![]() ![]() Southern Extreme Bullriding in Abingdon, Virginia, as featured in The American Guideīefore The American Guide, there was The American Guide Series – an Encyclopedia Americana of tour books and pamphlets published on every state during the Great Depression era of the 1930s and early 1940s. I enjoy browsing through Exposure online and and regularly check out Outside Online as well as the National Geographic Adventure blog too. My favourite printed publications would include Boat Magazine, Another Escape and The Ride Journal – all stunning and great reads. For the website, I'd say The Land That Never Melts (a pulking expedition on Baffin Island), Sitka to Hoonah (an Alaskan kayak adventure) and 125 days in Amazonia (an expedition to cross Brazil from north to south). That's incredibly difficult! The piece by Kenton Cool on the risks as well as the rewards of high-altitude adventure is an extraordinary and humbling story. Martin Hartley, a leading expedition and adventure photographer, has recently joined the team as director of photography, and National Geographic Adventurer of the Year Alastair Humphreys has also been involved in the project. We have two editors Jamie Bunchuk, an explorer and writer with a couple of expeditions under his belt, and Andrew Mazibrada, a lawyer, author and freelance writer. I look after the website production and design side of things and deal with the writers and photographers. The website has grown rapidly to become a great resource for adventure travel inspiration and the move into print has been a long-term ambition for me. Three years ago I decided to combine my passion and training for good design and typography with my other interests – in particular, being engrossed in adventure, expeditions and exploration. I've been a freelance graphic designer for 12 years, working mainly on promotional and ecommerce websites. ![]() Sidetracked started as a website but recently moved into print with a premium quality bi-annual journal, and we're looking at additional digital channels too. The stories are told by the men and women who undertake them, accompanied by incredible photography or video. Sidetracked is an adventure travel brand that captures and presents the experience of some of the most breathtaking adventures taking place throughout the world. And online there's Sidetracked, a magazine about exploration and expeditions (see below). And though not strictly travel, there are a few surf/skate magazines out there which instil a sense of wanderlust, especially Acid. We've been following Boat since their first issue on Sarajevo. We even got to publish one of Marcelo's poems for the first time.Ĭan you recommend any other travel publications (print or online) that we should read? The second is a piece we commissioned by LA-based poet/translator David Shook who wrote about his journey to Equatorial Guinea to find Marcelo Ensema Nsang, a poet whose work he'd become mildly obsessed with. It's difficult to pick, but two seem to have stood out: the first is Barnaby Rogerson's essay about the current state of travel writing. Tell us about the feature you're most proud of The magazine's art director is Pieter Stander, who's worked with us numerous times before. I left university in 2009, and have been writing, editing and working in magazine publishing ever since. Amy has been editing another travel magazine for the best part of a decade and used to work in book publishing. Who works on it and what are their backgrounds?Īmy Sohanpaul and I edit Renegade together. It's exciting to live in a time when, thanks to the internet, print is an unknown again and there are plenty of people out there doing wonderful things with it. ![]() We're also constantly inspired by the ever-growing market for independent magazines. We were seeing so much excellent work going unnoticed and we wanted Renegade to become a platform on which these stories could be published. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |