Informações:
Sinopse
Conversations with independent publishers, telling the stories behind the stories in some of our favourite magazines.
Episódios
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Travel and "holiness" in Cartography magazine
20/04/2018 Duração: 26min"We like to go beyond the landscapes we visit." Cartography is a beautiful, photo-led travel magazine that documents not only the people and places it encounters, but also their unseen histories and "holiness". In this conversation, editor and creative director Paula Corini explains the ideas and motivation behind their uniquely spiritual approach to travel journalism.
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Episode 66: Flaneur magazine
06/04/2018 Duração: 20min"The process comes first and the results later." Flaneur magazine is the experimental, reflexive magazine that builds each issue around a single street. The strapline has always been 'Fragments of a street', but for the latest issue, based around Treze de Maio in São Paulo, they've intensified the fragmentation and broken their stories up into numbered chunks that flow through the pages. It's their most ambitious issue to date, and in this episode editors Grashina Gabelmann and Fabian Saul explain how they and the rest of the team made it happen.
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Episode 65: Slightly Foxed magazine
23/03/2018 Duração: 22min"You come for a week and you never leave..." Slightly Foxed is the literary magazine that launched 15 years ago when three friends decided to take a stand against chain bookshops and celebrity publishing. As the magazine grew the team expanded, and in this episode they tell the story of how they became an extended family of book lovers, and why everything comes back to keeping their readers happy.
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Episode 64: Tbilisi – Archive of Transition
16/03/2018 Duração: 17min"Making a magazine is the best way to get to know a country." Froh! is a magazine and media NGO based in Cologne, and they've built a reputation for telling fascinating, unexpected stories from places like Armenia, Moldova and Lithuania. Their latest project is a book called Tbilisi – Archive of Transition, launching now on Kickstarter and based on three years spent working with locals and archives in Georgia's capital. In this episode, three of the team explain why they're drawn to these places, and why the rest of Europe could learn from them.
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Episode 63: Andrew Diprose, Wired
09/03/2018 Duração: 28min"I just can't think of anyone else who could do this job better than I could!" Andrew Diprose is group creative director of Wired in the UK, and in this conversation he reflects upon a career that has seen him working on iconic titles including i-D, Smash Hits and GQ, and for the last nine years Wired. He's a genuine magazine fan, and while the print publishing world has changed around him, he remains committed to the high standards that help his award-winning work to stand out from the crowd.
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Episode 62: Megan Conery, hotdog magazine
02/03/2018 Duração: 26min"Let's just make a poetry magazine – how hard can that be?" Megan Conery and Molly Taylor launched their poetry magazine hotdog in 2015, and quickly found out just how hard it could be. We delivered the third issue of hotdog to Stack subscribers last month, so Megan came over to the office to share some of the things they've learned along the way, and to talk about what drives them to keep on making the magazine bigger and better each time.
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Episode 61: Andrew Foxall, The Party Next Door
23/02/2018 Duração: 27min"Magazines can be more than just pieces of paper." The Party Next Door is an attempt to push beyond the established definition of what constitutes a magazine. Presented as a 12-inch vinyl record in a screenprinted sleeve, with gatefold outer sleeve, it looks to all intents and purposes like a standard record, but it's presented as issue one and its creators intend it to be a publication. Co-founder Andrew Foxall stopped in at the Stack office to give us the background to this ambitious publishing project.
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Episode 60: Liz Schaffer, Lodestars Anthology
16/02/2018 Duração: 18min"The one thing I knew is I didn't want to be an editor." Liz Schaffer is the editor of Lodestars Anthology, the travel magazine that trades in escapist tales from some of the world's most beautiful destinations. In this episode she speaks about why she never wanted to edit her own magazine, how she ended up being won over, and what are some of the unexpected benefits that have come along the way.
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Episode 59: Nick Loaring and Pat Randle, Double Dagger magazine
09/02/2018 Duração: 26min"People think letterpress is supposed to look knackered... We don't do that." Nick Loaring and Pat Randle are the editors, designers, publishers and printers of Double Dagger, the big, beautiful, letterpress journal that we delivered to Stack subscribers in October last year. They stopped in at the Stack offices this week to speak about their love of ink, the evils of photopolymer plates, and the simple beauty of moving type around to create a true letterpress layout.
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Stack Live: Can independent magazines make a difference?
02/02/2018 Duração: 01h15minIndependent magazines with a social or ideological mission are hugely popular at the moment, but can they really affect change in the world? Recorded live at The Book Club in London on 30 January 2018, this panel discussion brings together a group of the people behind those independent magazines, speaking about the challenges and opportunities they face. Featuring: James Cartwright, editor of Weapons of Reason; Rob Orchard, editor of Delayed Gratification; Sean Dagan Wood, editor of Positive News; Samira Shackle, editor of New Humanist; and Justinien Tribillon, editor of Migrant Journal.
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Episode 58: Mark Kiessling, Do You Read Me?!
26/01/2018 Duração: 25min"It started out of a need – there was no place for magazines in Berlin." Mark Kiessling and Jessica Reitz opened their magazine shop Do You Read Me?! in Berlin in 2008, and over the last 10 years they have become renowned for their discerning collection of quality print. In this episode Mark reflects on a decade of selling the best magazines, including the changes they've seen during that time and the massive increase in the number of independent magazines around the world.
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Episode 57: James Roberts, Vanguards magazine
19/01/2018 Duração: 21min"To see your little magazine poking out on the shelves is an amazing feeling." James Roberts and his friend Hugo Ross launched Vanguards magazine together while the two of them were studying Fine Art at Edinburgh University. With their studies behind them, the pair collaborated with 12-B, a design and risograph studio in London, to produce the second issue of their magazine exploring Scottish design and brands. In this episode, recorded at the end of 2017 just after the second issue had launched, James speaks about his excitement at seeing his magazine out in the real world, and why the pair plan to move beyond Scotland's borders in future issues.
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Episode 56: James Guerin, Berlin Quarterly
12/01/2018 Duração: 24min"I have an urge to make things that stay in the world." James Guerin is the founder, publisher and editor-in-chief of Berlin Quarterly, the literary and arts magazine that considers the cultural world as seen from Germany's capital. In this episode he reveals his motivations for making the magazine, the vintage magazines that still inspire him and his own desire to leave a lasting impression in print.
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Episode 55: Marco Velardi, Apartamento magazine
15/12/2017 Duração: 28min"How can you change without changing?" Marco Velardi is editor-in-chief of Apartamento, the iconic interiors magazine that is currently celebrating its 20th issue and 10th anniversary. We met up in Berlin to speak about the enduring pressures of independent publishing, the things they've learned along the way, and the challenge of keeping a magazine fresh while remaining familiar.
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Episode 54: Thomas Sumner, The Essential Journal
08/12/2017 Duração: 21min"It was three of us in a white van." Thomas Sumner is the creative director of The Essential Journal, the men's fashion and lifestyle title based in Liverpool. Now distributing 50,000 copies every month across Liverpool, Manchester, Leeds and London, and working with high end advertisers like Rolex and Jaguar, he reflects on the title's rapid growth, its editorial ethos and the opportunities that lay ahead.
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Episode 53: Christoph Amend, Zeit Magazin
01/12/2017 Duração: 26min"I'm always waiting for the surprise." Christoph Amend is the editor-in-chief of Germany's Zeit Magazin, the magazine distributed with news weekly Die Zeit. In this conversation he speaks about his earliest experience of writing articles, how his first professional magazine jobs taught him that creativity and profitability must go hand in hand, and why it's important for him as an editor to keep on writing.
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Stack Awards 2017
24/11/2017 Duração: 01h09minHear all the judges' comments and winners' acceptance speeches from this year's Stack Awards, recorded live at The Queen of Hoxton on Monday 20 November 2017.
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Episode 52: Petricā and Laura, Kajet journal
17/11/2017 Duração: 22min"Eastern Europe deserves a means of expression." Kajet is a new journal published from Bucharest and dedicated to telling unheard stories from across the region. First-time magazine makers Petricā Mogos and Laura Naum dropped into the Stack office this week to speak about their experiences making the magazine, and to explain why we need a fresh and authentic voice of Eastern Europe.
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Episode 51: Ruth Jamieson and Angharad Lewis
03/11/2017 Duração: 21min"I think we needed this period of very beautiful and luxurious magazines to prove that print was of worth... but now we're moving on." Ruth Jamieson is the author of Print is Dead Long Live Print and Angharad Lewis is the author of So You Want to Publish a Magazine, and together they judged the Student Magazine of the Year category in this year's Stack Awards. They came over to Somerset House for the judging session this week, and after we'd picked our winner, we sat down for a wider conversation about the current state of independent magazine publishing.
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Episode 50: Julian Victoria and Emily Rogers, Dog magazine
27/10/2017 Duração: 21min"You guys don't make dog owners look crazy..." Julian Victoria and Emily Rogers are the editors of Dog, the lifestyle magazine for people who love dogs. With its ultra simple cover concept, Dog has become a familiar sight on newsstands around the world, and in this episode they reveal their motivations in making the magazine, and explain why their readers aren't quite as doggy as you might expect.