Magazine Publishers of America
The first issue of The Knot national magazine bowed in 2002. “Today we have a circulation of 660,000 annually (330,000 semiannually),” says Co-Founder and Editor- in-Chief Carley Roney, adding that the largely photo-driven magazine is sold via newsstands, bookstores and The Knot website.
Charlotte, VT-based James Lawrence, who founded Eating Well in 1990 with Canadian publisher Telemedia Communications, was not part of the food and health magazine when it folded due to weak ad sales in 1999. Read more
Loveland, Colo.-based Interweave Press launched Interweave Knits in 1997 with more than 100,000 circulation. Initially planned as a one-time special issue, Interweave Knits proved popular enough to warrant quarterly publication, according to Pam Allen, its Dover, NH-based Editor-in-Chief. Read more
A division of iVillage Inc., (newly relocated to New York from Darien, CT) iVillage Parenting Network targets the expectant and new-mother market, primarily with three annual magazines and a website. Read more
Scholastic Inc. publishes more than 50 different magazines for students and teachers, according to Hugh Roome, President of Scholastic International and Executive VP of Scholastic Inc. Read more
World Magazine, launched in March 1986, has a weekly paid circulation of 140,000, according to Joel Belz, Founding Chairman of the newsweekly magazine and CEO of God’s World Publications Inc. Read more
Time Out Group Ltd., whose first Time Out magazine was launched in London, targets young adults in other cities in the U.S. and abroad. Read more
The two magazines in the Clapper Communications companies stable with the highest circulation totals are Crafts 'n Things, and Pack-O-Fun... Read more
Scientific American is the oldest continuously published monthly in America, the magazine’s President/CEO Gretchen Teichgraeber points out proudly... Read more