Domino (1-year)

Magazines : Domino (1-year)

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Domino (1-year)

from: Conde' Nast Publications




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Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 3 months

List Price: $35.00
Your Price: $10.00
You Save: $25.00 (71%)
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Average Rating:  out of 5 stars
Sales Rank: 49







Binding: Magazine
First Issue Lead Time: 6-10 weeks
Format: Magazine Subscription, Print
Issues Per Year: 10
Label: Conde' Nast Publications
Magazine Type: Consumer magazine
Manufacturer: Conde' Nast Publications
Number Of Issues: 10
Publisher: Conde' Nast Publications
Sales Rank: 49
Studio: Conde' Nast Publications
Subscription Length: 365 days




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Editorial Review:

Product Description:
Domino magazine is the guide to living with style for young, busy, fashion-conscious women. With a focus on home decorating, domino acts as design consultant, personal shopper and friend, offering inspiration, information and innovative ideas. Perfect for both renters and home-owners, each issue is packed with tips, shopping information and easy DIY tricks to help readers create the home and lifestyle of their dreams, on any budget.

Amazon.com Review:

Who Reads Domino?
Domino is a style magazine that focuses on life at home. Think of it as a search engine for great decor. It is written for the busy, fashion-conscious, discerning woman, who is passionate about living with style but may lack the time or expertise to navigate the decorating terrain. Domino is there to help.

Domino’s editors, with great taste, cull the market so that its readers can spend more time enjoying their lives and their homes. Through the beautiful interiors they photograph and feature, they reveal the secrets of how rooms are actually put together. Domino’s editors have the know-how, the access, the resources, the buying information and the knowledge of decorating and lifestyle trends. They help readers connect the dots between inspiration and realization, so that readers can make their own homes work better for their own lives. Great style, as Domino’s readers know, is all about personal choice. Domino liberates and inspires its readers to be able to make those personal choices.

What You Can Expect in Each Issue:

  • Destination: Every issue features a shopping guide to a particular city, highlighting the best neighborhoods, the most interesting places to eat and stay, and the best boutiques.
  • Scouting: The scouting section features the things that Domino’s editors have discovered and are obsessing over, the best new products, designers, plus quick solutions and easy ideas from decorators.
  • Decorating: The decorating section takes the mystery out of decorating and shows readers how to put the pieces together. This eclectic mix of articles runs the gamut: how-tos and tips from designers; answers to décor dilemmas from an on-staff industry leader. Regular features include: Guides to the best furniture options at different price points; Perfect Pairs, in which we take two pieces of furniture (i.e. bed and bedside table) and scour the market for the ones that best go together; Paint Palettes, shown in rooms so that you can see how it will actually look; and Outfit to Room, in which we translate a stylish outfit into an equally stylish room.
  • Entertaining: The typical Domino reader is busy and doesn’t always know when she will find the time to do the entertaining she would like to do. The solutions Domino offers are meant to help her host a meal or a party like she has nothing but time, and a full staff to boot. Domino features seasonally inspired recipes and party throwing ideas that are as glamorous as they are easy. The result is inspiration for the host with a surplus of taste but not a surplus of time.
  • Nesting: Nesting offers everything you need to make the time you spend at home more enjoyable, relaxing and efficient. Whether it’s beauty and spa treatments you can enjoy in your own bathroom, organizational ideas for the black hole that has become your closet, or a rigorous test drive of kitchen appliances, these articles help you build a sound foundation for your household and enjoy the home you have already created.
  • Renovating: Domino’s Renovator’s Notebook aims to simplify the process of 'home improvement'--and even to make it pleasurable--with stylish and practical ideas for transforming a space. This section features room makeovers, tips for dealing with contractors, information on how much work should cost, as well as truly doable DIY projects, and reports on the best new trends (plus detailed info about how to make them work).
  • Giving Back: Everybody wants to do good, but how? Each month the editors find ways to help Domino’s readers clear their karma by contributing to stylish and substantial causes, all while shopping, having fun, or clearing clutter from their homes.
  • Features: Each issue features several stunning interiors, large and small, urban and suburban, from across the country. Through text and photographs, Domino reveals both the spaces themselves and the ways in which people live in those spaces. In each article the reader not only enjoys a voyeuristic walk through someone else’s home, but also gets a mother lode of important information--how to achieve a look, where to find specific components, and what logic defines particular design choices. The style and design-ethic employed in each case may differ, but all of the homes it features approach design in an innovative, exciting and personal way. Most importantly these are real homes, living spaces, not show-rooms. Though Domino often features the homes of decorators and celebrities (as well as those of design-minded lay-people), its articles are about real people who live real lives, and who have designed their homes to make those lives more effective and more beautiful.
Past Issues:

Contributors:
Domino’s contributors are people who have made names for themselves as designers, trendsetters and style-makers, stars of their fields who generously lend their expertise and skill to Domino each month: Marian McEvoy, doyenne of the shelter magazine world; Rita Konig, author and tastemaker; Jennifer Rubell, cookbook writer and consummate hostess. And behind it all are the people who have shaped Domino from the beginning: Founding Editor in chief Deborah Needleman, Creative Director Sara Ruffin Costello, and Style Director Dara Caponigro, the style gurus who set the tone for every issue, and whose impeccable taste and clear vision have set a new standard in the field.

Magazine Layout:
Domino’s unusual approach to photography creates the beautiful alchemy of real life and fantasy that makes the magazine so enticing. Natural light, intimate angles and styling that celebrate the imperfections of life being lived set Domino interiors apart; there’s always a sense that someone just left the room. The magazine’s smart, sophisticated design offers several points of entry, so text feels conversational and entertaining. Visually and via text, Domino relates to readers in a close, fast, honest way.

Comparisons to Other Magazines:
The shelter magazine industry has traditionally reserved design as the territory of the elite. Domino shatters this premise, opening up that universe and showing readers how to navigate the terrain. We do this by featuring stylish yet affordable options, rooms that always have a characteristic mix of high and low furnishings, and by making a commitment to offer sustainable and eco-friendly design options. Its whole ethos is different. Unlike other design magazines, Domino focuses both on beautiful spaces and the people who live in those spaces. Down-to-earth, witty and easy to relate to, Domino makes readers part of the party, rather than onlookers. Advice is offered as options, never as imperatives. Readers always feel welcome, energized and taken care of, never burdened.

Awards:
The magazine industry has recognized Domino’s excellence since its start. When the magazine was launched in 2006, it swept all the major new-magazine awards. Advertising Age and Media Industry Newsletter called it launch of the year, and Adweek called it start up of the year. More recently, Domino was nominated for two prestigious National Magazine Awards by the American Society of Magazine editors.

Domino has also been recognized for its commitment to good works. The 'Domino design project' (which transformed 40 apartments in the South Bronx into beautiful homes for women and their families living with HIV/AIDS) won 'Community Involvement Program of the Year' at the Stevie Awards for Women in Business.










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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Worst Design Magazine
I had ordered a 2-year subscription to House & Garden. About 10 months in, the publisher replaced H&G with Domino. I tried Domino for 6 months before I called to ask for a refund. This magazine is terrible. Each month showcases multiple rooms, homes, before and after makeovers, etc., all from the homes of various Domino editors. They don't even put forth the energy to give you ideas from outside their own staff. How lazy are they?



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - High-End Decorating But Mostly Ads
* I started receiving Domino magazine about a year ago and can say that it has not held anything appealing for me.

It is high-end, artsy, modern decorating and has not given me one idea that I would actually use in my home.

More troublesome for me is the amount of advertising in the magazine. It is literally half advertisements. On my latest issue, I had to reach page 11 before the first page that was not advertisement or the table of contents. It is that way throughout the magazine.

The articles themselves are sparse. One page will be entirely devoted to answering one reader question. But most of the articles are just items listed with where to buy them. They consider that an article.

As far as magazines are concerned, there are much better ones out there.

If you are not seeking high-end, modern decorating then I would recommend the tried and true, Better Homes and Gardens (1-year). If you like a southern appeal, I highly recommend Southern Living (1-year), a wonderful magazine filled with travel, food and decorating from the south. If you are more of a traditionalist, try Traditional Home (1-year). ...



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - ....."Before & Before" makeovers??....HORRBILE
I hate this Magazine, I ordered it from Amazon because I had the option to pay $7.95 for shipping or spend $3 extra and get FREE shipping....I chose a Magazine-- "DOMINO" ...I never heard of DOMINO but I joke with my friends that it's like looking at "BEFORE & BEFORE" Photos...instead of "Before and After"... Their Makeovers, or the "look" they are going for is NOT for me. I feel like they are decorating out of somebody's attic or a Flea Market...or just don't have enough money to put a complete "look" together. I don't mind finding bargains or mixing and matching styles but I feel this magazine has NO style... I want to be inspired when I see something in a home magazine...something to strive for in the future or to be able to implement in my current decor. This magazine makes me want to transfer my subscription to someone else---that's if anyone else could stomach it. I have tried giving it away to my friends and nobody wants it...I will be surprised if this Magazine lasts long.



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - don't renew through amazon
* I renewed my subscription through amazon and I got two issues at once, Sept and Oct. Problem? I already had those 2 issues, making my 10 issue subscription only 8 new issues. This magazine is not good enough for a \"year\" subscription to be only 8 issues. It turned out to be 8 for the price of 10, not a good deal. ...



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Biggest waste of $10.00
I hate this magazine. Hard to read, definitely NOT for your average person. The stuff inside is just plain odd....not to mention expensive. Most of the rooms are ugly and would have no place in everyday life.

(1-year) Domino


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We've covered in too much detail how it's some sort of "open season" on Vonage when it comes to VoIP patents. After dealing with ridiculous and expensive patent lawsuits from companies who failed to actually innovate in the same way Vonage did, the company was pressured by Wall Street to quickly settle the various patent lawsuits filed against the company. Of course, rather than settle matters, that simply opened the door for other companies to go searching through their patent portfolios to see if there was anything they could sue Vonage over. Indeed, following those settlements it didn't take long for AT&T to dig up a patent and sue -- which was quickly settled as well. Thought things were over? No such luck. Nortel just showed up last month to sue and it took all of about a week and a half for Vonage to settle that case as well.

The Nortel case is slightly different because Vonage actually already had a patent infringement lawsuit going against Nortel, but it wasn't really initiated by Vonage. Instead, it had been initiated by a patent holding firm that Vonage bought in 2006. The end result of the settlement doesn't involve money changing hands, but just a cross licensing agreement for the patents. So what's the big lesson that Vonage and others have learned from this? It's certainly got nothing to do with innovating. It's to hoard as many patents as possible so that you have your own nuclear stockpile for when someone else sues you. Want to know why the USPTO is overwhelmed? It's not because there aren't enough examiners (as some will claim) or that there aren't enough funds. It's because the way the system now works is that you are supposed to file patents on every tiny little advancement so you can use it to protect yourself against lawsuits from everyone else. That's not about innovation. It's about waste. In the meantime, since it's still open season at Vonage, who's going to be next? There are a ton of other patents in the VoIP space that can surely be used in a lawsuit, right?

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This raw work-flow application isn't the Holy Grail many hoped it would be, but Apple Aperture 1.5 could make life easier for photographers who need to cull, retouch, and output large numbers of photographs quickly and efficiently.





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The tagline emblazoned across the top of this latest WWF album's cover reads, "All New WWF Superstar Themes That Rock!" And on any compilation where songs by Limp Bizkit and Marilyn Manson are unremarkable for their fast pace and fury, it can be safely said that all of the songs do "rock!" Careful work has gone into matching songs to the performers, and the opportunity to listen to this album outside the context of WWF shows means that a fan can live the fantasy any time he chooses, all day long. Even Vince McMahon's theme strengthens the role he plays in the WWF's plot: Dope's "No Chance" talks in the first person about a stupidly angry boss, and connecting McMahon with this song is smart because everybody hates their boss on some level, and this song only reminds the listener of McMahon's part in the drama. Along with "No Chance," some of the other numbers on Forceable Entry are new covers or remixes of wrestlers' theme songs. Here, this generally means a new version with dirtier guitar work throughout it. This will only bother the listener if he was really attached to the original version of one of the themes, such as Chris Jericho's "Break the Walls Down" (Sevendust), or Undertaker's "Rollin'" (Limp Bizkit). Regardless, if you know the songs played upon the entrance of these wrestlers, then you know which themes you like and which ones you don't--and you know whether or not you need this album. --Mark Huntsman
Domino (1-year)
Shopping  Created at Sat Nov 22 18:09:20 2008