Chris O’Leary, Fatboy Zine
The page functions as a hub of London’s best local eateries and their delicious dishes, celebrating these spots in all their day-to-day glory. Many of them have distinct shopfronts, too, which 30-year-old Rangaswami never fails to point out, often via poetic captions about the history of hot dogs, old school cash registers or musings over what a ch
... See moreJade Wickes • Caffs Not Cafes Finds the Magic in London’s Old School Joints
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travel magazine
Here Magazine started as the stories and pictures we picked up on the road and shared with our immediate circle, then grew into something bigger. Now, we explore places through the lens of local, creative, and influential people.
Here | Travel & Lifestyle Magazine from Away
Alex Dobrenko added
Shuya Gong added
Terence Koh
Terence Koh is a Beijing-born Canadian artist who deals with spirituality, subculture, and sexuality through his durational performances, sculptures, installations, and digital media. For decades, Koh has been compiling photographs and texts into zines and custom books – formerly under the pseudonym ‘asianpunkboy’ and under his own name since 2004. When asked what motivates him to make zines in a digital age, he replied with a handwritten note:
The Skinny: Independent Cultural Journalism
theskinny.co.ukAndrew McCluskey added
Bobby Hundreds • This Is Not a T-Shirt
Taste • Closing, Not Fusing, The Gap
Keely Adler added
sari added
If magazines were containers for taste, the creators of the creator economy are vessels.
Daisy Alioto • The Taste Economy
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