Thanks for the feedback -- again!
Well, again, thanks for all the feedback. I really do appreciate it and read all the posts.
For what it's worth, if you are interested:
- The videos were never intended to be any other than "Brooks does home movies." You are absolutely correct in that I know nothing -- and I mean that -- about video production. I am a
still photographer and am solely dedicated to that, so I'll leave the world of professional-quality video production to those who are passionate about it. For LXT, we will only have our little "amateur" videos and hope some folks find something in them of interest. Not everything has to be top drawer -- or, can be! Especially when we are trying to create a media publication that is affordable -- a little under $5 per issue for subscribers. This ain't no Hollywood budget -- not for serious video production!
- As to Bjorke's comments, I would suggest that the Web 2.0 (I'm not really sure I know what that is!) conversation is the conglomerate of all web stuff together. We -- that is
LensWork, which is essentially
me -- are just one small component in the aggregate. I applaud APUG, and
Emulsion, and all the other forums and publications because they all share my passion for photography. And, one of the great things about photography is that it is such a large tent that there is more than enough room for all kinds of ideas, all kinds of opinions, publications, styles, etc. Just look how much conversation has been generated by my little podcast on this one forum alone! I would have killed for these kinds of exchanges and contact with other photographers when I was starting out in the 1970s. Those of my generation, remember how isolated we all were back then and what a great thing it was to attend a workshop and meet other people who were as passionate about photography as you were? Now we have such contact every day, several times a day via forums like APUG. How marvelous!
- I've been accused several times on APUG of "going digital." I'll say it again for those who care for the facts:
LensWork is not and never was about equipment. We don't know what equipment was used when we review portfolios. We don't look at either equipment nor resumes when we select work for publication. We only look at images and try our best to select the work we think is interesting enough to deserve an audience. Period. Curiously enough, of the last 47 portfolios we've published in the magazine dating back to March of 2005, only 11 of them have been digital -- a whopping 23%. So much for our "going digital." Seriously, is this
too much?
- I appreciate your concerns about our readership numbers. Strange as it may sound, we've never been driven by readership numbers. If we were, we'd do equipment reviews, naked babes, and did I mention equipment reviews? We'd have famous people and movie stars on the cover. We would never have started a photography magazine that didn't publish photographs for the first 11 issues. Certainly we'd publish mostly famous photographer's work -- the "usual suspects" -- whose established name recognition would attract as broad an audience as possible. We don't. We've always operated our business under the assumption that there are people out there (a niche!) who appreciate the kind of photography we do and would be interested in a publication that offered the highest quality reproductions technology can produce. We must be right, at least a little bit, because for over 13 years now we've increased the number of subscribers every issue without fail, 70 issues in a row. Not a bad track record, even if I say so braggingly myself.

Our sincerest thanks to all of you appreciate what we do. And, for those of you for whom
LensWork is not a good match for your interests, we know you'll find
Emulsion, or
Aperture, or
Shots, or
View Camera, or
CameraArts, or
BlindSpot, or
ZoneZero, or
Photo-Eye, or
MagnaChrom ,or
f8 , or
Outdoor Photographer, or
PhotoTechniques, or
Focus, or
B&W or the other
B&W, or something that will offer you what
LensWork does not. (Sorry if I left someone out! When I was growing up photographically there was
Popular Photography,
Modern Photography,
Aperture and
Shutterbug and, er, well, that was pretty much about it.)
- Podcasts. I'm having a lot of fun with them. It keeps me thinking. I can talk about little things that aren't destined for the magazine. I like offering something for free to those who have a restricted budget and podcasting is something I can afford to offer for free. I like to think I'm somehow helping people think about their own photography and help their own creative process. I have about 5,000 people who are listening on a regular basis from all over the world and from the volume of enthusiastic and supportive emails I receive, I think I'll keep doing them for a while. I've now done 365 podcasts over three years and have concluded one undeniable truth: You cannot offer 365 opinions about something without occasionally ruffling someone's feathers. Which I occasionally do. This seems to leave two choices: don't ever say anything that might offer an opinion because it might upset someone who disagrees, or, hope people will have the good sense and perseverance to pick and choose from what you offer and find something that is useful to them and for which they are grateful -- the rest they can ignore. Obviously, I choose the latter.
I wish I was more disciplined to post more frequently and my comments wouldn't be so long or rambling. Sorry I got long-winded again -- a flaw my friends all know is unfortunately incurable.
Brooks