I understand that, but you have to admit, with as much respect as I have for traditional photography, there isn't enough of a market for it out there to run a magazine soley based upon traditional photography alone. There also isn't enough of a market to run a magazine soley based upon digital photography alone. I say this as in catering to photographers as an art magazine, not as a techinical "how to" magazine, which neither B&W, nor Inked, nor LensWork are. I don't know out of how many people are traditional photographers, would subscribe to a "how to" magazine about traditional photography. It would also depend upon the demographic base, what their income is, etc. Again, I wish Emulsion the best luck in the world. With paper and postage costs what they are today, there's a lot of money that goes into creating and running a magazine, money that comes from advertisers.
A fine art photography magazine must display the works of what galleries are showing since most of the advertisers are galleries and since most the readers visit and purchase art from galleries. A lot of galleries are showing digital photography today...
B&W isn't a how-to magazine, either. It's a magazine for collectors, but that photographers would want to keep up to date on to find out what the latest trends are in the fine art photography market. Some of those latest trends are digital, which is why B&W made their decision...to stay more up to date.
A fine art photography magazine must display the works of what galleries are showing since most of the advertisers are galleries and since most the readers visit and purchase art from galleries. A lot of galleries are showing digital photography today...
B&W isn't a how-to magazine, either. It's a magazine for collectors, but that photographers would want to keep up to date on to find out what the latest trends are in the fine art photography market. Some of those latest trends are digital, which is why B&W made their decision...to stay more up to date.
Ed Sukach said:For the same reason I "need" APUG. "Smart" business decision are nice - but I do not subscribe to, or read, any publication solely for the fact that it is produced as a smart business decision.
Not why I would subscribe to/ de-subscribe. Unfortunately, most - In fact, ALL of the publications that have allowed "just a few" digitally specific articles invariably change their basic philosophies from that of "art" and "fine" photography to a frenzied, "Take the photograph and why worry about it ... here are the miraculous, wondrous ways you can screw around with it afterwards."
You say there are "many" Fine Art Photographers working with "Digital Photogrpaphy" and infer(?) that the numbers of those who work with film are not sufficient to sustain a magazine. Do you have any "hard" information of those numbers ... which to me, would be necessary to support a "good" business decision, or are assumptions being made? Related - how may "Digitally" oriented (philosophy-wise) magazines are available to those who do work digitally, and how many for those work work with film ... or to put it another way, just what is the competition, and what is a reasonable expectation of sales?
How does this sound?
In a Board of Director's meeting, the information is brought to light - "Only ten percent of our profits are generated by film-based photography. Sound business - We will discontinue film-based products."
At the next meeting - PANIC!!! "Our profits are down by TEN PERCENT!!! - Heads will roll. Committees must be formed, Consultants hired --- to find out WHY..."