A new travel mag
Jun. 29th, 2008 01:06 pmI wander into the newsagent, and naturally I browse the magazine section. I'm always keen on computer mags with freebie cover disks, and of course I glance at the travel rack. Never know, a photograph, an article, a reader's comment will take me to some magical place. Honfleur was a recent example - a lovely little Norman port. The magazine cover was of the tiny harbour crammed with yachts from around the world and lined with picturesque shops and houses. The lady behind the counter looked at the cover and enthused about it - she'd been there and I resolved to pay a visit on my next trip.
Which I did, having a late breakfast as we dodged sleet showers on the way to Paris.
A couple of nights ago I ducked into a small mall to visit the bank, and of course my route took me past the newsagent. And the travel magazines. A new title caught my eye, not to mention the cover picture of a couple of horse-drawn carts ambling their way past the Pyramids.
Everywhere. A magazine with an intriguing twist. No staff writers. The magazine is written and illustrated by the readers, who submit their contributions, rate those of others, and the best are printed in the next issue. Admittedly, you only get $100 and a free sub if you are published.
I've just signed up, and thinking of some of the photographs I regularly see on the blogs and photo pages of my friends, there's scope for a few easy dollars.
Which I did, having a late breakfast as we dodged sleet showers on the way to Paris.
A couple of nights ago I ducked into a small mall to visit the bank, and of course my route took me past the newsagent. And the travel magazines. A new title caught my eye, not to mention the cover picture of a couple of horse-drawn carts ambling their way past the Pyramids.
Everywhere. A magazine with an intriguing twist. No staff writers. The magazine is written and illustrated by the readers, who submit their contributions, rate those of others, and the best are printed in the next issue. Admittedly, you only get $100 and a free sub if you are published.
I've just signed up, and thinking of some of the photographs I regularly see on the blogs and photo pages of my friends, there's scope for a few easy dollars.
no subject
Date: 2008-06-29 07:43 am (UTC)I share your fascination with travel mags, although many times I think they are aimed at a wealthier market than 'moi' (but then when you think how glossy most of them are, and how much they must cost to produce that would be right, I guess!) They are useful to fuel dreams, though. My trouble is I can't give them up afterwards - I have stacks of them all over the place! Something with which I must come to terms when I move *sigh*!
no subject
Date: 2008-06-29 04:59 pm (UTC)And the readers, who have paid for a copy by casual purchase or subscription. Reading about far places is a lot cheaper than actually going there!
I've got a few of these things. I'm saving the cruise mags, because they contain useful information about destinations, ships and lines. Useful for next time.
I'll see how I go with contributions. I tend to be too long-winded for a good travel article, and so many of my best photographs have a cute little bear in them!