PRINT MAGAZINES
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VW TYPE
A premium slant on the world of watercooled Volkswagens.
Life. With Volkswagens proudly sums up this beautiful 164-page elegantly-bound book-like-magazine, printed and bound in the UK on premium uncoated eco-focussed Magno Volume graphics paper.
Presented in 210×265mm format by Jon Saxon, an automotive journalist of 30 years: VW Motoring, The Golf, PAS, Eurotuner, CAR, evo, RDM.
vwtype.com -
CALLING ALL CARS
220 page 210×265mm quarterly magazine about Life. With Cars.
Ok, the words art, design, music, film, fashion, travel, history and architecture, are no way there to help describe a car magazine, but we strongly feel what truly constitutes as a magazine – on any subject for that matter – must involve almost every single one of them. With their help Calling All Cars offers a varied approach to the world of cars, in much the same way the car itself is to all aspects of life.
wearecallingallcars.com -
DOGHOUSE
2012 100-page love letter to the wonder that is the British pub.
“Where the magazine shines is the totality of its message.... Its outlook is essentially romantic: pubs of all shapes and sizes are wonderful, beguiling and fascinating. This has the potential to do more to 'save' pubs than any amount of woe-is-me whinging. The photos are often immersive, highly evocative full-page portraits of real rooms, in real pubs, with all their faults and flaws (dodgy gas heaters, scruffy carpets, fly-blown windows). Consider this an endorsement.” Boak and Baily's Beer Blog
doghousemagazine.bigcartel.com
More kind words about Doghouse
“If you like pubs and good writing, as much as I do, then you'll probably like Doghouse magazine as much as I do.”
— Charlie Connelly
“Doghouse has lovely production values, a pleasing aroma of paper, is thick and just right to read in the pub, has an avalanche of words tumbling over the edge of the precipice, photos of pubs that you might want to enter and others you might want to give a miss, has the size and feel of Wallpaper, and swells with an infectious liveliness. It’s a valuable record of pub life, whimsical and occasionally rambling, but well worth looking out for.”
— Adrian Tierney-Jones, Called to the Bar
“It's totally oldschool, settled in with a Double Diamond, a Woodbine, a pickled egg and a Babycham for the lady. There's lavish, often full-page photography of curling linoleum, patterned red carpets, pewter tankards and rosettes. The editor and photographer share a vision of pubdom so specific it's almost a fetish. Move over The Chap, you've got competition.”
— Andrew Humphreys, Made With Ink
“Today was a no drink night but edition 2 arriving from Doghouse; makes me want a beer.”
— Philip Diprose, The Ride Journal
“A fascinating glimpse into the social pillar of British society. Doghouse celebrates the timeless traditions and rustic aesthetic of true British pub culture; from the ubiquitous empty crisp packet wedged between a well-worn crack in a table, to the myriad of fascinating characters that can be found propping up the bar down any local. Topics range from ghosts, famous battles, random facts, to football and fishing. Great photography makes this quite literally a pub crawl for your eyes.”
— Morgan Cummins, Houndworthy
“I recently spent an afternoon in the Cock Tavern consuming Doghouse – ‘The British Pub Magazine’. Doghouse is wonderful – a love letter to all aspects of British pub culture put together in a glorious colour magazine. The first issue features stories on pub crawls, Japanese beer machines, back room rap battles and dogs that have been barred for pissing in the public bar. It magics up a world of pints of mild and Fosters fonts in smoky snugs, and of Tavern Snacks…”
— Robin Turner, Caught by the River