Monday, February 27, 2012

This Old House

This Old House (1-year auto-renewal)

This Old House (1-Year Auto-Renewal)


List Price: $49.90
Price: $16.00 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
Issues: 10 issues / 1202490 months

Availability: Your first issue should arrive in 6-10 weeks.

Average customer review:
(99 customer reviews)

Product Description

This Old House brings yesterday's craftsmanship, tomorrow's ideas, and today's living all under one roof.

Product Details
  • Amazon Sales Rank: #49 in Magazine Subscriptions
  • Formats: Magazine Subscription, Print
Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Who Reads This Old House?
This Old House is a magazine for homeowners in search of practical, affordable, and inspirational ideas for enhancing and maintaining their homes. What they find is a balance of step-by-step instruction for DIY interior and landscape projects; lively how-to's about keeping contractors on the level and saving money on remodels; expert tool and product reviews; and handsome feature stories showcasing fine craftsmanship and elegant architectural design.

What You Can Expect in Each Issue:
Detailed information, illustration, and photography that provides an understanding of the tools, materials and techniques required to renovate a home, as well as how to work more effectively with architects, contractors, and designers. Regular sections:

  • Idea File Inspirational: "before and after" kitchen and bathroom remodeling projects; and virtual makeover schemes for dated home exteriors.
  • TOH TV: Take-home lessons gleaned from This Old House television's current house projects.
  • Upgrades: How to get high-end looks—both indoors and out—for less; expert shopping advice for scoring the best deals on a range of household fixtures and appliances; comparative analysis of home improvement materials and finishes; and ideas for "greening" interiors and landscapes.
  • Home Solutions: Money-saving tips and easy DIY spruce-up projects; need-to-know news related to home safety and finance; and This Old House's "remodeling therapists" answer reader questions and help them steer clear of home improvement pitfalls.
  • How-to Projects: Creative recycling projects for salvaged house parts; easy step-by-step plans for weekend remodelers; tutorials on how all those "whaddaya call it" household systems and appliances actually work.
  • Ask This Old House: Expert troubleshooting for a range of problems submitted by the This Old House community; reader tool tests; TOH TV master carpenter Norm Abram's shares his tricks of the trade.
  • Feature Articles: Best bang for your buck ways to boost curb appeal; tips and tricks to save space and get organized; round-ups of winning room designs; period-perfect whole house renovation projects; and "All About" guides to building materials, fixtures, and finishes.
Special Issues
Reader-Created — The annual round up of projects and tips offered by the magazine readers and website users. The TOH community shares what they know, shows what they've done, and votes on thisoldhouse.com for their favorite projects sent in by their peers. Green — Whether building from scratch or improving an existing house, TOH helps homeowners weigh the many options for energy and water savings and choose the very best among thousands of eco-friendly products, new technologies and materials. The issue also showcases attractive, value-minded projects that inspire readers to envision their own green home makeovers.

Magazine Layout:
The overall design is engaging and fresh, with friendly and straightforward typefaces. A mix of illustration and step-by-step photography offers easy navigation of how-to stories. Pulled back views of interiors and landscapes are always highlighted with tight shots that break the images down to the details so readers can follow along and replicate the results at home.
Click on any image below to see select pages:

Contributors:
This Old House editors are DIYers; testing the tools, executing the how-to projects, and volunteering their own homes as research and development labs for devising smart solutions to real-life problems. The magazine also works closely with This Old House television's pros, calling on our resident general contractor, carpenter, plumber, landscape contractor, and interior designer for expert advice. Last, the readers themselves contribute to the magazine, submitting their own before and after projects, field-tested tips, and personal stories—good and bad—about home improvement.

Past Issues:

Comparisons to Other Magazines:
Neither rarified interior design magazine nor DIY manual, This Old House is a blend of the two, designed to help its readers enjoy, understand, and protect their investment in their homes.

Advertisers:
Lowe's and Home Depot, Valspar and Sherwin-Williams, Moen and Delta, Trex, True Value, Trane, Craftsman and Kohler are just a few of the home-centered advertisers This Old House carries.

Awards:
  • MIN's Best of the Web Winner 2009. Category: Video: Magazine-Branded Show (CONSUMER): This Old House Family Projects
  • Folio Eddie Awards: Gold Winner, Consumer/Shelter Full Issue, June 2008; Gold Winner, Consumer/Shelter Single Article or Series, June 2008, "Family Projects"
  • Editor and Publisher's "EPpy" award for best national magazine-affiliated web site, 2008
  • Society of Publication Designers: Website Redesign, 2008; Feature Photography Award, March 2007; Back of Book, Design Award, November 2007; Front of Book, Design Award, December 2007; Photography Award, 2006; Redesign Award*, 2005; Award, House Plans, 2005; llustration Spot Award*, 2005; Photography Award, 2005
  • American Photographer - Photography Award, 2005
  • Henry R. Luce Award, Special Interests, 2005
    *indicates multiple award
Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews

149 of 163 people found the following review helpful.
3Read the publisher's statement carefully
By a reader
If you're looking for d.i.y. information on maintenance and minor repairs for your old house, skip this one. As the publisher says, it's pretty much all about major restorations by professionals, and there's very little the average homeowner could even participate in, let alone do on his or her own. If you want to learn how an architect chooses historically correct replacement windows for your old ones that stick, buy "This Old House." If you just want to know how to get the old ones unstuck, move on to "Family Handyman."

35 of 38 people found the following review helpful.
4Resource Material
By R. Miller
If you are a fan of This Old House, then you probably want to get this magazine. If you have been watching the show for a long time (who hasn't?) then you will feel like you are reading a magazine about family, as there is usually something in each issue from each of the show's participants.

The magazine offers more in-depth information about the projects you see on television. A big reason to get the magazine is to learn more about the materials used in the projects and where you can get them. In addition, there are projects covered in the magazine which are not done on the television series.

While the magazine, in my opinion, is a bit short on exact specifics, or "how-to's," one has to keep in mind that a lot of the attitude of the show seems to be "use a professional." While I can understand doing that if you have the financial resources, it just isn't always practical. Still, if you want to be informed when you do call the professionals, this is one way to do it.

22 of 23 people found the following review helpful.
4perfect gift for TOH fans
By Richard Chin
This is a magazine for old house lovers -- people who like the style of an older home, for whom the things that break and the things that creak inspire renovation not cursing.

My wife and I live in our second old house, and have watched the TV show since before our first. For us pragmatic Norm the woodworker, blow-dried Steve the host, and spendthrift Richard the plumbing/HVAC guy are like family. This magazine provides occasional coverage of the project house you see on PBS which is a bonus for fans. But its main focus is to show you how you can fix up your own old house.

It is a great source of ideas, inspiration, and the vendors who can sell you what you'll need. Got an old house and the money and patience for renovation? If you do, get this magazine.

http://astore.amazon.com/amazon-book-books-20/detail/B002PXW0XK

 
 
 

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