Nourished Journal Edition Four has been released. Some features include April Gargiulo from Vintner’s Daughter, Lacy Philips from Free + Native shares her manifestation practice, Jacqui Lewis from The Broad Place talks travel, recipe for a warming turmeric bread from Sweet Laurel.
The brand new Good Sport Magazine Issue 2 is out now. Good Sport has grown and we have doubled in size. Good Sport Magazine Issue 2 explores stories that gain insight into what it means for athletes, teams, artists and sports professionals to ‘overcome’—the things they have faced to get to where they are or how they continue to strive forward in their chosen path, process and sport.
Good Sport Magazine Issue 1 is out now. Issue 1 seeks to build a strong, diverse and engaged platform in print and beyond. We cover a broad range of stories and insights from across the globe. looking at how things began and how they became a first. From historical events & world firsts, to grass roots and professional leagues.
Offscreen Magazine Issue 15 is out now. In Offscreen Issue 15 we asked professional futurist Amy Webb about how to think meaningfully about the future.
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Four & Sons Magazine Issue 5 is out now. In this issue we learn about memorial tattoos, lucky dæmons, surfing dogs, and top models (of the four-legged kind, of course). We read about the heartbreaking power of missing-pet posters and the brotherly bond between humans and working dogs.
Offscreen Magazine Issue 14 is available now at LOREM (not Ipsum)! For Issue No14 we had the pleasure of talking to Canadian photographer and app maker Lisa Bettany about her continual App Store success story; Airbnb co-founder Joe Gebbia tells us about the past, present, and future of a company that‘s forever changed the experience of travel.
Offscreen Magazine Issue 13 is out now! In Offscreen Issue No13 we speak with Kickstarter's co-founder and CEO, Yancey Strickler, about a business approach that's guided by purpose and idealism.
Offscreen Magazine Issue 12 is out now! In the new Issue, we take an insider's look at Zendesk’s impressive growth with co-founder Alexander Aghassipour; ustwo co-creator Matt ‘Mills’ Miller shows us how to create a ‘fampany’ of 250 employees while putting fun first.
In Offscreen Magazine Issue No. 11, UK government employee Mark Hurrell talks about designing functional websites without big bangs or big dramas. Joyce Kim connects the dots between human rights and digital currencies.
In Offscreen Issue No10, our anniversary issue, Amit Gupta tells his colourful life story as entrepreneur, photographer, and cancer survivor; New York-based installation artist Zach Gage shows us that art and games are closely related — at least for him.
In Offscreen Issue No. 9 designer Cameron Moll shows us how to be a successful home-office entrepreneur and dad of five; engineer Ruchi Sanghvi takes us back to her early, career-defining days at Facebook.
Offscreen Magazine Issue 8 brings you conversations with Australian-born banking maverick Josh Reich; New Orleans-based ed-tech entrepreneur Jennifer Medbery; the founder of award-winning digital agency Big Spaceship, Michael Lebowitz.
Offscreen Magazine Issue 7 is available now on loremnotipsum.com and boasts a refreshed design and even more inspiring stories. Our interviewees this time are Australian all-round talent, Cameron Adams; founder of t-shirt community Threadless, Jake Nickell.
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SPACES volume three by frankie magazine visits a whole lot of different homes and homes-away-from-home around Australia (and makes a hop, skip and jump across the Tasman to New Zealand). These places aren’t extravagant – in fact sometimes they’re as modest as a sharehouse room or travelling van.
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Spaces Volume 2 is a bookazine and collection of homes and homes-away-from-home around Australia: from the east coast capitals to the Adelaide Hills, the wilds of Tasmania and the southernmost tip of Western Australia.
frankie magazine's project SPACES is a collection of eclectic interiors from around the world. This large-format mag explores the homes, studios, shops and cafes of graphic designers, photographers, vintage collectors and shop owners.
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Pick up Smith Journal volume 12 and you’re in for quite a ride. For starters, there’s the bicycle trip from Mörön to Mörön in Mongolia with a couple of idiots who thought it would make it more interesting not to train for it.
Smith Journal Volume three is full of fascinating spaces and the stories of the inspired folks who work, live and think within them.
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Smith Journal Volume 13 is crammed with more than its fair share of sharp minds. Top of the list would have to be Solomon Shereshevsky, who remembered every single thing he’d ever come across – a great skill to have when it came to party tricks, but enough to send him crackers.
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Smith Journal Volume Ten is available now. Most of us on the internet love them. Short or drawn out, it doesn't matter, just as long as there are small bits of info with numbers next to them.
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Smith Journal Volume 16 is out now! The next edition of Smith Journal is full of people who love the thrill of a chase.
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It takes a certain kind of person to commit so fully to a task that they lose track of everything else. These obsessive types populate the pages of Smith Journal volume six.
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