Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12
Results 16 to 30 of 30

Thread: Taunton Press sold to Active Interest Media…

  1. #16
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    Peoria, IL
    Posts
    4,548
    Quote Originally Posted by Edward Weber View Post
    I'm not naive, I was trying to be optimistic. FWW was one of the best but they've been slipping for a while, as have all the others with competition from the web.
    Many people these days seem to be much more likely to watch a free video from someone, anyone without knowing their knowledge base or skill level, rather than read a magazine, which they have to pay for, written by professionals.
    Why bother, three finger Louie can do it, I've seen his videos

    While holding out hope, I intellectually know that it's just a matter of time until all of these publications are gone forever. Along with the knowledge they contain. We're left with resin poured river tables and cutting boards as the pinnacle of content.
    Everything goes in cycles. I'm a farm boy raised in the 50s. Where I grew up, family farming is just about dead. But I'm thrilled to see young people starting small food farms and community supported agriculture. These people actually grow things to eat, not just crops to make animal feed, processed sweetener, and fuel. Those little farms are the future of healthy food, like the farms before the 60s. Woodworking will come back when young people get tired of 3D printers and resin tables on steel hair pin legs. They just won't be able to learn from magazines like we did.
    Last edited by Richard Coers; 12-20-2023 at 8:14 PM.

  2. #17
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    Upland CA
    Posts
    5,571
    I recently quit subscribing to WoodSmith, and I have every issue also. Since being sold a few years ago, and at least one more time after that, I am done watching the owners try to turn a profit selling old stuff that is repeats and monetize anything they can. The turnover of editors has been rapid too. I am done with them.

    Another magazine that shocked me last week is Motor Trend, which I have subscribed to since the late 50's. The latest issue says how proud they are to turn the monthly magazine into a coffee table style issue 4 times a year. They own TV companies with their own channel, as well as many programs, shows, races, etc. I cannot believe they are broke, just greedy.
    Rick Potter

    DIY journeyman,
    FWW wannabe.
    AKA Village Idiot.

  3. #18
    Join Date
    Apr 2017
    Location
    Southwest US
    Posts
    1,072
    I began subscribing to Wood when I first stated taking the Woodworking Classes at the local Comm. College. (btw I'm still taking those classes)
    The deal was something like $10 for 3 years.
    When it came time to renew, of course the price was much higher.
    Told them I would renew for $25 for 5 years ($5 per year) ...take it or leave it. They took it.
    That subscription runs out in Nov 2024. I'll dicker with them again come next November.

    I'm still a novice and have learned not a few things from Wood. (I've also learned a whole lot from all of you here, and not only about Woodworking. )
    I figured (back then) that ~$5 per annum is pretty cheap and I could certainly get my money's worth; some of the shop helps for storage and jigs were very good for my small footprint situation.
    If I can finagle a good rate for the next 3 years at least (5 years would be better) I'll renew it.
    Last edited by Patty Hann; 12-21-2023 at 6:41 AM.
    "What you see and what you hear depends a great deal on where you are standing.
    It also depends on what sort of person you are.”

  4. #19
    Join Date
    Feb 2018
    Location
    N CA
    Posts
    1,290
    I had the same thing happen to me, Val. I called and the charge was dropped.. Taunton has always driven me nuts with subscription updates. Subscribe for a couple years and almost immediately you get re-up notices. FWW is the only mag I still take. The others have shut down. I was sorry to see Bimmer close. I had an article on one of my cars years ago. It is hard to find a store with a decent magazine rack today and will become harder.

  5. #20
    Patty that's a great technique .
    I like purchasing the old catalogs. It drives me nuts to buy something and then be stuck without access to stuff. I bought ShopNotes Catalog which I really enjoy since I'm slowly building a shop. I have another one on a thumb drive. Apple+news allows selection of Wood Magazine and a host of other things I enjoy like This Old House & Wall Street Journal. I subscribed once to WWGOA for like $5/year but immediately turned off auto renew at like $50/year. I like to design so I don't get these magazines/books for that portion. More about how to do things which I also get here and on YouTube.
    I only bring this up because one of my gripes with the model that everything is moving to is loss of access. I still have all the old ShopNotes issue available to me. Just not the new stuff. WWGOA I lost the money and the library. That's why I don't subscribe to Fine WW or similar. If I buy the library for $x.xx, to me I should get some type of permanent access to what I've purchased. I think FWW did that once or twice but I didn't buy it and now kinda wish I had... Oh well.

    An old proverb says that to the making of many books there is no end and much devotion to them is wearisome to the soul. There will always be WW content in one fashion or another. I just gotta spend more of my time in the shop building things lol.

  6. #21
    I was a FWW subscriber from issue 1. The first 50 issues were amazing. it seemed like the articles were timed to whatever problem I was trying to solve. Tage frid's hand tool expertise, machine set-up, building a 3 phase converter, all showed up just in time to help me out.

    After the 50th I continued to subscribe, but the topics started to repeat. Their advertisers wanted new woodworkers with equipment needs and the articles went back to basics. When a router review showed up on the cover around #150, I bailed.

    I still use the first 50 as a resource.

  7. #22
    IMO, this thread is starting to stray into how much people are willing to pay.
    If you want to learn certain skills and techniques from those who have the expertise, then you have to pay, simple as that. I don't work for free, why should they.
    The internet, while a great source of free content, also has a negative effect of making people think all content should be free. The "I'm not paying for that" syndrome.

    I have no idea why FWW was acquired by AIM, nor does it really matter. ALL instructive publications are feeling the demise of printed media. People will now get their information on a given subject from webpages and mostly YT videos, where it's a crap shoot.

    We'll all just have to wait and see

  8. #23
    Join Date
    Dec 2019
    Location
    The old pueblo in el norte.
    Posts
    1,906
    I've seen plenty of bad info in publications as well. With that said, I agree wholeheartedly with the statement that people now believe all entertainment content should be free. Which is a shame, as ultimately it devalues the skills needed to provide good content.

    I rather suspect, given my experience with pop wood, I'll be letting my subscription slip. We'll see, but the stack of FWW mags already shows a significant decline.
    ~mike

    happy in my mud hut

  9. #24
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Lewiston, Idaho
    Posts
    28,559
    I pay for the unlimited access to FWW. I love its knowledge base as I try to learn to "new to me" techniques or get design ideas from others more skilled than myself. Until I see a decline, I will continue to access it as much as I can. I hope it doesn't decline and if it does, I will just drop my membership.
    Last edited by Ken Fitzgerald; 12-21-2023 at 7:10 PM.
    Ken

    So much to learn, so little time.....

  10. #25
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    Cache Valley, Utah
    Posts
    1,724
    I had a subscription to Woodsmith from the beginning until about 15 years ago. When I was just getting into woodworking, it was a great reference and I got a lot of project ideas from it. I had all the issues in binders, and as I recall, I donated them to the high school where I was teaching shop when I retired.

    I have had a subscription to FWW since the late 70s, and have very nearly a complete set (missing a few of the early ones). I'm not renewing after my current subscription expires . I have a stack of about two years worth on the end table next to my chair in the living room and I haven't even looked at most of them. Eventually I'll scan through them then add them to the shelf over my desk, and will eventually probably give them to a younger woodworker.

  11. #26
    Join Date
    Jan 2018
    Location
    Cleveland, Ohio
    Posts
    85
    I made a couple of those high chairs back in 1989. One is in storage (my kids haven't had kids yet) but the other went to my in-laws. Their daughter just started using it for her second child.

    In those days Woodsmith provided a recipe, and I knew that I'd like whatever I project I made. Eventually I learned enough that I didn't need a recipe. But with those new skills I could go to a Woodsmith project, make changes in the design, and make something even better (to me) than the plan. The archived plans are Woodsmith's Achilles heel. They make it worth buying into their library, but once you know how to make the subtle changes that cause two tables or two cabinets to differ, you really don't need another new issue with a table or cabinet. The greatest innovation that (I think) keeps them relevant are the videos and plans the Chris Fitch designs and demonstrates. Those continue to be original methods that Woodsmith hasn't taught previously.

    I visited their Des Moines campus twice. Once was when Don Peschke was fully in charge and deciding on their direction. The second was just before he sold the operation. The folks I met always appeared to be doing this for the joy of woodworking. Money was simply a necessity to make this possible. As we all expected, after being sold Woodsmith started to advertise. They experimented with guest hosts like James Hamilton ("Stumpy Nubs") but they didn't expand that to other well-known woodworkers. I think they're struggling to come up with anything that's as innovative and useful as the ideas of Adolph and Don Peschke. Copying anybody else's success can work, but (by definition) it's not innovative.

  12. #27
    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Location
    Helensburgh, Australia
    Posts
    2,711
    There is another way to look at magazines repeating stuff as they do. Years ago when we as long term hobbyists depended on them for learning and projects magazines were looked on as a reference library especially pre internet. If they don't repeat that stuff then beginners don't have that same opportunity we had but the internet has provided another source most of which is questionable in passing on the skills the magazines provided. The new beginner has no way of assessing the rubbish from good stuff on the net which is not ideal.
    Chris

    Everything I like is either illegal, immoral or fattening

  13. #28
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    SE PA - Central Bucks County
    Posts
    65,919
    The bottom line here isn't what we all individually like when it comes to woodworking magazines at this point...many of us are "of a generation" where paper magazines were our source for learning for a long time. Different titles filled different needs. (and still do most likely) But the world has changed and the number of people who actually buy paper magazines is a fraction of what it was even just 10-15 years ago. Why? It's a combination of the Internet and the very real fact that less folks are inclined to take up crafts and other specialties which in the past provided the opportunities to sell magazines. It's economics and business reality at play here. Firms like Active Interest Media are willing to buy up the publications and have a better chance of keeping most or at least some of them alive where if they continued as they were, they might likely die from lack of revenue. The titles are immaterial relative to this thread because what's at play here is an entire industry. If it's going to continue to live, it has to be more efficient so it can still produce the media.

    Meanwhile, it's clear that many of us who did the magazine thing "back in the day", found various reasons to not continue with that. It's been something like a decade and a half since I last had a subscription to anything for all the reasons that folks have already expressed. We are no longer customers...
    --

    The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...

  14. #29
    Quote Originally Posted by Randy Heinemann View Post
    My guess is that the annual subscription price for something similar to FWW Unlimited will increase; maybe significantly and it will price itself out of being reasonable for most.
    For me, they already have. After two years of subbscribing, $99/yr just wasn't worth it to me. I would probably subscribe for $40-$50/yr.

  15. #30
    I think now, the safest bet might be to buy the memory stick with all the projects. I have one up to 05 but might get the latest, as the future is uncertain. They had been on sale prior to Christmas.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •