1.20.2007

Martha Stewart Special Issue Magazines

Since 1997, Martha Stewart Living has distributed up to six special issue magazines each year: suplemental issues based on a single homekeeping, entertaining or culinary topic. These magazines were not included as part of the general subscription: available on newsstands only, or by phone order. Below is a description of the special issues that have been released so far, excluding the first Martha Stewart Living Weddings issues,which began publishing once a year in 1995. (These were the seeds for Martha Stewart Weddings magazine which began publishing as its own entity in 1999 on a quarterly basis.) The issues below are now out of print but can often be found at online markets, such as eBay, Etsy or Amazon.




Holiday Cookies: November, 2001

Holiday Baking: November, 2002

Holiday Party Foods: November, 2003

Holiday Cookies: November, 2006
Holiday Handmade Gifts: November, 2007


Holiday Season's Eatings: October, 2008
Holiday Handmade Christmas: November, 2008
Holiday Sweets: November, 2009


Holiday Cookies: November, 2010

Holiday Handbook: October, 2011


Holiday: Halloween, 2000

Holiday: Halloween, 2004

Holiday Halloween Issue (Double Cover Issue): September 2007

Martha Stewart Halloween, September 2009
Martha Stewart Halloween Handbook: August, 2010; Reissued August, 2012.
Martha Stewart Halloween: August, 2011
Martha Stewart Halloween: September, 2013
 Martha Stewart Halloween: September, 2015
Martha Stewart Halloween - August, 2024



Between 2004 and 2008, Martha Stewart Living issued 10 special digests called "Good Things." They were small magazines devoted to various themes, such as kids crafts, home decorating, kitchen tips and organizing. Here is a list of the digests that were issued:
  • Good Things for Organizing 1 - 2004
  • Good Things for Organizing 2 - 2005
  • Good Things for Entertaining - 2005
  • Good Things for Kids (Snacks) - 2006
  • Good Things for Kids 2 (Crafts) - 2006
  • Good Things for Kids 3 (Parties) - 2007
  • Good Things for the Kitchen - 2007
  • Good Things for the Home - 2007
  • Good Things for Kids 4 (Crafts) - 2008
  • Good Things for a Healthy Home - 2008


EVERYDAY FOOD SPECIAL COOKIES ISSUE - NOVEMBER, 2006

EVERYDAY FOOD SPECIAL BAKING ISSUE - NOVEMBER, 2007

EVERYDAY FOOD RECIPE INDEX - 2007 - PROMOTIONAL MAILER
SPECIAL SUMMER ISSUE - 2011 - FULL-SIZE
 EVERYDAY FOOD SPECIAL ISSUE - 2015 - FULL-SIZE


MARTHA STEWART GOOD THINGS FOR WEDDINGS - FEBRUARY, 2004

MARTHA STEWART WEDDINGS 10TH ANNIVERSARY ISSUE - SUMMER, 2005

MARTHA STEWART WEDDINGS - SPECIAL COLOR ISSUE - SPRING, 2007

MARTHA STEWART WEDDINGS - COLLECTOR'S EDITION - SUMMER, 2008 (REPRINT OF 2005 VERSION)
MARTHA STEWART WEDDINGS AND DREAM HONEYMOONS - SPECIAL DESTINATION ISSUES: 2010 - 2012
MARTHA STEWART REAL WEDDINGS - SPRING, 2012
MARTHA STEWART REAL WEDDINGS: SPRING, 2013
MARTHA STEWART REAL WEDDINGS - FALL, 2013
MARTHA STEWART REAL WEDDINGS - SPRING, 2014
MARTHA STEWART REAL WEDDINGS - FALL, 2014
 MARTHA STEWART REAL WEDDINGS - SPRING, 2015
 MARTHA STEWART REAL WEDDINGS AND HONEYMOONS - FALL, 2015
MARTHA STEWART REAL WEDDINGS AND HONEYMOONS - FALL, 2016
MARTHA STEWART REAL WEDDINGS & HONEYMOONS - SPRING, 2017
MARTHA STEWART REAL WEDDINGS & HONEYMOONS - SPRING, 2018
 MARTHA STEWART WEDDINGS - ANNUAL PLANNER - 2019/2020



CLOTHESKEEPING - FALL, 1998
ENTERTAINING: CELEBRATE 2000 - NOVEMBER, 1999
AT HOME WITH TECHNOLOGY - FEBRUARY, 2001
 OUTDOOR LIVING - FEBRUARY, 2007
OUTDOOR LIVING - FEBRUARY, 2008
ORGANIZING - JANUARY, 2012
CAKES AND CUPCAKES - FEBRUARY, 2013
ORGANIZING - FEBRUARY, 2016
MARTHA STEWART LIVING 25TH ANNIVERSARY COLLECTOR'S EDITION - APRIL, 2016
MARTHA STEWART - GARDENING, APRIL 2024


1.05.2007

Memoir Magic

Samantha Reynolds knows what it’s like to lose a lifetime of memories.

When her grandmother died suddenly after a routine operation several years ago, Reynolds realized she had missed the opportunity to record her grandmother’s stories and felt the void of a legacy lost to time.

With the help of her family she created a book of testimonials and memories about her grandmother and went on to do similar books for friends and family members who were getting married or celebrating milestones.

Inspired by the notion, she launched a business dedicated to the creation of personal memoir books for anyone who wanted one; Echo Memoirs specializes in making hardback coffee-table books with an entirely personal edge.

Life stories, family histories, entrepreneurial accomplishments and the lives of pets and kids are just some of the topics clients can focus on when they commission a book.

“It is deeply gratifying to help people express their love for the people in their lives,” says Reynolds, founder and president of Echo Memoirs in Vancouver. “When we can help a daughter articulate how much her father means to her – and those words are forever preserved in a beautiful book – that is truly priceless.”
In the bindery, two staffers put some finishing touches on a book.


Clients are first treated to a phone consultation in order to determine the subject, basic length and purpose of the memoir. During subsequent taped interviews, by phone or in person, thought-provoking questions are put to the clients in order to get natural responses. These are then transcribed and professionally edited and woven into chapters, which are later shown to the clients for feedback, suggestions or any corrections.


The best photographs are gathered by family, with the guidance of the project manager, and professionally scanned. Once the book’s layout and design is complete, it is sent to a colour printing press and later hand-bound in hardcover at Reynolds’ Vancouver studios.


Reynolds says the final result always induces an emotional response.


“We always hear back from our clients and I’m proud to say we have a 100 percent cry rate,” she says. “It’s incredibly emotional for our clients to see their lives in print, or to read about how they have impacted others. I love that emotional side of what we do.”


Reynolds, who studied journalism at the University of Victoria and worked as a freelance writer and designer, says working closely with her clients is instrumental to a project’s success.


“The design of each of our books is unique and based on the story, the photographs and the distinct personality of the person or business celebrated in the book,” she says. “We have been known to base our whole design for a book on the way a client decorated her living room so that the book would be a perfect addition to the room’s décor. When it comes to creating these books, we don’t cut corners.”


This devotion to duty is reflected in the price of the projects: personal memoirs start at $30,000; corporate books start at $50,000.


Twelve to 15 people from the editorial department are assigned to one project, giving each client between 300 and 3000 hours of personal attention with interviewers, writers, proofreaders, designers, book-binders and photo technicians.


“The pay-off is that our books don’t make the gradual creep up to the attic or get tucked away in a bookshelf; our books are proudly displayed on coffee-tables for family and guests to read.”


Since the company started in 2001, Echo Memoirs has created over 200 personal and corporate memoirs across Canada and the U.S.


As for her dream project, Reynolds jumps at the chance to share:


“My dream project would be to do a surprise book for Oprah Winfrey. She is so great at honouring the contributions of other people so it would be fabulous to turn around and give her a book full of reflections from the people closest to her telling her how much she has impacted them.”
Traditional book-making practices are used to make the highest-quality, handmade product possible.
Reynolds says it’s imperative for family members to record and preserve their own family histories and offers some simple guidelines:

· Ask parents and grandparents questions about the past and urge them to tell their stories. Record those conversations on tape.
· Take lots of photographs and caption them right afterwards, either in a scrapbook, on the back of printed photos or by digitally naming a file.
· Go on a family vacation to a place of ancestral meaning (a grandparent's childhood hometown, the country where your great-grandparents emigrated from, etc.) and bring along a handheld video recorder to record the family's experience.
· Tape-record your "elders" at the next family reunion - or just at Christmas dinner this year.
At 31, Reynolds has a lifetime of her own memories yet to create, but she imparts some sage advice to anyone with a dream.

“Do something that you love. If you’d still do it even if you won the lottery, you’ve found your passion. Starting a company is hard work so you might as well be working hard at something that you really love.”


ECHO MEMOIRS:
1.877.777.ECHO

Martha Online

Marthastewart.com was launched on Monday, September 8, 1997, marking Martha's first forays into the World Wide Web. The site was initially planned as a companion guide to the daily television show, Martha Stewart Living, a repository for all of the instructions and information about the projects demonstrated by Martha on the program. Its ultimate aim, however, was to be completely interactive and to tie in with the Martha Stewart Living magazines as well as the emerging Ask Martha columns and radio spots. (It was designed, ostensibly, to give visitors to the site the opportunity to "ask Martha" their questions about cooking, gardening, cleaning or restoring, etc.)
The website as it appeared in 1999.

The venture was the first of its kind in television history. Never before had a website been created with a direct tie to a national, syndicated television show, with the aim of becoming an interactive portal for viewers of the show.

Designed by an MSL team of editors and graphic artists, headed by Robert Fischer and Lillian Fuentes, and with the technical assistance of Microsoft and U.S. Interactive, it was a site in its most basic form, at least by today's standards. When marthastewart.com was launched, the Internet had only existed as a commercial and personal computer tool since 1994. During the first few years of its initialization, it was rare to find companies that were using the Internet as a primary business tool. At that time, many companies didn't even have official websites.

The design of the main page of Marthastewart.com was simple and clean, using photography originally published in the magazine as embellishment. This accompanied a weekly greeting from Martha on the main page about what could be found on the site. At first, little could be found at all, aside from repurposed articles from the magazine, step-by-step instructions for projects featured on the television show and basic company advertising.
To promote the website, ads were run in Martha Stewart Living magazine to help direct more traffic to the site. These ones are particularly innovative: a pumpkin pie for the November, 2000, issue and a papier-mache pumpkin for the October issue. To promote Halloween specials on the website, this beautifully designed ad ran in the October, 2001, issue:

By the new millennium, however, a special web division was created at Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia and advancements in Internet technology were heartily embraced by the company and swiftly put into practice. By now, the Martha by Mail mail-order catalog division had a place on the web too with a special website where consumers could order and pay for items online, shaping the new direct commerce division at the company. It was integrated into the main Marthastewart.com site as well with photo galleries of the products and information about prices, shipping and returns. Eventually, subscription services also went online and people could subscribe to the various Martha Stewart magazines using the Internet. These elements made up the "Shop" category of the site.


The website also became an archive of information - the site's original mandate. In the "Learn" category, visitors could locate previously published articles from any of the magazines, lists of resources and information about homekeeping, cooking, organizing, kids, decorating and gardening. Photographs from the magazine and instructions for the projects and recipes created by the editors and producers also appeared online.

In 2002, there were more than one million registered users of Marthastewart.com, connected by online community forums on the site, many with personal profiles. Those registered to the site could receive newsletters about MSLO corporate initiatives, new product sales, information about products, as well as new projects and recipes to try, many exclusive to the website.

Not all was seamless and smooth, however. The site was not as effective and organized as some of its chief competitors and there were persistent problems with the Martha by Mail segment of the site: confusing shipping information, incorrect links and sections of the site that were very difficult to locate or navigate.
A much more challenging obstacle emerged when Martha was charged with criminal offenses related to an insider trading scandal. To help get her side of the story out, she and her lawyers launched Marthatalks.com in June, 2003. It was a public relations tool to both set the record straight and to allow Martha to communicate directly with the media and her fans about what she was going through on a personal level. The site was plain white enhanced by Martha's trademark green font and user menu. There were no images on the site, except for one on the main page, which changed periodically to reflect the season. In the first week of its launch, the site received 9 million hits and more than 50,000 emails from supporters. Thousands of these supportive letters were published on the website, along with favourable essays and articles about her criminal trial and legal documents supplied by her lawyers.

 
The trial and the ongoing technical problems with Marthastewart.com, in conjuction with the collapse of the Martha by Mail business in 2004, prompted a major revitalization of Marthastewart.com in 2006 and a relaunch in early 2007. The new website held much more content and was capable of hosting video streaming: segments from the new Martha Stewart Show could now be viewed online. The new site was also much more interactive with chat groups and personal profile pages where users could upload their own photos and share with each other, participate in workshops led by the magazine editors and ask for advice.

Also in 2007, Martha Stewart launched her personal blog, called simply The Martha Blog. Here, fans could read about what was going on in Martha's world, from her new farm in Bedford to her home in Maine, with personal photographs and anecdotes. A number of other blogs were also launched supporting MSLO publishing ventures, including a Weddings blog called The Bride's Guide, an Everyday Food blog called Dinner Tonight and a Blueprint blog, which was later shut down when that magazine folded.

Not to be left out of the direct commerce sphere, Marthastewart.com developed subsidiary commercial websites that featured Martha Stewart product lines, including furniture, the new Martha Stewart Collection at Macy's and Martha Stewart Crafts products. In the absence of Martha by Mail the 'Shop' category of Marthastewart.com was redesigned to showcase the latest Martha Stewart books and product introductions.

The Martha Blog replaced the defunct Martha Stewart Newsletter, which only published three issues in early 2007. The Blog was launched in August, 2007, allowing Martha to share her personal photographs and events with readers. It is hosted by Wordpress and co-run by her assistant Eliad Laskin and Martha's sister, Laura Plimpton. Below are images of the website as it evolved over the years:
The website's first incarnation was very simple, but still quite advanced for the time with a mail-order shopping component, online subscription services and a social-media component.
The website as it appeared in 2010.


In 2008, Martha launched Martha University, an online repository of video content for sale. Many of the videos were from Martha's first television specials in the 1980s and from her program, Martha Stewart Living, which aired in the 1990s and early 2000s. The site was closed a year later.
MarthaStewart.com as it appeared in 2013: a more blog-like appearance with less clutter and a more airy design.
 In 2020, now controlled by Meredith Corp., the website became very pared down to be more compatible with mobile devices.

12.15.2006

Menorahs

Twelfth-Century Jewish philosopher Maimonides once wrote that Jews should have a menorah for each night of the eight days of Hanukkah, the Jewish festival of light, which begins on the 25th of Kislev on the Hebrew calendar. Beholding the beauty of these religious candelabras, and you can see why.

Perhaps the most beautiful and timeless symbol of Hanukkah, the menorah is the nine-branched candelabrum used on the holiday as a symbol that commemorates everlasting light.
The miracle of light celebrated with menorahs at Hanukkah dates back to 164 B.C.E. when the Jews defeated the oppressive Hellenist Syrians. As they reclaimed their Temples and lit the candelabras for prayer, their supply of oil ran out after just one day. And yet the candles continued to burn – for a full eight days.

Menorahs must be one of the most aesthetically-pleasing examples of religious Judaica. Usually crafted in silver or brass, they shine brilliantly, illuminating their symbolism with stunning authority. Menorahs are often ornately carved with religious and decorative symbols, giving them added luster and beauty.

Although I am not Jewish, I own a small menorah that I found in Montreal. It was clearly a child’s, measuring only five inches high with a lovely coating of wax residue along the candle holders’ rims. It is fashioned in old brass and was not expensive, yet I dream of the child who once owned this menorah – likely during the 1960s, if the man who sold it to me was accurate in his assessment of its age – and wonder where that child is today. I wonder what he or she felt when lighting the candles and what dreams passed through the soul while staring at the mesmerizing light. It is truly one of my most cherished antique finds.

Menorahs made today are outstandingly modern, many of the gold and silver varieties fetching thousands of dollars. My personal favourites are still the classical varieties – symmetrical and tall with outreaching branches like a tree of light.

Below are several examples from a Judaica shop in the United States called Silver Heaven. To my taste, this is the place to find some of the most striking and well-crafted examples of new menorahs.

HANUKKAH
Hanukkah is celebrated for eight days and nights, starting on the 25th of Kislev on the Hebrew calendar (which is November-December on the Gregorian calendar). In Hebrew, the word "Hanukkah" means "dedication."

The holiday commemorates the rededication of the holy Temple in Jerusalem after the Jews' 165 B.C.E. victory over the Hellenist Syrians. Antiochus, the Greek King of Syria, outlawed Jewish rituals and ordered the Jews to worship Greek gods.

In 164 B.C.E. the Jews' holy Temple was seized and dedicated to the worship of Zeus.

Some Jews were afraid of the Greek soldiers and obeyed them, but most were angry and decided to fight back.

The fighting began in Modiin, a village not far from Jerusalem. A Greek officer and soldiers assembled the villagers, asking them to bow to an idol and eat the flesh of a pig, activities forbidden to Jews. The officer asked Mattathias, a Jewish High Priest, to take part in the ceremony. He refused, and another villager stepped forward and offered to do it instead. Mattathias became outraged, took out his sword and killed the man, then killed the officer. His five sons and the other villagers then attacked and killed the soldiers. Mattathias' family went into hiding in the nearby mountains, where many other Jews who wanted to fight the Greeks joined them. They attacked the Greek soldiers whenever possible.



Judah Maccabee and his soldiers went to the holy Temple, and were saddened that many things were missing or broken, including the golden menorah. They cleaned and repaired the Temple, and when they were finished, they decided to have a big dedication ceremony. For the celebration, the Maccabees wanted to light the menorah. They looked everywhere for oil, and found a small flask that contained only enough oil to light the menorah for one day. Miraculously, the oil lasted for eight days. This gave them enough time to obtain new oil to keep the menorah lit. Today Jews celebrate Hanukkah for eight days by lighting candles in a menorah every night, thus commemorating the eight-day miracle.

12.09.2006

Holiday Plants

Christmas gift plants – azalea, Christmas pepper, Christmas cherry, Christmas cactus, cyclamen, begonia, amaryllis and poinsettia – will stay attractive long after the holiday season is over, provided you know the conditions and care they require. All plants, for example, share similar care instructions: all require bright light – but rarely direct sunlight – all prefer cool rooms (around 65 degrees) that get even cooler at night, and all need watering before the soil is dry to the touch.

After bringing the plants home, removing the metal foil the plant was wrapped in at the store or greenhouse will contribute to the long-lasting beauty of the plants by allowing for adequate drainage. I often repot the plants in pots that are slightly bigger to allow for more growth. It also suggests the permanence of the plants in my collection and inspires me to care for them a little more carefully. Be sure to feel the soil to test its dryness. If it is dry to the touch, give the plant water until it drains out the perforations at the bottom of the pot, making sure the soil is thoroughly soaked.


Amaryllis:
This is one of my favourite plants of all-time. Its tall, slender stalk reaches up to reveal huge, trumpet-like flowers that will take your breath away with their beauty during the holidays. Amaryllis is native to Africa and is one of the few holiday plants that thrives in direct sunlight. A south-facing window with full sun is best for the amaryllis. If you want blossoms for Christmas, plant the bulb in early November. When planting the bulb, be sure to place the soil only halfway to three-quarters of the way up the sides of the bulb’s surface; the bulb requires a few centimeters of exposure. Never completely bury an amaryllis bulb. They prefer small, constricted pots, but enough room to set down roots. Water thoroughly after planting then do not water again until the leaves begin to show.


Gradually begin watering again – a small amount once a week is plenty - once signs of growth begin to show. The plant will grow quickly. In a few weeks you will have beautiful blooms. When the blooms fade, cut the stalk. If you wish to preserve the bulb until the following year, allow the leaves to grow throughout the year. The following autumn, cut the leaves and place the bulb in a cool, dark place for two months. Then, replant it and expose it to the sun; you should get a second round out of it!

Azalea:
The blossoms on an azalea will last long if plants have bright light during the day and cool temperatures at night. Keep a constant, even supply of moisture to the soil – the flowers will wilt and die prematurely if the soil becomes too dry. Soak the pot in water on occasion so that water penetrates deep to the core of the roots. Remove the old flowers as they fade. To keep your plant growing, fertilize with acidic azalea fertilizer every month, beginning the time the flowers fade in the spring until the new buds form; never fertilize while the plant is flowering or in full bloom. I find it difficult to keep azaleas indoors, to be honest. They are so sensitive to dryness. With the heat on during the winter months, the room's moisture becomes consistently dry, making it inhospitable to the plant. You could set up a humidifier to moisten the air in the house, but I always ask myself if an azalea is worth the effort. Usually, the answer is no.

Christmas Cactus:
The Christmas Cactus is actually not a cactus at all. It is a succulent and therefore requires even moisture throughout the year. It enjoys bright light but not direct sun. An east or west facing window is best. The plant will begin to bud in mid-November and flowers could last as long as three months with proper care. I've even had summer blooms on my plant!
Many people complain that their Christmas cactus never blooms again. This is likely because they don’t realize that the plant must be subjected to minimal exposure to light and no water for at least one month prior to the time you wish the plant to bloom. The plant will always bloom after a period of stress.
If you want blooms for the holidays, remove the plant from its usual spot and place it in a dark corner for one month, neglecting to give it water during this period. Once the month has passed, bring the plant back to its usual bright spot and gradually begin watering it again. Within a few weeks, you will see numerous buds begin to appear. Christmas cactus can be forced to bloom at any time during the year using this method of stress, but be sure not to get too greedy or the plant will give up. It requires consistency most of the time. As the blooms fade, remove them; this may further the flowering stages. For the rest of the year, keep the plant happy with even moisture and bright light.

Christmas Pepper and Christmas Cherry:
These plants are less common now than they once were, replaced by the more exotic amaryllis and cyclamen in recent years. If you do find them, they are usually reasonably priced. The plants’ attractive foliage and colourful fruits and blossoms make cheerful additions to a holiday décor. To prolong their beauty, give the plants bright light and cool temperatures. An occasional mist of water keeps the foliage looking its best. Treat pepper plants as annuals – throw them away when they become unattractive as they are not likely to refurbish their blooms or fruit a second time in a pot. You can dry the peppers and use them as seasoning, but be warned that they are very hot! Both Christmas peppers and Christmas cherries are easy to grow from seed. Plant the seeds in pots in the spring and put them in a sunny spot – even outdoors, if you prefer. Move them inside before the frost and you should have fruits by Christmas.

Cyclamen:
Cyclamen is a fussy but lovely addition to a holiday collection of plants. Their flowers are almost angelic as they bob weightlessly from tall, slender stems. They come in a myriad of colours, also: dark pink, light pink, variegated pink, deep red and plain white. They are native to the mountain ranges of the Mediterranean and Asia and like cool environments that simulate a forest floor: moist, cool and limited exposure to sunlight.
These plants do not have roots, but tubers. As such, they are easily prone to rot. Water them frequently but carefully. Never let the soil dry out but never let it get soggy either. Water them with small amounts at a time two times a week. Keep them in an east, west or north-facing window and make sure to keep them away from dry air vents, fireplaces and heaters. The flowering stages of cyclamen vary slightly. They are unlikely to bloom a second time in your home, although my grandmother has been blessed with a cyclamen that has never once stopped flowering during a two-year period! You may wish to discard the plant after the flowers have passed, although the foliage is quite nice.

Rieger Elatior Begonia:
This plant thrives under good light and with only average care. It has above-average lasting quality and is characterized by its dark green foliage and orange, red or salmon-coral flowers. To lengthen the blooming time to several weeks, select a plant in the half-open bud stage. It will do best if you keep it just barely moist. Once winter has passed, these plants enjoy the outdoors in warm weather. If you are repotting them, grow them in pots with generous amounts of peat moss.


Poinsettia:
Native to Mexico, poinsettias are, without a doubt, the most popular holiday plant in North America and Europe. Millions of these plants are sold each year during the Christmas season. Newer varieties are lasting longer than ever and are also less sensitive to drafts and temperature extremes. However, temperatures above 75 and below 65 are not recommended for the poinsettia, which enjoys a moderate, consistent warmth. It likes bright, indirect light most of the time. Direct sunlight should be limited to only four or five hours a day. Water them consistently but modestly; they are not big drinkers but do enjoy evenly moist soil. The ‘flowers’ of the poinsettia are not flowers at all.
The colourful sections of the plant are called bracts, which change colour with a change in light exposure, much as deciduous trees change the colours of their leaves in autumn. Growers of poinsettia place the plant in 14 hours of darkness each day between September and October in order to induce the plant to change the colour of its bracts, which surround the flowers: those tiny, yellow-green buds at the center of the bract formations. They will last as foliage plants for years after you first purchase them if properly cared for, but it is very difficult to get the plant to change colours again without the proper facilities.

12.02.2006

Design For Living

One of the things I’ve always loved about Martha Stewart Living magazine is its design: spare when it needs to be but arresting with its visual impact. The magazine has always boasted tremendous style and it is little wonder it has received numerous National Magazine Awards for design since its inception in 1990.

In 2002, the magazine underwent a design overhaul with a new font, custom tailored for the company, larger photographs and more white space to ‘de-clutter’ the page layout, enticing the reader to linger a bit longer in the new found space.

Without sacrificing content or information, the magazine successfully streamlined the words on the page and blended them cohesively with the beautiful photography to achieve a seamlessness not easily replicated.Here is an article from Folio magazine on the specifics of the redesign in 2002, which began with the October issue of that year.

Article by Sarah Gonser for Folio Magazine, October 2002:

Nobody carves a pumpkin quite like Martha. While most of us are satisfied to scrape out a cockeyed jack-o'-lantern and call it a day, Martha doesn't rest until she's constructed a full-blown fright factory, complete with eerily glowing pumpkin tombstones (based on inscriptions found in eighteenth-century burial grounds) and haunted two-story mansions with swinging shutters and rooftop shingles. And what MS-concocted scare-fest would be complete without a thorough foray into the paranormal? Did you know, for instance, that the earliest recorded ghost appeared in ancient Greece? And that the spookiest estates can be found in St. Louis? It's all in the October issue of Martha Stewart Living. No surprise, really. When Martha preps for Halloween, she leaves no headstone unturned.

Therefore, when the doyenne of domestic design put her mind to a redesign of MSL, the centerpiece of her multimedia empire, the same no-detail-is-too-tiny mentality applied. Fonts were crafted from scratch; templates, grids, color palettes, and style sheets became an everyday obsession. The office turned into an aesthetics test kitchen where the design crew cooked up a new look for two painstaking years. "You can't put a comma in that magazine without having a committee meeting," says one MSL freelancer, "so no one was surprised that it took so long."

Redesigns are risky business, and in its 11-year history, Martha's magazine has gone under the X-Acto knife only once before, for a minor face-lift in 1996. But the newsstand had grown crowded with me-too competition. "People were always emulating us, "says Eric Pike, the executive creative director. "In a lot of ways we created a trend in magazines. No one was as clean and book-like as we were. The market was about busyness, layers of information, dingbats, and design tricks to keep people engaged." Three National Magazine Awards later (two for photography and one for design), MSL had proved a little too inspirational. To stop the blatant borrowing and defend its turf on the newsstand, the designers had to create something that couldn't be easily copied.

There were other motives as well. Between the mid 90s and 2002, the magazine's circulation grew by 40 percent, and as it collected more readers, it drew more ad pages. More ad pages meant more content, and soon the TOC was teeming with dozens of departments and sections - to the point where MSL's clean design had become cluttered. And as all Martha fans know, clutter is definitely not a good thing. "The front-of-book became really, really fat," says creative director Gael Towey. "We felt it was getting harder to navigate."

Then there was the typeface. "I knew it needed to be bigger," says Barbara de Wilde, the art director. "My sister is a librarian, and she said, 'I'm not going to read your magazine until the type is bigger.'" Plus, the words bite-sized kept coming up in focus groups. Readers were looking for quicker hits of information rather than long, flowing text, according to Margaret Roach, the editor-in-chief. "People seem to want to get to the point more quickly." The team was also looking to freshen a title that was, frankly, in jeopardy of growing a bit stale.

Finally, there was the sticky situation of evolving the magazine by creating an identity that was less reliant on Martha herself.

With the October 2002 issue, Martha Stewart Living unveiled a revitalized magazine. Touting a new specially commissioned font, larger photographs, an overhauled FOB, and a multitude of charts, grafts, and lists, the redesign also introduced new and tweaked columns and sections.The results of the two-year effort are subtle, says Towey. The design is more methodical. In fact, one MSL freelancer says the entire process was an exercise in meticulousness: "They pinned mockups all over the wall, and there were days when Eric, Gael, and Martha would just stand and stare at them for hours."

To illustrate the thinking behind the redesign (and to shed some light on why it took so long), the MSL team took FOLIO on a backstage tour of the revamped magazine.

PHOTOGRAPHY
The mass of how-to instructions in MSL can make even the most daring domestic goddess feel a little overwhelmed. "For 11 years we've been looking for that perfect place where our readers aren't given too much information - which makes it look too difficult - yet there's enough information so that they can successfully complete the project," says Towey. "[The redesign] tried to make everything simpler, to calm it down."
To clean out the clutter, the team played with photography. "It's the same, but cleaner," says Towey. "We're putting fewer photographs on the page, and they're larger and easier to see. We didn't want the typography to overwhelm the photography - we wanted the photography to be the hero."

The redesigned pages have also been "aired out maybe 10 percent," says Pike. "There's more white space," adds Roach. "We peeled back a little bit of the 'too much' to make the essence come out."

MODERNIZATION
The newsstand has its fair share of fading starlets, but the makeover of MSL was intended to keep the wrinkles at bay. "As your readership ages, you can make the mistake of becoming your mom's magazine," says Towey. You have to keep attracting younger readers, she says, "so there was a drive to be more modern." The index of the mag is now on the spine, and various concepts have been updated. "Historically, this page was a moody, inspirational shot with emotional text about the seasons," she says. "Now it has been redesigned as a sort of still-life photograph, accompanied by several season-related, historical, or novel facts. We will create this still-life icon month after month. I think that it's award-winning."

"The amount of white space is like a drum roll," says de Wilde. "It leads you up to an event, stages everything else on the page. If you use white space when you design, you can add drama." The redesign also shakes up the position of objects on the grid. "By becoming asymmetrical, we've added a modern element. Before, the balance was very centered," adds de Wilde.

THE FONTS
In late 2000, de Wilde began talks with font designer Jonathan Hoefler, of New York-based Hoefler Type Foundry. "We needed a font you could use - small, large, and throughout the front of the book," she says. Also, although MSL doesn't use boldface type - because "we don't shout," explains de Wilde - the designers do favor italics. "The italics looks like a voice, or a quote." She decided that two fonts would be needed: one front-of-book workhorse, and an elegant, classical-yet-modern font for the feature well.

For the well, the Living team settled on a light serif font inspired by old, hand-drawn maps. For the front of the book, a slab serif called Archer became the font of choice. It took four months for the basics of Archer to be designed so that de Wilde could begin flowing front-of-book text and testing its abilities. Archer debuted, complete, in the October issue. The well font, Surveyor, however, is still several months away from completion and won't appear until the February issue.

"When you have a magazine that prints at the numbers we do, they don't want you experimenting," says de Wilde of the still incomplete Surveyor.

The new fonts will not only improve readability, adds Pike, but they'll also protect the new look. "It's hard to emulate you when you have a proprietary typeface. The innate quirkiness of the particular font has a really specific character. People can't copy it to the same degree."

READABILITY
The savory photography in MSL has a way of creating a craving for everything from miso soup to roast beef, but readers looking to put the recipes to the test were grumbling that the directions were difficult to read. "You should be able to put the magazine on the counter, stand up, and make whatever you're making," says Towey. "We needed better readability." The new font helped, but from the FOB to the feature well, the number of elements on a page needed to be reduced.

Then, to satisfy reader appetite for bite-sized info, the new templates were fitted with bullets and charts. "People have changed their reading habits," says Roach. "It's good to step back and see that we don't always need a 1,000-word story. It'll never come down to just 10 words on the page. But sometimes you just don't need poetry. You need information."

COVERS
The cover logo is the same, and even the photography is similar. But the Archer typeface is used to introduce simple, clear blips of information on the upper-left side of the cover, Pike explains. "A lot of magazines out there put shadows, outlines, and all this stuff all over their typefaces - that just adds to the busyness of the newsstand," he says. "They all think that's what America wants. We would rather have clearer, more arresting photography that hopefully gives you a sense of peace.

"There's a lot more competition on the newsstand, adds Towey. "You have to make a very iconographic statement that people will see from far away. It must clearly say, 'This is a new issue - buy me!'"So what does a renovation like this cost? The folks are MSL declined to show us the bill, but they say the ROI is in the eye of the reader and advertiser. "Advertisers are very design-driven," says Lauren Stanich, president of publishing. "And the fact that it's a beautiful magazine helps showcase their ads. From a business point of view, if it's easier for the reader to navigate the magazine, [new business] and renewal numbers will increase.
"Hoping for an objective take on the MSL team's efforts, we sent the October issue to Robert Valentine, a design consultant. Right from the start, his impressions bore out the team's goals. "It seems cleaner," says Valentine. "They created a magazine for everyone now. The front of the book is simpler. The projects are simpler. A lot of people don't pay attention to individual departments and put all their attention into the feature well. But that's what sets Martha apart - she's great at paying close attention to the details."

THE PERILS OF NAMESAKE BRANDING
Before Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia began trading on the New York Stock Exchange in 1999, the company warned investors that the "business would be adversely affected if Martha Stewart's public image or reputation were to be tarnished." In its prospectus, MSLO said it would increasingly focus on spreading content-creation across a team of experts.In the three years since then, Martha Stewart has appeared on the cover just once - in January 2001, a 10-year anniversary issue. So one important mission of the redesign was to allow for key editors to be introduced in future issues. First up was Susan Spungen, the food editor, with Easy Entertaining. "We're introducing everybody," says creative director Gael Towey.


Still, months of negative press about Martha Stewart's alleged involvement in the ImClone stock scandal have critics speculating about irreversible damage to the brand. While MSLO stock dipped to an all-time low - hovering in October around $6, down from a 1999 high of $49.50 - year-to-date ad pages grew 2.5 percent and ad spending increased 8.8 percent. In other words, the scandal has produced mixed, somewhat indeterminate results. "There hasn't been the slippage of readership people expected," says George Fertitta, president and CEO of New York ad agency Margeotes/Fertitta + Partners. "But there has been some advertising withdrawal.

Ultimately, just as we like to build people up and then tear them down, I believe we also forgive." Fertitta speculates that, given the time to heal, the MSLO business prognosis could be quite positive. "It's a powerful brand," he says. "But so much depends on how this dilemma is handled."

Branding expert Larry McNaughton, president and COO of CoreBrand, has his doubts. "Instead of standing for something that's going to last a lifetime, like Disney, or Michael Dell, or Steve Jobs, Martha Stewart stood for a lifestyle," says McNaughton. "The issue here is that a brand based entirely on personality, on celebrity, is hugely fragile. It is incredibly difficult, if not impossible, to translate that into something deeper, more stable, and relevant without losing the original appeal of the brand." Given the current course of events, he says MSLO may have no other choice than to excise Stewart from the brand. "Martha Stewart is approaching the backside of the bell curve of her celebrity," says McNaughton. "If they were to start MSL today, I don't think anyone would buy it."

THE COMPETITIVE SET
Although just more than a decade old, MSL is often considered the founding grandmother of the genre. But now the newsstand is crowded with competitors. In the last year alone, new titles such as Chic Simple, Budget Living, Cachet, LivingRoom, and ReadyMade began vying for a piece of the nester market. The MSL staff acknowledges that the heat's been turned up but says the redesign will go a long way toward making their glossy pop on the newsstand. "There's a fundamental difference between us and everyone else," says Roach.

"We honor doing everything from scratch. If you look at our masthead, as compared to, say, Real Simple, I bet they have two or three people in their food department. We have 15 people in the kitchen and a bunch more contributing editors. It's harder to do it the way we do, but it's who we are. That's our trademark, and that's how we differentiate."

MARTHA OPENS UP

Q: What prompted the redesign?

A: The magazine had to evolve. It had to grow in order to deal with the times, people's changingattitudes and evolving lifestyles. Of course, the magazine had subtly evolved over the years, but this redesign was more than subtle because it involved a change of fonts, headlines, the index printed on spine, clearer photography - all of which helped to create a clearer, more helpful, easily accessible experience for the reader.

Q: What about the old design wasn't working?

A: It wasn't that it wasn't working, exactly. Other magazines had started looking like our magazine. Others began using the same typeface, logos, and visual style. And that just wasn't appropriate. We are more trendsetters than followers.Sometimes [Living] was a little difficult to read. For instance, when we'd run type over photography. That doesn't work for the homemaker. She wants clarity. She wants information that's easy to read, instructions that are simple to follow, and beautiful photography. The chaotic magazines of the mid 90s - the avant-garde, hard to read designs found in tech magazines - don't work for the homemaker.

Q: Do you worry about the competition?

A: No. Why should I? I mean, other magazines started to look like our magazine, not the other way around. Right now there's a whole spate of magazines with "living" in the title. The typefaces look peculiarly similar to ours.

Q: Did you ever worry about the length of time the project was taking, and the cost?

A: No, not at all.

Q: Will the average reader and advertiser recognize the improvements?

A: Oh, absolutely. We already received lots of letters from readers saying things like, "Thank you for printing the index on the spine." It might appear subtle, but they notice all these little changes. They're very detail-oriented.

Q: Some have inferred that the redesign was a way for the magazine to reduce its dependence on your name, your face. Was that the case?


A: I don't think the redesign removes my importance from the magazine at all. It has nothing to do with that. What it does is make the magazine more visual and appealing to the reader. It has absolutely nothing to do with that.