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TOPIC: Which Quilting Magazine do you recommend?

13 Aug 2008 09:45 #24070

Yeah, I admit it, but I don't use it every day. I can't seem to get past the solving of the equations. I can't seem to bring up anything else that I see in the instruction manual of Brain Age. Is Brain Age 2 any better? I am so new age challenged. I was introduced to this by my old friend who was hooked on it but she doesn't quilt so has time on her hands. She must spend up to 3 hours a day on it. Judy in AZ
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brain games 13 Aug 2008 09:37 #24069

So Judy,are you admitting to owning a ds?I bought my daughter BrainAge2 and Big Brain Academy for Xmas.I thought they were just silly kids games and guess who got hooked??Just recently I bought her a word game and at her insistence I bought my own ds(but don't tell anyone esp. my husband!)ha ha,Julie,having fun improving my mind(sort of).
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05 Aug 2008 19:41 #23530

Sandi, that is very true according to the Brain Age. They have you reading aloud as a daily exercise. Judy in AZ
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05 Aug 2008 18:53 #23524

Free cell works really good for stimulating your brain and doesn't cost as much as nintendo. I read a study that just reading out loud helps too. My hubby already thinks I am nuts cause I talk to myself, so guess reading out loud will land me in the funny farm. hehe

Sandi in hot hot FL
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05 Aug 2008 12:47 #23508

Quilter Lynn, you need to buy Nintendo DS and then buy Brain Age. that is supposed to help us when we are older. There are lots of little games to play to make you think and you should work on it every day. As if I already don't have enough to do. There is also a brain age test to see how old your brain is. My brain age is 80. :oops: I guess I am not using it any more. Use it or lose it. But I really think there is a glitch in the game as I am giving the right answer but the game says to try again and again and again. but I am still giving the right answer. So it calculates that I am 80. I might have to send the little card back to the manufacturer and have them try it. Judy in AZ
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05 Aug 2008 11:35 #23500

  • QuilterLynn
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Oh, I do wish I could learn to read the newspaper on-line! I have tried, and for some reason my brain just doesn't seem comfortable with it! Hope that doesn't tell my age? :lol: :lol:

I do enjoy Quilter's Home too. It's funny and always covers some subject I'm interested in other opinions about. I'm not looking for patterns anymore..........at all..........I'm trying to finish what I've started and looking at being my OWN pattern maker............that should be entertaining! ha
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05 Aug 2008 10:30 #23495

I have say I have cut waaayyyyy back on my magazines. I now buy them at the book store. I know it is not the most cost effective way to buy, but frankly I have not been real inspired lately by some of the patterns. I only buy a magazine if there are patterns I want to make.
The one magazine I really do look for is: Quilter's Home (Mark Lipinski). I enjoy his humor and frankly these days I can use a laugh!!

To be honest, most of the time the patterns are offered for free the when the next issue is published. You can go to the magazines website for patterns.

I do have three favorites: McCalls, American Patchwork and Quilting, Fons and Porter.
I completely understand only mailing six issues a year.
In the past year, we have stopped all but two magazines delivered to the house. It certainly cuts down on our recycling and I guess saves some trees. We even started receiving one of the newspapers on line.

FW
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05 Aug 2008 05:45 #23479

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It is the fun of getting the magazine in the mail that most of us will miss.... The inspiration and ideas that comes when you look through the newest issue. If the magazines got together and decided when they were going to release each issue so a reader always had a new magazine in the mail... that would be something, but you know TIIC will not do anything that sensible.

Getting mail is still a event that people look forward to; NO ONE writes letters any more they just email.
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05 Aug 2008 03:26 #23474

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I caught the same "buried" change in the # of issues of QN. I'm really disappointed. I guess I should contact them, too. I'll still subscribe, but I think they might lose readers by cutting back on the # of issues per year. That's something they've always had over other quilting magazines. I do plan to stop subscribing to McCall's. I'll just buy it if I see a pattern I can't live without.
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01 Aug 2008 14:14 #23272

Yeah I know. I'm thinking it's like everything else - economics. One printing and mailing instead of two even tho the magazine has more pages. It seems to us like quilting is a big industry but with all the TV shows we're seeing disappear it sounds like it's struggling as much as anything else.
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31 Jul 2008 22:03 #23228

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Thanks Patti. I'll be sure to post when I hear back from them. I also love getting a shiny new issue each month even though it sometimes takes several months till I finish it. I don't get their logic. She says we will get the same amount of information as we got in two issues every other month. If so isn't it still two issues to go through in two months? Sounds like the same thing. Also sounds like a bunch of baloney. Oh well I will just have to accept this change.
Karen
Lyndhurst, Ohio USA - East Side Suburb of Cleveland, Ohio
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31 Jul 2008 20:10 #23216

Karen I hope the decision comes back favorable. I pulled my latest copy out of the mail this week and it is a bigger magazine. I agree with one thing they said, I often do not get thru the whole magazine in one month before the next one comes. Altho I do read each one cover to cover. If it is going to be as they say, the same amount of content, then I can live with every other month. It's just wonderful to get the eye candy each month.
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31 Jul 2008 19:37 #23210

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I actually called them about the same thing and after checking with a supervisor the woman took my number to call me back. Back in March I renewed for two years that would have just started this month. She agreed I should get 20 issues not the 13 they were going to send and said they would have to figure out how to do it. I'm just hopefully waiting for the verdict.

Karen
Lyndhurst, Ohio USA - East Side Suburb of Cleveland, Ohio
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31 Jul 2008 18:30 #23206

  • Louise
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Since I last posted on this topic, I contacted Quilter's Newsletter by e-mail (mailto:qnewsletter@palmcoastd.com) to tell them how unhappy I was to hear about the subscriptions being cut to six issues per year. I still have about a year left on my current subscription, which was for ten not six issues. Therefore, I requested that my subscription be extended to compensate for the difference in the number of issues I was receiving or receive a refund for the difference.

Much to my amazement, within one day the magazine contacted me by email to say that my subscription had been extended by four issues and that the gift subscriptions I had given as Christmas presents had also been extended. Of course, I'll double check that when I receive my next issue, but if anyone is in the same boat with extended subscriptions, you might want to contact the magazine.

While I'm still unhappy with the change and the way it was handled in Ms. Magee's editorial, it certainly gives QN redemption points.

Niagara Falls, New York
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