Tag: personal post

  • Getting to the root of the problem | Why I need to stop worrying about my blog

    I thought I’d take a moment from my usual posting to talk about this big ol’ world of blogging. Now I would classify myself as a hobbyist blogger, someone who does this whole posting thing for fun…for now at least.
    Because after signing up for the South Blogger’s Meet-Up and actually mentioning my blog in interviews and CV’s/Application Forms for placements, I’m seriously considering how much I value my blog and whether I can actually stand back and call it marketable.

    Which also makes me question how serious should I be taking this whole world of blogging?

    Should I put it out there I’m looking for advertisers? Should I start using AdSense? How are my stats doing? How well am I networking? How much do I do to ‘sell’ my blog out online and in person? Is my content marketable and are people reading it? How much am I posting? Should I be looking for more blogging events to go to? And if I go to them so I have to make business cards? Because isn’t that what my blog is becoming? A business?….
    blah blah blah…

    And this is when I start panicking. I start looking at other bloggers who have follower numbers in the hundreds and thousands and feel a little disappointed in my own blog. They say you should forget about all this, that views and follower counts mean nothing. But it’s easier said than done.
    I’m not gonna lie I’ve been in a bit of a blogging funk the past week and the whole time I was worried about what posts am I going to put out? Am I commenting and networking enough to warrant comments back?

    When I’m away from my blog I find myself worrying about it. Which hasn’t been the best thing being back at University, upping my hours at my part-time job, socialising and also participating in NaNoWriMo this month. But I can’t help it. It seems when I’m not blogging I’m thinking about ‘whether I can take a photo or mention this on a post?’. It can drive a person up the wall.

    But last night I really had a stop and think about all this? Is it really worth the worrying? I remembered the initial reason I started up my blog, not to gain a revenue stream or have a massive following. But to just express myself, some of my first posts were about sharing experiences and writing about things I felt passionate about (at that time it was The Clothes Show and X Factor fashion lol what can I say :D). And I commented on other people’s blogs because I wanted to not just so they might hit me up and comment back.

    Getting back to the main issue here and what I’m trying to say is it’s fine to freak out a little bit. It’s good to have a moment and think ‘Oh good lord my blog is terrible’ because it should refocus you. But after that initial freak out you need to step back and put it in the back of your mind.
    Sure it’s nice to mention you have a blog and dream about one day making some money off it.

    But right now? I needed to step back and get back to what I really loved about blogging when I started nearly a year ago now. I loved writing about fashion. I still do, but since then I also found some other loves with art, music, design and even just the web itself. It was all about content that pleased myself at the beginning and nothing else. And it’s the same for anyone else in a blogging funk.

    What do you really enjoy about this whole world of blogging?

    Is it the chance to express yourself, whether through fan-girling about something or having a moan? Then write, write, write.

    Is it the interaction with other? Then go and take a trip away from your own blog and comment on other’s posts.

    Whatever it is, just go out there and forget about numbers, forget about advertisers and forget about being professional and have fun. Worrying is going to do nothing except give me more frown lines, and God only knows I’m getting plenty of those from Uni as it is.

    So breath deep with me fellow bloggers…Keep Calm, Freak Out….and then Carry On ;)

  • My life in magazines

    My life in magazines

    Fashion Magazines. They pretty much come with the territory when you start blogging about fashion.

    I was clearing out my room this week and kept coming across magazines whilst moving bits and pieces around. I gathered them all together and found ones dating right back to when I was a pre-teen. So I thought I’d take a trip down magazine memory lane with my life in through their glossy pages.

    IMGP0064

    Sugar Magzine

    Starting off. I started buying fashion magazines as a pre-teen. Initially, they were treats from my mum, instead of getting an allowance. Sugar magazine was my introduction to the fashion world, it was bright, beautiful and full of great UK teen fashion. Plus with the added ‘Lad Mag’ and teen advice columns, it was pretty much a bible for my pre-teens. Back then fashion was a minefield, I was a tomboy who wanted to be girly so I guess this was my first venture into femininity.

    IMGP0069

    Teen Vogue

    After, a trip back home to the Philippines in my mid-teens I bought Teen Vogue for the plane ride (the top magazine in the pile above is that issue) and loved it! American fashion really took my interest, the styling was different (though it might’ve been the influence from the main Vogue) and the fashion stories seemed more exciting and up to the minute. So I started buying copies alongside Sugar. I eventually stopped buying Sugar, to my 14/15-year-old self I felt a bit more sophisticated buying Teen Vogue and revelled in American popular culture.

    IMGP0072

    Vogue Magazine

    Wanting to graduate to the big girl’s magazines I started buying Vogue after stealing away my mum’s copy of the 100th Anniversary edition. But it hit my pocket hard (I was a lowly student after all) and I switched back to the teen version after a few editions. Vogue did spark my interest in the fashion industry though, I remember getting into the idea of becoming a fashion editor after reading Vogue and watching The Devil Wears Prada.

    IMGP0073

    Grazia, Look, More – Weekly Gossips!

    I then had a phase of getting weekly fashion/gossip magazines. They were cheaper and I felt more inclined to get rid of them as they were only good for a quick fashion fix. These three are the only ones I have left. Weeklies required no brain power to read so were great as an after exam treat both at GCSE and A Level.

    IMGP0076

    Company, Marie Claire, Glamour

    Since becoming a commuter for University I tended to switch between the major fashion magazines here in the UK – Marie Claire, Glamour, Elle UK and Company – usually dependent on the free gifts and who’s on the cover, superficial but what can I say I’m a student and I’m swayed by freebies lol. In terms of fashion, I was discouraged away from taking on fashion journalism as a career, instead favouring to use fashion as a tool for expression using the magazines as personal inspiration. It also seemed appropriate to be reading about ‘grown-up’ problems and advice columns in these magazines now that I was 17/18 year old instead of trivial playground problems in Teen Vogue and Sugar. IMGP0080

    Elle Magazine

    And now, with my Elle UK subscription which I got at London Fashion Weekend, I’ve got a monthly fix of glossy fashion for blog inspiration.
    But when that ends who know where I’ll go? I’ve been swayed into flicking through the more ‘obscure’ titles as well as reading online magazines too.

    What about you guys?

    What are your favourite magazines?

    What did you start off with and what are you reading now?

    Ria Xx