Stack Magazines
Stack Magazines
Conversations with independent publishers, telling the stories behind the stories in some of our favourite magazines.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Aug 6, 2021 • 33min
Plastikcomb's experimental arts publishing
"The whole magazine itself becomes a piece of art..." Aaron Beebe is the founder and art director of Plastikcomb, a magazine that champions collage, comics, fine art and more, all of it unified by a low brow pop aesthetic. There’s something raw and rough and experimental about Plastikcomb – its pages break out of the orderly grids of contemporary magazine design and instead respond to the featured artwork to create something that is itself a piece of art, and in this conversation Aaron speaks about his influences and the series of happy accidents that led him to this point.

Jul 30, 2021 • 25min
Bum magazine's risograph experiment
"I don't think we've made the perfect Bum yet..." Lee Marable and Roosa Melentjeff are the editors and designers of Bum, a lovely risograph printed magazine based in Helsinki and dedicated to exploring stories around arts, architecture and design. As they explain in this conversation, the magazine really started because they wanted to experiment with risograph printing, and I think it’s clear they’ve totally fallen in love with this unpredictable and painstaking method of printing.

Jul 23, 2021 • 32min
Balcony uncovers art in the everyday
"We put the artist as a human before the work..." Audrey Rose Smith and Vicente Muñoz are the editor and creative director of Balcony, the new magazine that explores art in the everyday. Both Audrey and Vicente work in New York in jobs connected with the art world, and Balcony is the result of their frustration with the way art is commonly discussed – they want to present this intimate, behind-the-scenes view of artists as a way of challenging the commercial, event-driven narrative that tends to dictate which artists are covered in the mainstream press.

Jul 16, 2021 • 29min
Kinfolk's new magazine about kids
"I hope it makes people feel good..." Harriet Fitch Little is editor of Kinfolk magazine and editor-in-chief of Kindling, the new title published by Kinfolk to explore the subject of bringing up children. In this conversation she explains how the Kinfolk team ended up making a magazine about raising kids, how the pandemic played its part, and why it was particularly important that Kindling remained an open and non-judgemental magazine.

May 21, 2021 • 26min
Football reflects on America in Spiral magazine
"American football is a reflection of America – good and bad..." Shawn Ghassemitari is editor-in-chief and creative director of Spiral, the magazine that takes a creative look at American football. I was really interested to hear about his reasons for making the magazine – his parents immigrated to the US from Iran in 1978 and he speaks about the sport as a way of assimilating into American culture, and also as a way of reflecting all elements of that culture, both good and bad.

May 14, 2021 • 28min
Batshit Times takes an absurd look at our dark days
"Things are going to be weird for the rest of our lives..." Peter McCain is the creative director and editor-in-chief of Batshit Times, the New York-based satire and arts magazine that released its first issue in April last year. That first issue was themed ‘Quarantine’, and when I read it I assumed the whole project was conceived in response to the pandemic, but as he explains in this conversation, there are lots of other things he’s much more worried about.

May 7, 2021 • 31min
Setting a strange tone with Synchron magazine
"We just wanted to know – what do people care about now?" Lea Kloepel is editor of Synchron, the magazine she launched earlier this year with her boyfriend and art director Johannes Farfsing, and which stands out as one of the strangest and most striking magazine launches I’ve seen for a long time. It's dedicated to exploring contemporary visual art and fiction, but it does so in a way that is brilliantly inventive and entirely its own – Lea's explanation of the origins of their weirdly organic typography is one of my all-time favourite examples of geeky magazine design obsession!

Apr 30, 2021 • 29min
Yana magazine takes a fresh look at juggling
"Juggling is just playing – it should talk to everyone..." Florence Huet is the founder and editor of Yana, an extraordinary magazine about juggling that is on a mission to combat the stereotypes and assumptions about what it means to juggle. It's packed full of geeky references that Florence explains in this conversation, helping to open up even further a magazine that had already totally caught my imagination.

Apr 23, 2021 • 35min
Novella's collaged, personal approach to fashion
"We all wear clothes – we all have something to say about them..." Abigail Buzbee and Ryan Hunt are editor and art director of Novella, an experimental fashion magazine that takes a handmade, literary approach to its subject. In this conversation they explain why they were so excited to play with the conventions of the fashion magazine, and how at the start of the project they actually didn’t intend to make a magazine at all.

Dec 18, 2020 • 27min
Nork magazine's evolving ode to the north
"You go mad if you don't do anything here..." Agnese Zile is creative director and editor-in-chief of Nork, the magazine she started as "an ode to the north", but which has evolved over the years to become a broader exploration of the world, though still with a distinctly dark perspective evocative of her adopted home in Tromsø. In this episode she talks about her reasons for changing the magazine, the challenges of independent publishing, and the strange lure that keeps pulling her back to publishing this labour of love.


