest. I got to admire and be inspired by incredible homes, and I couldn't wait to get my issue every month.However, lately, I have seen less Architecture than Interior Design, and more ads than ever. I've even let my subscription lapse. Every now and again, I'll pick it up on the magazine rack, but only if the issue is architecture heavy, or covers a particularly interesting project in depth.
Architectural Digest used to be the pinnacle in the field, but now it is just a mixed bag.
Read Best Reviews of Architectural Digest (1-year auto-renewal) Here
In summary, this magazine portrays houses that you can't possibly ever hope to own in an "airbrushed" presentation that can't possibly match real life; it is "house pornography". It is exciting to read and puts plenty of ideas into your head.You have to determine whether repeated exposure to this type of media will enhance your life or make you miserable. Hey, if you have a spare million dollars and need someone to tell you what is fashionable or in good taste--this is for you!
People complain about the ads--I complain about the articles. People get in the way. I note that none of the owners of these showpiece homes have children--most are living alternative lifestyles. Actually, the house becomes the product of the relationship instead of children. It is a fascinating cultural phenomenon and this magazine is the leading journal of the movement.
Want Architectural Digest (1-year auto-renewal) Discount?
AD has lost its edge over the years as it has become more focused on life style rather than interior design (witness the extensive sections dedicated to world hotels and properties for sale, or look at the breezy, non-substantive "Letters to the Editor" to get an idea that AD is not taken seriously by designers).Still, AD usually presents one designer, or two, whose work is inspiring, and it's Special Editions ("before and after," or "designers' own homes") usually make up for some disappointing months.
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