(Part 3) Best magazine subscriptions according to redditors

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We found 85 Reddit comments discussing the best magazine subscriptions. We ranked the 43 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 41-60. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Subcategories:

Art, music & photography magazines
Automotive & motorcycle magazines
Business & investing magazines
Entertainment & pop culture magazines
Parenting & family magazines
Fashion & style magazines
Cooking, food & wine magazines
Health, fitness & wellness magazines
Home & garden magazines
Lifestyle & culture magazines
Interests magazines for men
News & political commentary magazines
Pets & animals magazines
Religion & spirituality magazines
Science, history & nature magazines
Travel, city & regional magazines
Interest magazines for women
Craft & hobby magazines
Spanish language magazines
Newspapers
Technology magazines
Newsletters
Sports, recreation & outdoor magazines
Literary, sci fi & mystery magazines
Magazines for children & teens
Professional & educational journals

Top Reddit comments about Subjects:

u/andrewsmith1986 · 1 pointr/AskReddit

http://dealspl.us/Magazines-and-Books_deals

all of the deals i got are expired right now, but i got most of them for 5$

besides PS which i got for free(some freebizmag thing) along with spin(lollapalooza)

its a really awesome website if you are like me and spend money when you have any at all.

u/TootsNYC · 1 pointr/BeginnerWoodWorking

If he's going back to school, he won't have time or space to truly use tools, so don't buy those with the intent that he'll use them at school.

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Get him a subscription to a woodworking magazine or two. My brother got me a subscription to Wood Magazine, and I called it "woodworking porn."

These will have projects he might actually do some day, projects he'll never do but will aspire to, projects he might adapt to something smaller.


They will ALSO (importantly) have info on tools he can dream about buying in the future, or decide he doesn't need. Info on helpful gadgets to buy, jigs to make.

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I found them VERY inspiring. They were fun to read, they didn't take a long time (wouldn't distract him from the school stuff), the pictures were great, and I got itchy to do stuff.

I learned things far beyond what actually making anything would have taught me (I'm never going to buy a lathe or a bandsaw, but I loved reading about them--and I'm much smarter now).

Many of the same principles (how to care for the tool; how to get things square; others) are actually applicable when I use other tools.

They had plans and cut lists, which were educational to look through, even if I never make that workbench or children's playground. I got a sense of how to construct something sturdily. And what order to assemble (the MOST important part).

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Get them in print form!

a review of several of them, with recommendations:http://www.mechanicalcaveman.com/best-woodworking-magazine-reviews-beginners-wood-working/

Another review, with a longer list (some of the same names)

Some titles I would personally recommend (most are on those lists):

https://www.popularwoodworking.com/

Woodsmith

Fine Woodworking

Woodcraft Magazine

Family Handyman might be good if he's kind of a fix-it-up person; a slightly different way of looking at it (cabinet inserts more than midcentury modern tables)

maybe get him a bit of a variety--a cabinetmaking one, a straight woodworking one, a "turning" one--to give him exposure to different ways of working with wood.