New Editor B/W Photog Magazine

Steve Litt

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I see that David Corfield is leaving after a short time as Editor of Black and White Photography magazine.Elizabeth Roberts who was deputy Ed to Alisa Mcwhinnie
is taking over.Looking forward to the next issue.

Regards
Steve
 
Frances (Schultz) has just spoken to Liz at some length, and everything looks very encouraging. As many of you will know, Frances is a devotee of black and white, and her feeling is that Liz is very good news indeed: the magazine will certainly not lack soul.

Liz has lots of ideas: one of her main themes is going to be getting people to make actual prints, whether silver halide or digitally (note: she seems to have has no plans whatsoever to increase the digital content of the magazine), and whether as 'fine art' or as a record.

Inevitably, it will take her a while to put her own stamp on the magazine, and equally inevitably, there are 'legacy' articles and themes that are already commissioned and will be run. As a result, it won't make sense to judge the magazine immediately; give her a few issues before you decide whether she is at, above or below Ailsa's standard.

One thing I will add, though, is that Liz is an enthusiastic rangefinder user...

Cheers,

Roger
 
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I think this might be good news. Although I have still enjoyed recent issues there does seem to have been the start of a slow degeneration towards it becoming just like all the other phot mags. Long may it continue to be about photography and not equipment, etc.
 
I was just about to cancel my subscription, since B&W Photography seems to have gone steadily downhill. Mike Johnston's columns are about the only reason I haven't done so already. Now I guess I'll stick around a while longer.
 
I'll be interested to see how Elizabeth Roberts changes the magazine, I just hope she manages to restore some of the individuality that it's lost over the last several issues.
 
Once Alisa Mcwhinnie left the magazine lost it's soul.

I thought it was going down hill months before she left. It was getting too "cutesy" and starting to target amateurs too much with articles more and more pedantic and with less intellectual depth, IMO. Was starting to move too much towards a Pop Photo-like content....

Hopefully this will shake things up and it will somehow go back to the way it was a couple years ago.
 
I bought B&W this month after several month's off and was pleasantly surprised that things seem to have improved some. I was not so impressed by the edition last year that Liz edited before David came on board but I nonetheless have high hopes for a return to previous form.

With the digital "issue" I think it is silly for the magazine to be analogue only - a black and white, analogue photography magazine is a niche too far! Many frequenters of this and other forums have increasingly opted for a hybrid workflow - myself included. I hope that this is recognised, without ignoring those who still choose to print with an enlarger - this I feel IS a dying art - and as such it is more important than ever to write about techniques so that those who chose to persue it in the future are able to find out about it.

Perhaps it is elitism that makes me hope that the magazine will concentrate less on beginners issues and "which camera do I need?" BUT such subject matter is so done to death in the mainstream photographic press that I feel their is a niche for a magazine aimed at a more advanced audience. In dumbing down subject material, the publisher will alienate long term subscribers who really don't need teaching the rule of 3rds for the millionth time.
 
Perhaps it is elitism that makes me hope that the magazine will concentrate less on beginners issues and "which camera do I need?" BUT such subject matter is so done to death in the mainstream photographic press that I feel their is a niche for a magazine aimed at a more advanced audience. In dumbing down subject material, the publisher will alienate long term subscribers who really don't need teaching the rule of 3rds for the millionth time.

Dear Charly,

Yes, but the problem here is that overly specialized material frightens people off too. 'Printing witb iron-(3) salts' may be fascinating; but how big is the audience?

There has to be a balance between 'beginner' and 'arcane' -- and it's different for every single reader.

The perfect magazine has stuff that EVERYONE can do -- and will be tempted to try.

Cheers,

R.
 
Are you talking about a magazine or a manual?

Eh?

For my money, the job of a magazine is inspiration.

Hey! I want to try that!

Yes, I can probably do it...
(They may be flattering themselves here)

People want to learn how to be better at that they already do, or to be inspired to do new things. Which bit do you disagree with? Obviously, no-one is going to want to try everything, but then, no magazine in perfect.

Cheers,

R.
 
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The only mags I still sub to are BWP [everything has all been said already ] and AG, which I discovered last year and is a revelation.
Published quarterly, well written, beautifully printed and produced, no advertising, expensive but IMHO worth every penny/ cent/eurocent ...........................take a look at

http://www.picture-box.com/

Clive
 
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I'm happy enough with a mix of conventional and digital and I too use a hybrid of the two. What concerns me is too many equipment reviews - there are so many magazines doing them and to go too far down that road will mean that the magazine loses any distinctiveness.

Equipment reviews should be reserved for when a manufacturer is delivering something genuinely new (i.e. not just a new model but a step forward in technology or approach) or different (e.g. if Fuji go ahead and bring out their new 'folder').

Let's have a magazine that is about photography and photographers and provides inspiration to struggling amateurs like me and keeps us trying for something better.

Posted this before I saw Roger's latest post - I agree entirely
 
The only mags I still sub to are BWP [everyhthing has all been said already ] and AG, which I discovered last year and is a revelation.
Published quarterly, well written, beautifully printed and produced, no advertising, expensive but IMHO worth every penny/ cent/eurocent...
Clive
Dear Clive,

Take a look too at Schwarzweiß and FOAM -- though I have to admit I've just let my subscription to the latter lapse: not close enough, often enough, to what I want to do.

Cheers,

Roger
 
Ah, then I think we agree. I wasn't trying to be a smartass or anything, I just despise those "DIY" magazines: "24 steps to printing at home", "10 places to go this summer", "Another bloody sunset in five easy steps". To me inspiration comes from the end result, not how some lens/film/developer worked for a single person.

No disagreement there. Well, very little, anyway. If some bugger is going to write them, I'd rather have the money...

I completely agree about the 'my way or the highway' attitude in some articles. I'm more inclined to say, "I use this because a, b, c, but you can pretty much use whatever you have except perhaps y and z".

EDIT: addendum. If someone looks at something I've written; says 'I could do better than that'; and then does better -- then I have succeeded. Too many photo press jourmalists are too concerned with showing that they are really good photographers -- when they aren't, but when they could give useful tips on how to approach something because they're a bit clearer on theory/background/grammar than some photographers who take better pictures.

Cheers,

Roger
 
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