Wood Working Magazines - Any recommendations? - Printable Version +- Woodnet Forums (https://forums.woodnet.net) +-- Thread: Wood Working Magazines - Any recommendations? (/showthread.php?tid=7331289) |
RE: Wood Working Magazines - Any recommendations? - Bass Player - 06-27-2017 (06-27-2017, 04:40 PM)SteveS Wrote: I have subscribed to magazines in the past, but I wouldn't bother if your goal is to learn then books are a much better value. I would agree. That's also why I kept all my books during my moves in the last 10 years during which I was forced to down-size my collections & sacrifice the book case full of magazines. But I still learned quite a bit from those magazines & have a few plans from them in my list of possible future projects ==> I might eventually be looking into some of those digital collections I've seen for Shop Notes, Work Bench, AWW, & Wood. (06-27-2017, 04:59 PM)dg152 Wrote: My 2 publications are Wood Magazine and Woodsmith. They're geared to my level of (un)expertise and easy to read. (06-27-2017, 06:41 PM)AHill Wrote: All the magazines tend to recycle content. They all need to straddle this fine line between attracting people new to the craft vs. experienced folks looking for more of a challenge. Then they spice it up a bit with new tool reviews and tests. RE: Wood Working Magazines - Any recommendations? - Bass Player - 06-28-2017 (06-27-2017, 10:38 PM)AHill Wrote: Schwarz leaving did hurt, but the dagger was the departure of Lang, Huey, and Bender. Those guys were all genuine woodworkers, and not just journalists. They brought a lot of talent and diversity to PWW. .... Those 3 guys also happen to be the founders of "360 woodworking" mentioned by Steve N. in this thread.... RE: Wood Working Magazines - Any recommendations? - Hank Knight - 06-28-2017 (06-27-2017, 10:38 PM)AHill Wrote: Schwarz leaving did hurt, but the dagger was the departure of Lang, Huey, and Bender. Those guys were all genuine woodworkers, and not just journalists. They brought a lot of talent and diversity to PWW. Megan Fitzpatrick is a fine editor, but I think the magazine has lost a lot of the creative juices that used to reside in-house. I agree completely with Alan. Huey, Bender and Lang leaving PWW was a crushing blow. I should have mentioned them, but I still think Schwartz was the spark that made the magazine shine. I certainly didn't mean to knock Megan, and I hope my post didn't imply that. She is doing a great job with what she has to work with. I still subscribe to PWW and look forward to every issue. Hank RE: Wood Working Magazines - Any recommendations? - Hank Knight - 06-28-2017 Bass Player, I tried to send you a Private Message, but your messenger is disabled. enable it please and I"ll contact you with an offer you won't refuse. RE: Wood Working Magazines - Any recommendations? - Bass Player - 06-28-2017 (06-28-2017, 08:53 AM)Hank Knight Wrote: Bass Player, I tried to send you a Private Message, but your messenger is disabled. enable it please and I"ll contact you with an offer you won't refuse. Done. RE: Wood Working Magazines - Any recommendations? - Cooler - 06-28-2017
Either buy or subscribe to the magazines that you like best. Enjoy the coffee & bagel. RE: Wood Working Magazines - Any recommendations? - Bob Lang - 06-28-2017 If you like magazine type content and are looking for the best bang for your buck, get the back issue discs in pdf format of Fine Woodworking, American Woodworker and Popular Woodworking. Each of these had periods where most of the articles were written by folks with relevant experience in the real world of woodworking. Those were the high water marks of quality content and sadly, those days are behind us and not likely to return in anything that we would recognize as a magazine. The growth of Amazon and the internet dramatically changed the world of publishing in general and magazines in particular. Over the course of a couple of years print content became less relevant and less of a value to readers. The reaction of the industry, especially the magazines was to do everything possible to become even less relevant and less of a value. Pages were cut to save on printing costs and a formulaic corporate mentality chased away the people who actually knew about the subject. For me, the value of a publication is the knowledge within the pages. Hardly anyone in the publishing industry shares that opinion. Good content takes experience, creativity and a willingness to take risks. That doesn't happen in a world where content producers don't really know or appreciate the craft and spend their time pleasing the suits upstairs and racing their competitors to the bottom to grab the low hanging fruit. RE: Wood Working Magazines - Any recommendations? - Steve N - 06-28-2017 (06-27-2017, 10:38 PM)AHill Wrote: Schwarz leaving did hurt, but the dagger was the departure of Lang, Huey, and Bender. Those guys were all genuine woodworkers, and not just journalists. They brought a lot of talent and diversity to PWW. Allan they lost big when they lost those guys, they were the woodworking behind Popular woodworking, give ya 2 guesses what La Schwarz was IMHO Steve Shanesy was the force that made the "magazine" part do so well. Think like a coach, with the best bullpen in the market, his part was just keeping them on track. RE: Wood Working Magazines - Any recommendations? - Handplanesandmore - 06-28-2017 (06-28-2017, 12:22 PM)Bob Lang Wrote: If you like magazine type content and are looking for the best bang for your buck, get the back issue discs in pdf format of Fine Woodworking, American Woodworker and Popular Woodworking. Each of these had periods where most of the articles were written by folks with relevant experience in the real world of woodworking. Those were the high water marks of quality content and sadly, those days are behind us and not likely to return in anything that we would recognize as a magazine.I agree to what Bob said with one qualification: Older issues may not cover the use of new tools, the Domino Joiner, for instance, and if you are looking for techniques or projects relating to those new products, you may have to check out the more recent articles. The internet certainly has killed a lot of print magazines (the same way Amazon has done to small malls and department stores). However, the quality of content as well as presentation on the internet is not monitored, meaning anyone can present themselves as skilled or experienced. Many bloggers or Instagramers fall into this category (and my furniture maker friends like to call these bloggers or the like socialite woodworkers, who have an interest to showoff their fancy boutique tools or purchases to strangers). Simon RE: Wood Working Magazines - Any recommendations? - Gary G™ - 06-28-2017 Woodwork is the one I miss. To me, It was the best on the block. Ref: https://goo.gl/images/NAhSYk |