I just read an article in the September issue of Vogue that made my
day.
My day job right now is to sell print—that’s how I am supporting myself
financially. However, I am a print evangelist 24/7, meaning I brag about print
all the time: its benefits, the creativity involved, how necessary it is especially in a digital world, and how it helps companies and individuals stand out from an overly-saturated digital market. So, needless to say, when my
favorite fashion magazine is publishing the very same things I’ve been
saying to people the past couple years, admittedly a little more stylishly, I
get very happy.
Vogue’s article by Robert Sullivan states that “despite the
long-trumpeted rise of digital media, a handful of New York women are
championing conventional print--be it in the form of magazines, stationery, or
good old-fashioned books.”
Below is the first paragraph of this article, entitled The
Fine Print:
You thought print was dead, kaput--especially now, as
more and more of us see the world through Google-colored glasses. But lo! Print
is not only not dead--it's back, at least in certain circles. As I type,
magazines are being birthed off-line, and more and more independent bookstores
are opening. People are even printing stationery again, despite what texting
has done to their penmanship. "Sometimes I feel like I am doubling down
into the tactile world," says Sarah McNally, owner of McNally Jackson, a
little bookstore in Manhattan's Nolita with big plans for expansion, as we
shall explain in a bit.
I obviously can’t put the entire article up here because
that’s why you’re supposed to purchase the subscription. But in a nutshell,
these are the main points:
- Print is not necessarily back, it is just changed. Since you are no longer required to use paper for correspondence, when it is used, it affects with more gravity.
- People want beautiful things and people are also tactile. You can look at print as an event in and of itself.
- An example of print making waves is the print-only magazine Cherry Bombe, which focuses on women and food. A combination of amazing photography, good paper stock and excellent inks have readers flocking to the publication.
- Sarah McNally, referenced in the first paragraph of the article as the owner of a small bookstore in Manhattan, has a new print shop in the Nolita neighborhood of Manhattan. She sells lithographs, Risographs and letterpress posters advertising a John Cage performance circa 1952.
- The final point is, don’t give up on the digital world. Just recognize how the old world just keeps influencing the new one.
I 100% agree with this article and am excited to see that
other people are getting the value of print. I’m going to
make a point to visit Sarah McNally’s bookstore and print shop when I go visit
NYC in a couple weeks. Thank goodness for people like her.
Thanks for reading!