Nick Gibbs
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- Joined
- 22 Mar 2005
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I'm a bit mystified what this high end magazine will publish. I've worked with professional woodworkers a lot of my life, and the techniques that we show in British Woodworking are the techniques that are often used in professional workshops.
My suspicion, I'm afraid, is that people are asking not necessarily for high end techniques and kit, but for a magazine that looks high end, and which projects an exclusive impression of how they'd like to be viewed. It becomes a badge. That is a different beast, and I think F&C has been successful for that reason, and other reasons. I don't mean to denigrate them, but there have been jigs and techniques in British Woodworking that I doubt have ever been seen in a British woodworking mag before. But we try to be inclusive, embracing all sorts of folk. The pencil article, for all its failings, put professionals beside ordinary home woodworkers. Perhaps that's why some readers didn't like it. But to me that is what matters. The woodworking market in Britain is so small that the last thing we need is to split it into tinier segments.
In publishing terms, my little company is as close to a boutique as it comes. And I agree that people like me can produce niche titles, like our other title, Living Woods. Though printing and postage are expensive, it is actually the skills and time taken to produce quality articles that matters and really costs, whether it's for a magazine or on the web.
My suspicion, I'm afraid, is that people are asking not necessarily for high end techniques and kit, but for a magazine that looks high end, and which projects an exclusive impression of how they'd like to be viewed. It becomes a badge. That is a different beast, and I think F&C has been successful for that reason, and other reasons. I don't mean to denigrate them, but there have been jigs and techniques in British Woodworking that I doubt have ever been seen in a British woodworking mag before. But we try to be inclusive, embracing all sorts of folk. The pencil article, for all its failings, put professionals beside ordinary home woodworkers. Perhaps that's why some readers didn't like it. But to me that is what matters. The woodworking market in Britain is so small that the last thing we need is to split it into tinier segments.
In publishing terms, my little company is as close to a boutique as it comes. And I agree that people like me can produce niche titles, like our other title, Living Woods. Though printing and postage are expensive, it is actually the skills and time taken to produce quality articles that matters and really costs, whether it's for a magazine or on the web.