Publisher Spotlight: Plant Society Magazine

From 20/30-something hipsters with first-time plots in big city community gardens to lifelong rare plant collectors and members of the most esoteric of gardening societies, anyone with a desire to dig around in dirt will find Matt Mattus’ newest venture, Plant Society Magazine, not just educational, but inspirational.

Mattus, an author, designer, brand creative, adventurer, naturalist and plant expert, is well known among green thumb types. His popular gardening blog,growingwithplants.com, attracts plant enthusiasts from around the world who are fans of his near-daily diary entries and enjoy the stunning photographs from his many gardens.

When Mattus learned about MagCloud’s print on demand service last year, he began thinking a print magazine would be a perfect extension of his blog — a way to provide yet more in-depth knowledge and greater detail about connoisseur and collectable plants, with a bit of food, travel, design and home and garden décor mixed in for good measure.

“These days, mainstream gardening magazines are too commercial and ordinary,” Mattus says. “Plant collectors and rare plant enthusiasts want something unique and original. They’re curious about discovering new things.”

And Mattus is just the one to uncover anything exciting and unusual. As a creative director at Hasbro, it’s Mattus’ job to discover new trends in the making — and to keep the company a few steps ahead. He has even written a book on the subject: Beyond Trend – How to Innovate in an Over Designed World.

It’s a mission that has become his personal passion, especially when it comes to gardening. A self-described “hortigeek,” Mattus lives on his family’s 100-year-old farm in Worcester, Mass., where for the past 40 years he has collected and grown rare plants and actively participated in obscure plant societies — Androsace Society, anyone? He planted his first seeds on the farm at the age of 5 and remembers when the zinnias were taller than he was.

His own experiences are a sharp contrast to the modern science efficiencies so common in the gardening world today.

“With the rise of mass-produced micro-propagated plants that are all the same at every home center around the world, I can see dumbing-down happening everywhere,” Mattus says. “They’re selling ‘supertunias’ and sheep-sized Chrysanthemums. Gardening has morphed into a pastime that feels more like disposable decorating. But I know there’s still a huge population of gardeners out there who still honor the art and science of it all.”

It’s this population that Mattus reaches with his blog and now with Plant Society Magazine. He writes all the content, focusing only on plants that he, himself, has grown. And he pulls images from his vast collection of more than 10,000 photographs he has taken of plants from his greenhouses and gardens. He organizes his photographs by species and time of year.

“I have so much content, it’s a little overwhelming,” Mattus says. “I’m obsessive when it comes to plants. I photograph every step of the growing process, from planting the seeds to tending to them — even how I display them in pots and vases. With MagCloud, I don’t have to design something six months in advance. I can shoot my cover the same day that I upload my files to the MagCloud website.”

Mattus published his first issue, High Summer, in 2009, featuring 75 pages of in-depth information about, and photographs of, exhibition chrysanthemums, dahlias, pelargonium, nerines and crocosmia.

His Autumn issue focuses on cultivating miniature species Narcissus for cold greenhouses and alpine beds, odd and rare winter blooming bulbs, Cyclamen species in pots and winter shrubs for color.

Mattus promotes the magazine, which also will include Spring, featuring the genus Primula, seed growing, Corydalis and rare Japanese orchids, and mid-Winter editions, on his blog and through his Twitter account.

“I love being my own editor and art director,” he says. “I also appreciate being in charge of my own advertising. You’ll never see me writing about organic gardening and then running an ad for fertilizer on the next page.”

Mattus still recalls the day his first issue arrived in his mailbox. “It came in a plastic bag, and it looked like a real magazine,” he says. “I work with printers all the time. The quality I get from MagCloud is as good as anything out there. I would recommend MagCloud to even the pickiest of designers.” Mattus also appreciates the ease with which MagCloud handles all the order processing and distribution. “Anyone in the US, Canada or UK can order issues direct from the MagCloud website, and can even pay directly with a credit card or Paypal,” he notes. “MagCloud prints to order, and in five days or fewer, the magazine is printed, bound and mailed directly to the reader.”

Without MagCloud’s self-publishing service, Mattus says a magazine like his, with its relatively smaller run and niche market and lack of a traditional distribution channel, wouldn’t be possible.

“I understand the need for big publishers to remain profitable,” Mattus says. “But the publishing business is changing so fast. Self-publishing is now much more accepted in our new digital world of blogs, Twitter and Facebook. For me and for the readers I want to reach, MagCloud is the perfect solution.

“Frankly, I had no idea how the magazine would be received,” he adds. “I expected both positive and critical comments, just as I get on my blog. And that’s terrific. My favorite comments are from readers who tell me that Plant Society Magazine is better than the fancy British gardening magazines. One reader said, ‘Finally, a well-designed and informative magazine that not only shows me step-by-step tasks, but that actually teaches me how to grow something out of the ordinary.’

“That’s exactly what I’m striving for.”

Check out the latest issue!

Publishers In Their Own Words: Rallycross World

Rallycross World Magazine
by Tim Whittington, Publisher

Rallycross World has been published for ten years, initially as a quarterly print title but moving to a monthly ‘e-zine’ style distributed as a pdf in 2005.

It’s the only magazine specializing in Rallycross, an explosive form of motor sport featuring short races between up to eight cars on track with both asphalt and gravel surfaces in the same lap. We aim to provide a mix of coverage that is attractive to both fans as well as the drivers, engineers and companies working within the sport. Each issue combines news, analysis of the main issues affecting Rallycross, insightful opinion columns, feature material aimed at competitors and fans as well as award winning photography of this most exciting brand of motor sport. The readership is diverse and widespread, covering competitors and fans across Europe and Scandinavia.

The first Rallycross events will take place in America later this year and I’m beginning to get some interest from US readers already.

I’ve been working as a journalist and photographer specializing in Rallycross since 1984 and Rallycross World has become an important part of what I do over the last decade.

MagCloud has allowed me to offer a printed version of the magazine again. As a traditional, old school, journalist there is something very satisfying about having the tactile magazine in the hand, even if I am happy to accept that the majority of the circulation remains with the pdf version.

Check out the latest issue!

Publishers In Their Own Words

The International Lifestyle Magazine
by Julian Nicholson, Co-Founder of The International Lifestyle Magazine

The International Lifestyle Magazine is owned and operated by cbl media based deep in rural Spain. Starting as a regional bi-monthly magazine, we soon recognized, aided by detailed analytics that its content was appealing to people all over the world. International Lifestyle Magazine was born.

Magcloud.com was an obvious choice for a hard copy distribution solution. The print on demand option allowed us to drastically cut our advertising rates, which was critical in our strategy to ride out an extremely difficult financial climate. The print on demand feature also fits in perfectly with our ideals in helping to protect the environment.

The ILM, as it is affectionately known, promotes positivity and seeks out the people, places and products that stand testimony to that ethos. What we end up with every month is a magazine that seriously picks you up and inspires.

Working with such established names as the National Geographic, Natural Habitat Adventures, Blue Ventures, Yellowstone Park, Dame Stephanie Shirley, Orange County Choppers, Jamie Oliver and Steenbergs to name a few, the reputation of this publication is growing in stature with every new issue.

Check out the latest issue!

Publishers In Their Own Words: XTERRA Planet

The XTERRA Planet
by Trey Garman, Magazine Editor and Vice President of XTERRA

TEAM Unlimited, the owners and producers of XTERRA, recently launched “The XTERRA Planet” – a quarterly magazine dedicated to the people, places and races of XTERRA.

The name for the publication is a spoof on the fictitious “Daily Planet,” the Metropolis newspaper that employed Clark Kent (aka Superman). And, just like that periodical, “The XTERRA Planet” will cover the exploits of superheroes in our community.

We’ve been building this magnificent collection of story ideas and images since our first race back in 1996, and now with this magazine we’ll be able to showcase the amazing people and incredible photography we’ve gathered along the way.

The late Steve Larsen graces the cover of the inaugural issue, a tribute to a man who made great contributions to XTERRA through the years. Other features include dramatic photo spreads, a piece on Jamie Whitmore’s “Miracle Twins”, a destination feature on Henderson, Nevada where the XTERRA West Championship will be held, fun Q and A’s with the sports biggest stars, updates from races around the world, and a story on one of the most successful trail run bloggers of our time.

Check out the latest issue!

Publisher Spotlight: Fotoblur Magazine

After struggling to get his work published in print, software developer and photography enthusiast Lance Ramoth set up a little spot on the Internet where he and a few photographer friends could easily post their fine art images. Through the site, Ramoth reckoned, they could encourage one another, vote for their “community favorites” to be featured on the home page and enjoy some great talent that might otherwise go unnoticed.

He dubbed the site fotoblur.com, and before long, with word of mouth and the magic of the Internet, itself, his small group in early 2007 blossomed into an international community of 2,500 members today and counting.

“I was surprised by how well it worked,” Ramoth says. “The images that the community selected as their favorites were among some of the best photographs I had seen. Launching our own magazine just seemed like the next step given that we had a pool of great photographers who would provide the content.”

And photographers who appreciate the reproduction quality of print. “It’s just dramatically better than what you see online,” Ramoth says. “Plus, Web sites come and go, but magazines can last decades. And for those of us chronically attached to our computers, it’s nice to be able to enjoy a magazine anywhere besides on our screens.”

Ramoth’s instincts were spot on. The first issue of Fotoblur Magazine drew 600 submissions from the fotoblur.com community. Issue 2 brought in 800. By the time Issue 3 (the most recent issue) came around, Ramoth was overwhelmed with 1,400 images.

Just as the fotoblur.com community votes for favorite images to be featured on the site’s home page, members also vote on which images should appear in the magazine. Ramoth and a small group of editors review the top 10 percent of the vote-getters, selecting 40 or so black-and-white and color images per issue that represent a diverse cross-section of subjects and a range of photographers, themselves.

Ramoth then designs the issues, usually devoting a full page to each image with very limited text and no advertising.

“There are already a lot of photo magazines out there with articles and ads,” he says. “But our philosophy is all about the image and the celebration of it. Each image contains a story in itself and requires a full page for it to be fully processed and appreciated by the viewer.”

The decision to bypass advertising meant, of course, that Ramoth needed a way to print the magazine without incurring any expenses. He heard about MagCloud from a colleague and decided to give it a try.

“I’ll admit that I was skeptical about the print quality,” he says. “But when I held the first issue in my hand, I was simply blown away — it truly exceeded my expectations. The color of the images was spot on. There was little to no color cast on the black-and-white images, which was one of my major concerns. I just remember thinking, I really did it!”

Since Ramoth runs fotoblur.com and manages the magazine almost singlehandedly, he appreciates that MagCloud handles all the printing, shipping and order processing details. He looked into working with a few newsstand magazine distributors, but found that the upfront costs and the need for advertising to support the distribution would have threatened his creative vision. “MagCloud allows me the freedom to concentrate on the results I desire creatively,” he says.

As each issue is published, Ramoth spreads the word via fotoblur.com, as well as through Twitter (@fotoblur) and digital publication sharing services like Issuu (issuu.com) and Scribd (scribd.com) and various file sharing services. Contributors to the issues also help publicize the magazine’s availability.

Ramoth makes the issues free to download and view online and supplies links to MagCloud for those who’d like to purchase the print version, $15.40.

Ramoth hasn’t given up on his hope to turn Fotoblur into a newsstand magazine if he can attract enough purchasers. He’s also considering combining all four of this year’s issues into a hardcover book.

His advice for other potential magazine publishers? Purchase a good software package, create the content and do it. “When I told people that I wanted to start a photography magazine, they thought I was crazy,” Ramoth says. “But I just didn’t listen — I just did it anyway.

“Be creative, publish, then promote,” he adds. “It’s an amazing experience in itself, and you’ll feel something special when you turn that idea in to something tangible.”

Check out the latest issue!

Publisher Spotlight: Wally Dog’s Tale

As an educational assistant at the Edmonton Public School District in Alberta, Canada, Irene Read has plenty of experience in educating children with special needs — children with autism, in particular. She noted early on in her teaching career that these youngsters struggle to focus — and the importance of simplicity in communication.

To help increase the children’s comfort and comprehension levels, Read began taking photos of various objects and using them as part of how she communicated. “If we were going to the washroom, for example, I’d show a picture of the washroom,” she says. “For some, these photos did help them make the connection much more quickly.”

With photographs making such a difference in her classroom, Read began thinking about applying the same concept to children’s books.

“Books with fantasy illustrations are gorgeous, but children with autism have enough trouble relating to the real world, let alone sorting out graphic interpretations of reality,” Read notes. “And they can’t process visually complicated, busy pages. I thought that seeing real photographs on the pages would make more sense to them — just as we’d seen in the classroom. And I also thought that not just autistic children, but all children could really appreciate the merit of one photograph presented on a single page.”

An avid photographer with a willing model in Wally Dog, her family’s 10-year-old Jack Russell Terrier, Read put together a simple story using large photographs of Wally and short captions to describe him. She wasn’t sure what to do with it until her husband mentioned reading about MagCloud in their local Edmonton Journal newspaper.

The idea that she could produce a magazine about Wally with no upfront costs seemed like a perfect fit. She uploaded her first 12-page issue of Wally Dog’s Tale to MagCloud’s Web site and, when it was ready for printing, began telling her friends and family members.

“I got a lot of positive feedback and a lot of smiles,” she says. “Everyone who knows Wally loves the magazine. My mother-in-law sold a few copies at her senior center. And a couple of friends bought copies. One friend purchased a copy because he says he thinks I’m going to be famous!”

Read followed the first edition with a 16-page issue, this time introducing Wally’s friend Bird — the family’s pet dove. The issue features photos of Wally and Bird with simple captions describing them playing, eating and taking naps together.

The next four issues are based on a true story of a missing Bird and all the places Wally searches for him. The tale ends well — Wally finds Bird trapped under a basket and rescues him.

Working with MagCloud, Read says, couldn’t be easier. The responsive staff is always on hand to answer any questions. And since the magazines are primarily for children, she’s especially pleased with the thick, durable paper stock.

Read promotes Wally Dog’s Tale through word of mouth and hopes to attract the autism community and pet lovers everywhere. When she returns to school next year — she’s on leave at the moment — she’ll be eager to see firsthand how her students respond to Wally Dog.

“I hope that adults who love to read to children and talk about what they see in the pictures will enjoy the magazines,” Read says. “And I hope that children with autism find them attractive and informative as they try to make sense of the world. It’s thrilling to see something that was initially just a little hobby come together in material form.

“MagCloud lets anyone turn ideas into reality,” Read adds. “Unlike big magazine publishers that must please the tastes and interests of the ‘majority’ to increase sales, MagCloud gives everyone the opportunity to publish regardless of interest area or niche.”

Check out the latest issue!

Publisher Spotlight: Medical Science Liaison Quarterly

In the pharmaceutical and healthcare industries, ethical practices directly affect patients’ lives. One incorrect use of a drug to treat a disease for which it’s not approved could result in a significant adverse reaction — even death. To help ensure their products are used properly within the healthcare community, companies often employ medical science liaisons (MSLs) to build and foster collaborations with hospital and university scientists, researchers and physicians — and even government constituents.

No one, perhaps, is a better expert in, and advocate of, the contributions of MSLs than Jane Chin Ph.D. A former MSL herself, Chin created the Medical Science Liaison Quarterly (mslquarterly.com) in 2003, the first Web site — in fact, the first resource — devoted specifically to MSLs.

“Even though MSLs connect with so many people, it can be an isolating job,” Chin says. “Most work from their home offices. When I was an MSL, there was nothing on the Internet or in print that pertained to our field. So I started my own Web site.”

Chin researched and wrote articles and reports that she knew would interest MSLs, and she even conducted surveys and shared best practices. Her site became so popular that she left her job and founded the MSL Institute (mslinstitute.com) the very next year.

Along with offering MSL hiring, training and consulting services, Chin continued to publish the MSL Quarterly online. Eventually, she noticed bits and pieces of her valuable work appearing in other consultants’ training binders and presentations. She needed a publishing medium that would offer more copyright protection than the Web — one that would be immune to simple copy and paste computer keyboard commands.

“A friend told me about MagCloud, and while I know that a print magazine won’t eliminate plagiarism, it certainly makes it more difficult,” Chin says. “Plus, I liked the idea of offering clients something tangible. MSL Quarterly isn’t for leisure reading. It’s something you really want to concentrate on. Having it in print means readers can underline helpful passages and make notes in the margins.

“For mass distribution, yes, digital is a good way to go,” Chin adds. “But for a focused audience like mine, I was very excited to move to print. There’s nothing like holding paper in your hand.”

Chin published her first print issue of MSL Quarterly in January 2009 ($47), a 28-page issue focused on MSL training and business acumen. She quickly followed with nine more issues covering everything from compliance and clinical trials to metrics and salary surveys.

While most issues contain new content, Chin likes that she can revise and print popular articles and reports from the more than 100 in her MSL Quarterly Web site archives. She’s even published popular chapters from in-depth research reports as their own individual magazines.

Chin promotes each issue through both her MSL Quarterly and her MSL Institute sites. She includes links to MagCloud’s site, inviting readers to preview the issues before placing orders.

Because MSL Quarterly is a scholarly publication, Chin appreciates MagCloud’s easy-to-use layout template and the print quality. “My readers are just interested in content — not the design — so a simple template works fine for my purposes,” she says. “The print quality is what’s important. My magazine is semi-glossy with full color. I’m very pleased by the quality and consistency of each issue.”

And, of course, the price is right. “I really need to keep my overhead as small as possible, so I love that MagCloud has no upfront fees,” Chin says. “I’m willing for MagCloud to take a percentage of each magazine I sell. I feel much better about that than having my profit eliminated all together by people illegally sharing my work.”

So has the magazine eliminated all MSL Quarterly copyright violations?

“Obviously, if someone wants to plagiarize or otherwise violate copyrights, there’s little I can do to prevent it,” Chin says. “However, a company training department recently placed an order for a large quantity of magazines to distribute to its MSL team. Before, they’d probably purchase one of my articles online and then email it to everyone. So, overall, I’d say that printing the magazine has reduced copyright infringement and the illegal sharing — both of which were cutting into my bottom line before.”

Check out the latest issue!

Publisher Spotlight: film & festivals

From Prague to Paducah, large cities and small towns around the world play host to 4,000 film festivals annually, attracting millions of filmmakers and cinema lovers eager to see their favorite artists unveil their silver screen masterpieces. While Variety and other mass media outlets cover the likes of Cannes and Sundance, only film and festivals magazine covers them all, even the smallest of festivals, spotlighting independent filmmakers who wouldn’t normally attract attention from the mainstream press.

“We were getting a good reputation for the quality of our coverage, so we decided to carry on,” Patmore says. “We opted for a digital format magazine, which happened to coincide with our already planned ‘green issue,’ in which we covered the environmental impact of film festivals and the movie industry. So we thought that would be a good tie-in as we relaunched the magazine in digital format.”

Recognizing the value of print, however, Patmore was hesitant to give it up entirely. When he searched the Web for print-on-demand resources, he found MagCloud.

“I thought it would be a good complementary option to the digital version because we could print with MagCloud without any upfront costs or any minimum orders,” Patmore says. “So we decided to give it a try, and here we are.”

Each issue of film and festivals features a specific theme, including that first environmental issue. Other topics so far have included filmmaking in Australia, Latin America and in Asia, children’s film festivals, microbudget British films and a spotlight on women filmmakers around the world. Thanks to the affordability of MagCloud, Patmore now publishes 10 issues a year instead of the original four.

A small team of writers and regular freelancers, along with guest contributors — usually indie filmmakers, themselves — provide the magazine’s content. Patmore solicits story ideas from them and makes assignments, tapping into each writer’s area of expertise. After editing the incoming pieces, he spends about five days designing the magazine and sourcing the photography. He then uploads the files to MagCloud for the print-on-demand version of the magazine, as well as to Yudu (yudu.com) for the digital version.

“I’m very impressed with MagCloud’s quality,” Patmore says. “I used digital printing for other jobs years ago. The technology has certainly improved. And you can’t beat having a magazine you can hold in your hands. I still feel the best way to read anything is on paper. I also like the archival advantages of print. However, I suspect that at the moment most of our magazine sales are to people who appear in the magazine and want to show it to others.”

And print publications, Patmore has learned, have higher credibility among publicists than Web sites. “It seems that the public relations companies still have far more respect for print — print journalists are always accorded more talent access despite the fact that we now have far more online readers,” he notes. “In those terms, it is important for us to remain in some sort of print format just to ensure we can get the best content for the articles.”

Patmore promotes the magazine by word of mouth, the film and festivals Web site (filmandfestivals.com) and through Facebook. And these days at festivals, instead of handing out free issues, Patmore and his team distribute promotional postcards detailing how to order copies.

The result? “The sales of our print magazine have been very slow to start with, but are increasing,” Patmore says. “And we’ve had nothing but positive feedback for both the quality of the content and the design. Since most of the feedback is coming from film professionals, it’s very heartening.

“The print magazine was never intended to be a major source of income for us, but to serve as an alternative to the digital version,” Patmore adds. “It has certainly turned out to be more profitable than our previous print version, which only lost money. Most of our readers access our free digital version, but we see a growing number of people buying the print-on-demand version.”

Patmore’s advice to aspiring magazine creators: “If you want to do it, then do it — it can be done now almost without any capital outlay,” he says. “But make sure the content is worthy of your intended readers. Quality should be the driving force — well written, grammatically correct articles; good photography and good design with legible, correctly formatted typography. If the design aspect is not good, then it might as well be a Web site or blog.”

Publisher Spotlight: W25 Magazine

Photographer and visual artist Adi Ashkenazi was simply looking for a way for artists to meet, collaborate and share their work when he launched his W25 Magazine Web site (w25mag.com) in late summer 2008. Since then, the site has become a community portal for artists, featuring art, photography, fashion, style and music.

Photographers, illustrators, art directors, musicians and others in the expressive arts register with the site and freely submit their work, as well as their ideas and comments. Known for its edgy, trendy focus, the site became an instant hit — just as Ashkenazi anticipated.

“I was interested in seeing other people’s projects — I think all artists are,” he says. “I created the site as a ‘home’ for all artists. I wanted to show not only well-known artists with proven portfolios, but any artist with an artistic soul. W25 is where art lives and evolves.”

Originally from Tel Aviv, Ashkenazi has made New York City his artistic home since 1998. The magazine’s W25 title comes from his West 25th street address. He began making photographs as a youth, and today shoots commercial and fine photography. His art is featured in exhibits around the world.

It wasn’t long before contributors and visitors to the W25 Magazine Web site began asking for a print magazine — a request that Ashkenazi wanted to fulfill, but had no budget for mass printing.

“I started looking for a print-on-demand solution and found MagCloud just by searching the Web,” he says. “I liked that MagCloud didn’t have any upfront costs and that we didn’t have to commit to any sort of minimum order. I also like the concept of printing based strictly on orders that people place so that we’d never have wasted paper. Keeping our operation green is important to me.”

Ashkenazi asked some artist friends to help him select several unusual fashion photographs and illustrations for the first print issue, which appeared in October 2008 ($12.50). Ashkenazi does all the design and layout himself, and he promotes the magazine through the W25 Magazine Web site, a Facebook group (now nearing 1,000 members) and by word of mouth. He also receives quite a bit of media and art-related blog coverage.

Now, eight issues later, Ashkenazi remains just as pleased with the results as he did from the beginning.

“From the very first proof, MagCloud’s quality has been beautiful,” Ashkenazi says. “I’ve tried a few other vendors just to compare, and they are a far cry from what MagCloud can do.”

Demand for newspapers and general news magazines may be on the decline, but Ashkenazi says magazines like his will continue to grow in popularity. “People like to buy unique magazines and artsy magazines,” he says. “These are not the kind of magazines you read and throw away. These are the kind of magazines you keep and collect.”

And the kind of magazine where artists like to see their work showcased. Ashkenazi receives so many quality submissions each week from all over the world that he’s revised his original bimonthly publishing schedule to a monthly one. He accepts published and unpublished work for consideration, looking primarily for pieces that stretch the boundaries of self-expression.

“I like simple yet sophisticated work, and I’m interested in the way something is presented and the story behind it,” he says. “I wouldn’t publish anyone specifically because of what he or she has done in the past. I just look at the art, itself.”

Ashkenazi notes that the site and magazine require a significant amount of personal time on his part. He includes his own work only occasionally, and never as a leading feature. So why spend so much time promoting others?

“This is a community that I wanted to build — I get a lot of satisfaction from it,” Ashkenazi says. “I receive emails from artists all the time, thanking me for sharing their art. They’ll say something like, ‘I was so down and something nice finally happened when you published my work.’ It makes me feel really good.”

Ashkenazi often suggests MagCloud to other artists for use as a promotional tool. “Putting portfolios together costs a fortune these days,” he says. “But with MagCloud, you can put together an issue of your work and submit it to your clients every few months. It’s an amazing niche in the market.”

Ashkenazi is confident that W25 Magazine will continue to grow, and that he’ll eventually hire staff members and attract advertisers. That MagCloud makes the print process so easy, he says, is reason enough for others interested in publishing to give it a try.

“If you want to make something that people will buy, why not do it?” he says. “And with MagCloud, it doesn’t cost you a dime. If W25 Magazine starts getting, say, 50,000 orders, I will consider other options. But for now, print-on-demand is perfect, and MagCloud delivers the best quality out there. It makes everybody happy.”

Publisher Spotlight: Kalina Magazine

On Jan. 11, 2000, Noah Kalina, then 19, began photographing himself in the same pose with the same expression every day. In 2006, he posted the Noah K. Everyday project on YouTube. Within a week, 1 million viewers watched as Kalina’s face— and fashions —changed via a fast-moving, six-minute montage of six years of daily photos shown in sequential order. (12 million have viewed the video, to date.)

Kalina became a cyber sensation, which led to international media coverage, celebrity appearances and commercials and, in perhaps the highest form of flattery, seeing his video parodied in an episode of The Simpsons.

Today, the Brooklyn-based freelance photographer is frequently on assignment for New York Magazine, Blender, Rolling Stone, Esquire, Forbes, VH1, MTV, Sony, Neiman Marcus and other high-end clients, photographing fashions, musicians, interiors and any number of advertising campaigns.

While Kalina takes great pride in all of his work, his collection of images from a popular T-shirt campaign are among his favorites — so much so that he began looking for ways to publish them aside from their commercial use.

“I’d been photographing this particular model for more than three years, and there was just something I saw in the photos,” Kalina says. “The images were used for advertising, but I couldn’t stand not to use them for something else. I wanted to find a place to put them — a place where they’d fit.”

Kalina was hoping to find some casual and accessible medium — even something that would allow him to experiment a bit. When he came across the MagCloud Web site, he recognized right away that a print-on-demand magazine would be the perfect vehicle. “I especially liked the fact that MagCloud had no set-up fees,” he says. “I don’t have to worry about selling a minimum amount of magazines. Plus, it’s got me thinking of project ideas that I can pull off in only a few months.”

Kalina decided to give MagCloud a try, with the idea that each issue would center on a single theme or concept. He enlisted Jeffrey Docherty, one of his favorite art directors, to create the design. “I went over to Jeffrey’s house and said, ‘We’re making a magazine,'” Kalina recalls. “He created the Kalina logo and designed the whole magazine. It took just a couple of hours of design and tweaks, and then we had what we wanted.”

With that, the first issue of Kalina, titled Why Wouldn’t You Love Me?, was born. The 60-page issue, featuring those favorite model photographs, came out in February 2009 ($17), with Bean, a 44-page issue devoted to photographs of Kalina’s cat, following in April ($12). He plans to publish a new issue every two to three months.

Kalina promotes the magazine by email, his blog (blog.noahkalina.com), Twitter, Facebook and his Flickr site (www1.flickr.com/photos/noahkalina). He also created a Kalina Magazine site (kalinamagazine.com) where visitors can view sample pages before clicking over to the MagCloud site to purchase copies.

Not surprisingly, Kalina’s promotional efforts spread virally, with other bloggers and social media users helping him get the word out as each issue becomes available.

Most buyers of the magazine are existing followers of his photography, but Kalina believes those interested in art and photographs in general will be attracted to the magazine, as well. The print medium, he says, is a perfect complement to his online popularity — especially with the high print quality that MagCloud delivers.

“People still like objects and they like to collect things,” he says. “I’m a fan of photography as much as I am a photographer, myself. I like to collect photography books and prints, especially by artists who strike a particular chord with me. I think most people who enjoy art are like that.”

Kalina finds the magazine a useful promotional tool, too. He mails copies to specific photography editors and art directors he’s worked with in the past — or would like to work with in the future, using magazine sales proceeds to cover the postage costs.

Kalina’s advice for other artists thinking of creating a magazine?

“I get asked that a lot — there’s really not a right way or a wrong way to do anything in the art world,” he says. “Make the work that you like, and if you like it and put it out there, chances are other people will like it, too. These days, most things will work. You just have to devote some time to it. It doesn’t hurt to try new things.”

To prepare for an upcoming issue, Kalina plans to reach out to other artists he likes and invite them to contribute. He’ll then select his favorites for publication.

“I can see Kalina evolving into an open magazine and making other photographers part of this,” he says. “One of the things I love about MagCloud is that it’s given me a new medium to think about. And I think it’s inspired a lot of people to look into magazine self-publishing and try it for themselves.”

Kalina, by the way, continues to photograph himself. While fans clamor for more of the Noah K. Everyday project in video form, the daily self-documentarian has yet to commit to a second installment. But he doesn’t rule it out.