B&W and View Camera both include digital stuff any more. I stopped subscribing when they defiled their pages with that stuff.
Same with Lenswork. It's still worth taking a look at.
There've been a couple of startups but seem to have croaked after two or three issues. Emulsion and.....................?
Somewhere in the dark recesses of my mind I seem to remember one still floating around. Just out of reach. That's going to be a 2AM coming to mind thing.
Not many since the advent of internet the magazine and newspaper industry sales figures have gone down the toilet and the publishers are struggling to survive, photography websites and YouTube have all but replaced them people can get the information free on-line.
Someone who is a member here (laurie campbell, IIRC?) has started a subscription digital mag that she says she hopes becomes available in print after the first year. But it only started some months ago, and I don't know if she still has hopes for that. I would subscribe to it; I will not subscribe to a digital mag
It is called "Looking Glass" magazine, and it is quite good - and all analogue based. The email anouncing that the third edition is up arrived in my Inbox today.I bought a subscription the first month. I may not like looking at magazines on the web but it's better than nothing. Oh and it's a very nice webzine.
I've been taking View Camera for some years now. Everytime that I consider letting my subscription lapse, they will come out with an issue containing an article or two that makes the price of the year's subscription worth while. As to film and paper, I learned about an Adox paper in Ansco 130 there. If you are trying to stay in business by selling magazines of interest to people using LF and ULF equipment you probably need some subscription money from the digital folks also.......Regards
What you prefer and what is commercially available are two different things the publishing industry worldwide is suffering a huge reduction in sales and consequently photographic magazines especially film photographic ones have almost disappeared.The internet is great but I much prefer to hold a book or magazine in my hand than look at a computer screen to read. My wife bought me a Nook for Christmas a couple years ago and I tried it but it wasn't for me. Now it sits in a drawer unused and collecting dust. Just my opinion.
Are there any film Photography magazines left?
Are you expecting that the photography magazines of today would have any interesting or usable content?
It is called "Looking Glass" magazine, and it is quite good - and all analogue based. The email anouncing that the third edition is up arrived in my Inbox today.
I believe the economics of manufacturing monochrome film and magazine publishing are very different.They haven't "almost" disappeared. Print magazines for film photography have disappeared.
I may be deluded but I still think there is a market for one. If companies like Ilford can stay afloat seems like a magazine could too.
I believe the economics of manufacturing monochrome film and magazine publishing are very different.
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