American Photo | 
| Publisher: Hachette Magazines, Inc.
List Price: $29.94 Buy New: $12.95 You Save: $16.99 (57%)
Rating: 17 reviews Sales Rank: 630
Format: Magazine Subscription Type: Consumer magazine Subscription Issues: 6 Subscription Length: 12 Months Issues Per Year: 6 First Issue Lead Time: 12-16 Weeks
ASIN: B00007AV7N
Release Date: November 23, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 2 to 4 months
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description This magazine is for men and women interested in creative photography. It profiles the personalities behind the lens and their contributions to art, history, fashion, journalism, and advertising. American Photo often features reviews of exhibitions and books, readers' photos and requests and picture portfolios and stories on working professionals.
Abstract
Specialized articles aimed at the professional art photographer; profiles and portfolios; product reviews; computerized photography; digital imaging.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 12 more reviews...
OK worth the price September 21, 2003 Ernest Boehm (Des Plaines, IL United States) 36 out of 40 found this review helpful
I think for the editors choice issues and equipment reviews this is worth $13 a year. I was pleased with all my purchases base on equipment review in this magazine. The is a mostly about glomore photos and photo journalism. If you are not intrested in this area of photograpy than this is not the magizine for you. Lots of ideas about interior photograpy, and model photography. A lot of writing about the buzz in the photo world. Also quite a bit about photographes bios or resume, not a lot about there technique. Yet it is only 13 dollars a year and I see an image in each issue worth paying 13 dollars to see in each issue. There are a lot of ads, but good ads which are quite entertaining. Not a techincal or method guide in any way. good overview of the newest and best equipement. Also good photo book reviews Good political photoessays too.
one of my favorite photo magazines April 19, 2002 adead_poet@hotmail.com (Austin, tx USA) 19 out of 22 found this review helpful
American Photo is one of my favorite photography magazines. It's beautifully made and full of great articles. There is some technical pieces in it, but what I really love about the magazine is that it isn't just a technical magazine (like Popular Photography), it's issues cover artists and events happening. I feel all photographers, regardless of whether you are a novice or an advanced professional, should subscribe. The only fault I can find is that it comes out bimonthly and not every month.
Lots of ads and nude women June 22, 2003 Barbara (Front Royal, Virginia United States) 15 out of 17 found this review helpful
I'm a new photographer and was looking for technical information about a wide variety of photography styles. This journal seems to focus on photographers who shoot nude or semi-nude women. If it were one or two of the journals I wouldn't care, but it seem to be the focus each time. I think they just want to sell magazines rather than teach us something about photography.
Hackneyed July 15, 2003 Michael J Edelman (Huntington Woods, MI USA) 15 out of 21 found this review helpful
American Photo began as a magazine devoted more to photography than to gear, as an alternative to the gear obsessed magazines like Pop Photo and Photographic. It has evolved into a magazine that divides its pages between equipment obsession and cheesy "glamour" photography that tries for art and delivers soft core porn. No stars.
Better titled "American Fashion Photography" August 27, 2003 15 out of 15 found this review helpful
I subscribed to this magazine hoping for a good, general overview of the field in this country, with product reviews, tips, etc. The product reviews and tidbits are helpful, but I've become increasingly tired of the fashion photography focus and more particularly with the glamour shots on every issue's cover. I'm not sure if they're trying to compete with Vogue, but there's a lot more to photography than yet another shot of a model or an actress. How about some landscape, portraiture, abstract, historical, architectural, aerial, or underwater photography? Please? They seem to have forgotten who their audience is, and frankly, the helpful and informative bits are outweighed by the narrow focus on fashion media and photography.
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