Nick Gibbs
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Interesting reading, Ian. Lots of good sense. I will ponder once I've got the latest issue of Living Woods to press!
Cheers
Nick
Cheers
Nick
Nick Gibbs":1hi5bgil said:But I do think that some people have a misapprehension of what a professional workshop looks like.
Thinking about it, one of the things American magazines have done by investing so much in fantastic illustrations is that they have sanitised woodworking, making all the jigs and things look very much smarter than the tend to be in reality. My experience of many pro workshops is that most of the jigs are flung together, and hang, tatty-ish, on the wall. That's why the tips pages in US mags are hand-drawn, to make the tips look sexier than they really are. In British Woodworking we remake a fair number of the tips, a) to try them out, and b) to portray reality.
=D> =D> =D>Nick Gibbs":ixyjj9bl said:A famous planemaker once asked me for a copy of one of my magazines. I suggested he swap it for one of his planes. "But my planes take a month to make," he said. "So does an issue of my magazine," I retorted!!!!
Nick Gibbs":2lix4uxr said:It is quite funny the emails I've had the weekend, with so many different folk liking and/or loathing almost every article in different ways.
A famous planemaker once asked me for a copy of one of my magazines. I suggested he swap it for one of his planes. "But my planes take a month to make," he said. "So does an issue of my magazine," I retorted!!!!
The subject itself tends to go round and round a bit - we've had similar discussions frequently over the years, with various magazine folks contributing. Fair play to Nick; he's probably taken more of it on board than any other editor (and more flak too, I reckon), but still the same points crop up again and again. The magazines are all still seeming to try and be all things to all men, and it doesn't work. Another frequent moan is where is the aspirational/inspirational stuff? Yes, you want projects that make you want to rush out to the w'shop then and there, but sometimes you want to read about a "Someday" project, that you aspire to do. If it's well presented, in the meantime you can still generally pick up tips and techniques from it that you can use now anyway. FWW used to be good at that, but not so much now, I gather.Dodge":blzv9sb2 said:I feel that this thread is going round and round a bit
Alf":2i34q9xj said:Of course, if you can find half a dozen good writers who have a steady turnover of new projects to write about, a breathtaking range of technical know-how, and will work for peanuts, you could solve the problem in one fell swoop. And I'm sure Nick writes to Santa and asks about that on an annual basis... :wink:
Nick Gibbs":234eop6j said:A famous planemaker once asked me for a copy of one of my magazines. I suggested he swap it for one of his planes. "But my planes take a month to make," he said. "So does an issue of my magazine," I retorted!!!!
Sgian Dubh":1y957fxv said:Ah, maybe true Nick, but you are operating in a truly scaleable industry and the planemaker isn't. By that I mean the planemaker has one product to sell at the end of a month's work, whereas you have hundreds, or perhaps thousands, albeit each one of your magazines costs a fraction of the single plane.
You aren't comparing like for like, but I suspect you were aware of that and your comment to the planemaker (and here) was rather tongue-in-cheek. Slainte.
I had a very rude visitor at a show recently who saw nothing painful in telling me how he gets his copies of my magazine from someone else, and passes them around
At least he didn't bin them, you should be pleased!Nick Gibbs":249yyn8s said:..... I had a very rude visitor at a show recently who saw nothing painful in telling me how he gets his copies of my magazine from someone else, and passes them around.
Nick, I don't doubt the effort and work that goes into creating a good magazine, issue after issue. I have had some peripheral involvement in the publishing game over the last fifteen years as an author, and I like to think I've developed just about enough understanding of the business to recognise the work and talent needed to create a good magazine.Nick Gibbs":mkdo7cce said:It was, of course, tongue in cheek, but only up to a point. It is very easy for people to underestimate the effort that goes into producing a magazine, and that the collection, analysis and repackaging of information in an entertaining and informative manner is a skill the same as making a plane, fitting a sink or cooking.
Sgian Dubh":1fputvi9 said:I genuinely enjoy sending my manuscripts to a good editor of a good magazine. I suppose the counterpoint to that is I do not enjoy sending work to a poor editor, and won't do so if I find out I'm working with a dud. Slainte.
Possibly, but it will have to wait until I finish working on a larger text which is a manuscript on timber technology. It's only been five years and a bit in the writing until now, ha, ha.Nick Gibbs":3twk0ilw said:Does that mean I can expect to hear from you?
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