The Photographer's Mail

The Photographer's Mail was the only commercial photography industry publication in New Zealand. It was a monthly broadsheet newspaper published eleven times a year, that was distributed free to the professional photography community.

The Photographer's Mail
The Photographer's Mail logo
Categoriesphotography
FrequencyMonthly
Circulation17,000
PublisherParkside Media
Year founded1991
CompanyParkside Media
CountryNew Zealand
Based inAuckland
LanguageEnglish
ISSN1171-9214

History and profile

The Photographer's Mail was launched in 1991 as a free magazine.[1] The magazine was purchased by Parkside Media in 2007 to complement D-Photo magazine which focuses more on consumer and enthusiast photography.

The Photographer's Mail

In January 2010, it was announced that Parkside Media was to suspend publication of The Photographer's Mail for the time being, in a statement from the editor, published in the forums of the sister title D-Photo.[2] The Photographer's Mail was restarted as a bi-monthly magazine[1] and is currently in print by Parkside Media.

Magazine contents

As of the November 2008 issue, the typical contents included:

  • Editor column
  • Readers' letters
  • Exhibition listings
  • USA report
  • New Zealand photography news, including new product releases
  • Competition
  • Interview with a professional photographer
  • PSNZ, AIPA and NZIPP news
  • Trade noticeboard
  • Image editing tutorial
  • How-to feature

Website

The Photographer's Mail shared its website with D-Photo. Daily news articles were available weekdays which were additional to magazine content. Full magazine articles were available from previous issues, often including additional photos and information (including videos) that could not be fitted into the magazine. No physical back issues are stored of the magazine.

gollark: Plus, again, extensive and useful sandboxing.
gollark: Actually, the potatOS shell is just the regular one.
gollark: No, PotatOS is real.
gollark: Seems unlikely.
gollark: PotatOS does, however, run its own BIOS to run user code more safely (though within the confines of the usual BIOS) and crash the actual BIOS's parallel-ing to run Polychoron on top.

References

  1. "The Photographer's Mail". King Size. 12 September 2013. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  2. Statement on D-Photo forums
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