Showing posts with label wedding magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wedding magazine. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Modern Dog

Modern DogA stylish and witty addition to the underpopulated dog magazine scene, Modern Dog is a finely crafted and informative quarterly.

Its foundation is geared for the purebred (that is to say unrepentant) dog lover, and from that springs articles on dog art and illustrators, living arrangements with dogs, high fashion and style, book reviews and recipes. In short, the assumption is that anyone interested in dogs is an interesting person with a need to be visually and intellectually stimulated.

What a arch magazine this is. How clever to pair an article on summer wines with appropriate recipes ... and illustrate the same with a dog in a straw sombrero ready to party.

And if there's a trend in human fashion to be explored, that trip is going to be taken with a dog in tow. The photography and styling in this magazine is inspired, doggy and fun. Plus, there is ART to behold. Articles on accomplished illustrators, outsider and funky art. The art blends in with dog stories and book reviews, which leads into articles on travelling with dogs.

A good read, a good sit to be taken with your favorite dog in your favorite chair. Or, if you're dog-deprived, a good way to lessen the pain.

Modern Dog is a magazine worth reading.

My new favourite magazine! Beautiful photos, smart and entertaining articles, fashion, art, exclusive celebrity interviews... all with a dog focus! Cover models range from Paris Hilton and Tinkerbell to Virginia Madsen and her dogs. Thanks to Modern Dog I now know how to throw a dog-friendly cocktail party (complete with hors d'oeuvres for both twoand four-legged guests) AND actually get my dog to come when she's called. Definitely worth checking out.

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Modern Dog magazine is especially perfect for those who own small dogs and/or live in urban areas. The magazine is well-written, full of timely articles, and includes ads from unique merchants. I have a Lab and two Boston Terriers so I feel that I am included in their target audience; however, this magazine does include something for everyone who has a dog and wants the best for it, even if it isn't a smaller dog. I like how edgy the magazine is and this is why I think it's more tailored for urban dwellers.

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If you are a dog parent (and not a parent of a child) this is a MUST! This magazine will allow you to keep up on all the fun & exciting outfits and products offered for your fabulous fur baby! If you are a modern dog parent you'll want to subscribe to Modern Dog. Like any good parent magazine you'll find information needed to care for your fido! The magazine will keep you up to date on modern trends and happening places. Of course, if you're not a true dog parent and have children, you will still love the magazine!!! Enjoy!

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I've not subscribed to a pet magazine since middle school when I couldn't get enough of Cat Fancy and the pictures of all the adorable, fluffy kitties. Now, content is more important than pictures, and Modern Dog delivers. I read every issue cover to cover and have yet to recycle one because they are so full of information. Everything from food to training to breed quirks to pet friendly businesses are covered. The product reviews are thorough and cover a wide variety (and price range) of products. The holiday 2010 issue had several pages of gift ideas, and I was surprised that so many items shown were actually affordable. Many times pet magazines showcase items that are out of almost every income bracket are listed, so this was a refreshing change.

Dog owners will get a lot out of this magazine health information, adoption stories, training tips, travel tips, nutrition, caring for senior dogs, products, shopping resources it's all there. A subscription would made a wonderful gift for any dog lover.

Monday, December 22, 2014

Imbibe

ImbibeA friend introduced me to this fun magazine. Without being ponderous, it has more useful and accessible information than I've seen in one food or wine journal in a long time. I've learned practical things like not to buy the econony sized vermouth, 'cause it won't keep well once opened, or the best sparkling ciders, what wine to bring as a dinner party gift, and why Guinness tastes better in Ireland. It has great virtual trips like to Thailand, Oaxaco, and Jamaica woven around the theme of the liquid pleasures produced in each country everything from tea to rum, or chocolate. I find it humanizes the products from all over the world that I take for granted while giving me imaginative ways to serve them. When CNN starts to drown me with bad news, this snappy mag is as refreshing as Thai iced tea or a tall Vermouth cassis.

If you buy Imbibe because you think it will be filled with receipes of all the latest shots and drinks, you will be disappointed. This is a serious magazine about beverages. If you are interested in how bourbon is made than you will like the magazine. I found a recent article about the bourbon trail to be very informative as I had recently went there on a vacation.

Imbibe seems to focus on alchol but there are also articles about coffee and tea (I skip these parts). Once again the magazine aims to inform you of how things are made or how to enjoy them. There are some drink recipes but this is a small part of the magazine.

Quality: The pages are thick and the ink does not bleed onto your hand. The magazine is well done and very classy you would not be embarassed to leave out on a table for guests to look thru. Content is informative and the articles are failry short (afterall you are dealing with beverages not rocket science).

All in all Imbibe is a magazine like no other thus it has no real competition. The magazine is well done and I look forward to receiving my copy every other month.

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With an unpretentious approach to coffee, alcohol, and tea; Imbibe accomplishes what most magazines (and books!) of its genere can not: They make the subject of drink approachable once more!

Fascinating articles, Interesting Q&A's, great product reviews, along with drink recommendations, and recipes, this is a magazine I'll be subscribing until these eyes can't read no more.

Read Best Reviews of Imbibe Here

Portlanders like to drink; coffee, tea, beer, wine, booze, water...whatever. Give Portlanders a glass and pretty soon they'll be snobs about what side of town the filling comes from. Great American Beer Festival Gold Medals frequently accumulate more heavily in each side of town than in other states...and there are five sides of town! World class coffee and tea companies spring up like mushrooms after a fall rain. The tap water can legally be bottled as spring water.

Imbibe magazine is a great magazine about great drinks from a place where they really care about such things. They provide excellent coverage of recent drinking trends and great old standards. Best yet, it's not a bunch of New Yorkers explaining why you should live in Manhattan. It's a bunch of Portlanders inviting you to the best drinks in the world. Enjoy a subscription, and remember to hydrate before going to sleep after a night on the town.

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Imbibe is simply a fantastic magazine for anyone interested in wine, beer,coffee or tea. This magazine is a rare gem.

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Friday, September 26, 2014

True Story

True StoryI don't have time to read a long book right now so the short stories are good in this magazine

I love True Story. I have loved this material for many years, and was very happy to be able to purchase it once again.

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Thursday, September 4, 2014

Stone Voices

Stone VoicesWhen you open this magazine, you are greeted by gorgeous full color prints and beautiful, honest, explorative writing. I can't believe no one has done anything like this before, but it seems like no one has. This isn't another new age magazine with superficial articles about being spiritual. Stone Voices is a very well done journal working hard to gather intelligent creative writing and art together. In the years to come, Stone Voices is likely further the discussion of how art is an expression of our spiritual journey.

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Freeman Ideas on Liberty

Freeman Ideas on LibertyThose who like politics and don't mind bias will like Freeman: Ideas on Liberty. This publication comes to you courtesy of the Foundation for Economic Education and it offers an intellectual take on some of the pressing issues of the day. These issues are usually economic in nature, like problems with regulations, the explosion of the national debt and its ramifications, and other like topics. But the articles can sometimes cross into the social and philosophical realms as well, with columns on subjects like homeschooling, morality of war, homelessness, and other social topics.

The Freeman is very different from your standard newsstand reading for countless reasons. First, it touches on subjects that are not often talked about in most magazines. Second, it often offers a perspective that is very different from mainstream magazines. In many ways, its articles are more like those found in a newspaper, since they tend to cover current events and economics/politics. However, unlike the typical American publication, the articles in The Freeman are more intelligent and require a higher level of understanding. Most of the articles in The Freeman would not be included in the average newspaper because they are a little too deep and require a little too much thinking and this is precisely why I like this magazine as much as I do. But most important and obvious among the differences between The Freeman and the average magazine or newspaper is the opinions presented. The Freeman and its many contributors do not hold back when it comes to opinions. They do not attempt to offer a balanced viewpoint or try to sound politically correct. The articles in this magazine are politically charged and they take a consistently libertarian position on all matters, both economic and social. Most every article is a persuasion piece, with the journalists stating in an intellectual and convincing way why their opinion is correct and everyone else is wrong.

One fact about The Freeman that I wish was different is its low number of pages. But there is one valid reason for this: Lack of advertisements. In a typical issue, there might be two small ads at the most, and these ads are usually for the Foundation for Economic Education or ads for books that share the magazine's economic philosophy. This is very nice for those who get tired of flipping through the pages of most magazines and seeing an advertisement on every other page. The Freeman is paid for by the members of the Foundation for Economic Education and through private subscriptions and while the price is higher per issue than most other magazines, the reader gets the enjoyment of having a magazine that is almost completely adfree and dedicated to economic and political talk.

The Freeman is, overall, a solidly intellectual magazine that I will continue to read each month. It offers stimulating reading material from a perspective not often found in magazine publications and it is not a magazine for those who like to read unbiased viewpoints. It would be nice if the issues were a little longer, but The Freeman is still a magazine I recommend to everyone who likes some thoughtprovoking reading material without all the advertisements.

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

I Love Cats

I Love CatsI bought a subscription thinking it would be a nice suppliment to my Cat Fancy subscription. The "I Love Cats" magazine was very thin (hardly magazine worthy) and just didn't have any useful information for me. Overall, I was VERY disappointed in this magazine.

If you want a magazine with cute little cat stories than this magazine is for you. If you want solid information about care of your cats get a subscription to Cat Fancy.

I love this magazine. Not only does it include cat photos and facts, it includes funny stories, comics, and unique kitty products! This makes a great gift for all cat lovers!

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Saturday, March 1, 2014

Farm World

Farm WorldGood articles on current farming. Varied articles on different but pertinent topics. Extensive ad section.

I bought a year's subscription to Farm World for my father who owns a u-pick farm and LOVES all things farming. For months afterwards, every time I saw him, he told me how much he loves Farm World. He is one of those people who doesn't babble. He only says something when it means something, so the fact he told me he loved it at all was a compliment. The fact he told me every time he saw me for months told me he REALLY LOVED it. He is getting his subscription renewed this year. At least I know it's something he loves.

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This publication is very nice and comes every week. But, it is a bit more technical than I had wanted. I was looking for more hobby type farming and this has more commercial information. It still has a lot of information and I do enjoy reading through the magazine.

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This is an excellent and useful product. In an age of questionable media, FarmWorld stands out as a newspaper that relates to all those with interests related to the farm and ranch. Thank you for this publication and Amazon's usual tremendous service!

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This publication is very much focused on larger conventional farming practices and is openly against organic farmers and activist groups. If you really want to know how your food is grown and who is lobbying against real organic practices, and what the legislative issues are, this is the publication to read.

Friday, December 13, 2013

Relix Magazine

Relix MagazineRelix magazine finds itself in a tricky spot. They could be strictly faithful to their roots, become something like a Grateful Dead nostalgia magazine, and there would be a percentage of readers who would be perfectly fine with that. I've been on email lists with people who could debate endlessly over Dead trivia, what was their best period, which were the great Dark Stars, what years did Jerry have a click track in his ears and what is the greater significance of that. On the other hand of the spectrum, they could expand their horizons, attempt to bring in as many people and styles as possible under the umbrella of "Music for the Mind." They veer a little too far in that direction these days. For example, see recent interviews with Bo Bice and Rick Moranis, or recent reviews of Rush, Rosanne Cash, and System of a Down. Nothing personal about any of those musicians, in fact I'm a big fan of Rick Moranis' work from Little Shop of Horrors and his SCTV days, but it's a matter of scope. The danger is gradually turning into something as light and mindless as what the formerly great Rolling Stone magazine has become.

Overall, I think Relix does a reasonable job though with this balance. It's hard to define what this scene is in the first place, the post-Dead, "don't call us a jam band" jam bands, jazz-funk-roots music scene. It is multifaceted and hard to keep on top of. Still, I've been turned on to lots of great music through the pages of Relix, such as Gabby La La, Karl Denson, STS9, Umphrey's McGee and the Living Daylights (see my listmania, already semi-outdated, of discs in heavy rotation of late).

I was getting free issues of Relix, I think through Grateful Dead Merchandise or some other catalog. I was enjoying it but on the fence about whether or not it would be worth it to pay and renew. I was getting a little turned off by articles trying to convince me that post-Dead Bob Weir and post-Phish Trey Anastasio are now doing the most important works of their careers. Enough.

But, then they got me. They are now including free CDs (well, free with purchase), I think something like every other issue at least, that are compilations of the bands on the scene and up and coming new bands. This may be a gimmick, but it works on me. The magazine is well worth the price if it includes the opportunity for me to expose myself to the music I'm reading about without doing any leg work. I have a family now and work about 70 hours a week, I'm not out at the Fox Theater in Boulder four times a week listening to bands anymore. I'm not traveling to festivals. If I was hipper or more techno savy, I'd be at exposed to new music from the internet. But I'm not hip anymore, if I ever was. I have little gray hairs that stick out my ears, and I listen to bootlegs and mixed tapes on a clunky sony walkman. The CD compilations included are a great way for me to stay in touch with the scene and its vast diaspora.

This is my favorite magazine. I don't have much time to go to concerts these days, but Relix keeps me tuned in with the Jamband music scene. They recently redesigned their magazine and I think that it appeals to a much larger audience now. They do everthing from camping equipment reviews to music reviews to in-depth articles on bands... anything that might relate to the live music scene. Still, they find time to devote to the Grateful Dead (The Dead, Other Ones, etc.), keeping the magazine true to its roots.

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This was orderd for a family member in a correctional facility in July. It is now November, the person is to be released in three weeks, and none of the magazines have been received. I will be asking for a refund.

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