Sublime Magazine

Sublime Magazine
Logo for Sublime magazine
Editor Damian and Laura Santamaria
Categories Lifestyle
Frequency Bi-monthly (every 2 months)
Publisher Sublime Magazine Ltd.
Year founded 2004
First issue 2006
Based in Highgate, London
Website http://www.sublimemagazine.com/

Sublime is an international sustainable lifestyle magazine. It is an independent bimonthly print publication dedicated to making sustainability appealing.

The magazine is based and published in Highgate, North London and is distributed in print to more than 30 countries worldwide.

The company is subsidised solely by advertising and sales of the printed and digital copies.

History

Sublime was founded in 2004 by husband and wife Damian and Laura Santamaria. In March 2004, they gathered a group of 30 media industry people to test their concept. Out of these discussions the core contributors team was formed. The concept was then promoted through events, thinktank meetings and the launch of the website. By 2005 Sublime had a group of 300 opinion-formers around the world who were willing to be involved in spreading the Sublime philosophy.[1]

Issue 0 (taster issue) was launched in September 2006, with 200,000 copies inserted into The Times and the Waitrose magazine. Issue 1 was published in January 2007 with the theme `reversing the order` featuring model Alek Wek on the front cover.

In the early days of the magazine's production, it featured in an advertisement that was displayed in front of the Queen at the opening of St Pancras railway station.,[2] in a video called The New Age of Travel. The magazine cover featured prominently at the beginning as a woman read it on the train.

It has also appeared in a video on Current TV, with the caption: "Beauty isn't skin deep. Sublime magazine launches the first international ethical glossy."[3]

The magazine has featured advertisers such as Rolex (Award for Enterprise), Divine Chocolate, Nikon, Kuoni Travel, Missoni, Rado, Oxfam, Barclays Wealth, Weleda, IWC, Lexus, Lavazza, Smart, Ben & Jerry's, Zegna and Paul Smith parfums amongst others.

Topics

Sublime covers topics such as nature, energy, fashion, technology, design and architecture, culture, food and well-being. There is a strong emphasis on community, fair trade, natural and organic products, clean technologies and sustainability. With regular features by Wayne Hemingway MBE, Jeremy Leggett, Dr Frances Corner, John Grant and Hanspeter Kuenzler.[4] on recent and relevant topics. Music reviews, book reviews and an editorial also feature alongside other articles.

Every issue of Sublime magazine has a topic or theme that the articles and other features inside relate to. Regeneration, Eclectic and Thinkers have been themes of past issues.[5]

Sublime Magazine's Thinkers Front Cover

Philosophy behind the magazine

Sublime aims to promote concepts of originality, ethical values, sustainability and diversity through its content. It is set to inspire and empower today's well-informed and well-connected readers. The sticker on the front cover of each issue reads "for creative thinkers and enquiring minds".

The magazine originally launched with the tag-line "the first ethical international lifestyle magazine", but after the first year changed to "the first sustainable international lifestyle magazine".

The editors of the magazine said in their editorial in issue 26 that "sex, money and celebrity are the three pedestals on which mainstream magazines currently stand. When we started Sublime five years ago, we set out to challenge this convention by basing our publication on the somewhat more opposing principles of integrity, respect and interdependence."[6]

Sublime's purpose is not to produce yet another green or eco magazine, but to promote a post-consumerism lifestyle that satisfies the interests of a 'transition generation'.[7]

The magazine publishes its motto on its Facebook page:

Now that the future happened yesterday
Now that we are not what we can buy
Now that we don't want to get anywhere any faster
Now that we want to make poverty history
Now that people are the most important thing for people
Now that we know that the greatest risk is not to risk
Now that we don't need to be asleep to dream
Now it's time to start again[8]

Another phrase that can often be seen is: "Bringing aesthetics & ethics together with style & soul", found throughout issues of the magazine.

Developments

The magazine is trying to develop further than print. One such development is with the Sublime Econic Award, which was launched during March 2010, in Issue 20. In the issue, it explains that "Sublime will reveal the pioneering brands that have a long-standing tradition of empathy towards the environment, those that have made groundbreaking innovations in the eco market."[9] Weleda won the first ever Econic award, with a model wearing a dress made from their Pomegranate Bodycare Packaging.[10] The creative team of Sublime is responsible for the design, production and photographic shoot of a tailor-made outfit using 'eco' products.

Another branch of the company is the sublimemagazine.es website which is a Spanish translation of the English online website. Globally, approximately 450 million people speak Spanish[11] with correspondents in Madrid, Barcelona, Mexico, São Paulo, Buenos Aires, Rio de Janeiro, Bogota and more; the website wants to reach these Spanish-speaking countries.

teens.sublimemagazine.com wants to reach out to a younger audience with a blog for teenagers. The website is run by a teenage editor and contributors and features articles and topics that it thinks teenagers would be interested in, such as music, fashion beauty and grooming.

Feedback

The Guardian published an article on Sublime and Lunch magazines in 2006. The article says that "Sublime hopes that companies will put their money where their socially responsible mouths are." It also summarises the magazine's principles in its subtitle: "Two new glossy magazines aim to show that good taste and ethical principles do mix. So will they attract enough advertisers?"[12]

TreeHugger, a prominent sustainability website, wrote about the magazine in 2005: "They have invested much time and energy into setting up the company and putting together a stellar international team of writers, photographers and other contributors.

"In the notoriously competitive world of magazine publishing where several new publications go under each year, the Sublime team have been meticulous in their market research".[13]

Divine Chocolate marketing director Charlotte Borger said "We are proud to say that we have supported Sublime since its launch. It is a beautiful magazine and they are a great partner for Divine".

"Sublime is visionary and unique. Your recent issue on water has triggered many ideas", said Francesco Bandarin, Director General for Culture Director of the World Heritage Centre.

Editors

Damian and Laura Santamaria are the editorial directors of the magazine, both of them come from a background in branding and new product/business development. They are of an Italian Argentine origin, and graduated from the National University of La Plata with an MA in visual communications. The university was pioneered by Tomás Maldonado, who "is considered one of the main theorists of the legendary Ulm Model", which "was one of the most progressive institutions for teaching design and environmental design in the 1950s and 1960s."[14][15]

In 2001 the Santamarias published a book titled Santamaria: Identity. The book features a collective of work including corporate identity, packaging and retail design as well as conceptual art, sculpture and photography devleoped by the Santamarias during their first 10 years of professional practice. The book was launched in October 2001 at Zwemmers, Soho, London. It was released at Panta Rei in Madrid at the same time.[16]

Blueprint magazine published an article about the editors in 2001.[17] The journalist writes: "Here's an international, cross-disciplinary network that truly speaks the same language. Its members cover visual communication, product design, fashion and architecture." The says Laura and Damian set up their business in a less-than-traditional way - in a "bullish approach" that "seems to have paid off" and is "refreshing" in the UK industry.

Contributors

There are currently 19 regular contributors to the magazine,[18] in addition to other guest contributors and contributors who no longer work with the magazine.

References

  1. About Sublime, Retrieved 10/06/2011.
  2. The New Age of Travel, Retrieved 10/06/2011.
  3. Sublime, Retrieved 08/06/2011.
  4. Sublime Contributors, Retrieved 10/06/2011.
  5. Back issues, Retrieved 06/06/2011.
  6. Sublime Magazine, Issue 26, page 11.
  7. Dr James Martin, The Meaning of the 21st Century, Retrieved 06/06/2011.
  8. Sublime Magazine on Facebook, Retrieved 06/06/2011.
  9. Sublime Magazine, Issue 20, page 42.
  10. Weleda, How sublime!, Retrieved 06/06/2011.
  11. SpanishCeo, Worldwide Spanish Speaking Population Statistics, Retrieved 06/06/2011.
  12. Stephen Armstrong, The Guardian, 10/07/2006, page 10.
  13. Sublime - First International Ethical Lifestyle Magazine, Retrieved 06/06/2011.
  14. HfG-Archiv Ulm, Retrieved 07/06/2011.
  15. Ulm School of Design, Retrieved 07/06/2011.
  16. Santamaria: Identity, published Santamaria Design Consultant Limited 2001. ISBN 0-9541199-0-8
  17. Clare Dowdy, Blueprint Magazine, Issue 188, pp. 82-84.
  18. Team, retrieved 06/06/2011.
  19. Hanspeter Kuenzler, Retrieved 07/06/2011.
  20. Frances Corner, Professor of Art and Design Education, London College of Fashion, Retrieved 06/06/2011.
  21. John Grant, Demos, Retrieved 06/06/2011.
  22. David Buckland at Cape Farewell, Retrieved 07/06/2011.
  23. Jen Marsden, Retrieved 06/06/2011.
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