The 2024 readership survey results: Younger people, less TikTok

Friday, July 5th 2024
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What PS content do you like best?

The single most powerful thing about Permanent Style has always been its closeness to its audience. I have over 100 mini-conversations with readers every day in the comments; Lucas has half that again on the shop side. The suggestions for articles means we can never run out of content, and that content addresses reader concerns, rather than targeting fashion trends or SEO. 

Still, there’s something particularly useful about asking readers targeted questions, all at once. It focuses the mind, and makes sure we have the most feedback possible on important questions. Readership surveys are the best way to do that. 

We did our first in 2019, and completed our second a couple of weeks ago, five years later. Many of the questions were the same, so we could see how things have changed; others, for example on new media and business models, were new. 

These are some of the results. 

What are the most important features of PS products?

My biggest concern about PS right now is that we should be changing the medium we use. Blogs can seem very noughties: no one starts a blog today, they start an Instagram account or a YouTube channel. We are the biggest website for high-end menswear around, but perhaps that’s because we’re the only one left. 

So, the first question I was interested in was, how old is the average reader? Is our audience gradually ageing, as it follows the generation that primarily used websites and blogs, and gaining no followers among younger people who use Instagram and TikTok?

The answer, reassuringly, was no. Back in 2019, the average age of a PS reader was 42. Today, it’s 41.5. They’re getting younger! Well, barely, but basically the same. 

Given everyone has aged five years in that time, we must be picking up younger readers, particularly given traffic overall is up - 17% in that same period. 

This age breakdown is what Google Analytics tells us too, but that’s a little fuzzy. More importantly, it’s what I see anecdotally. In the pop-up shops we often have fathers and sons coming in together, the father having told the son about the site with the good reviews. I particularly love seeing how two generations take the same clothes and principles, but style them very differently. 

How do you like to read Permanent Style?

So how do those people feel about the media we use? This, by the way, is primarily the website. PermanentStyle.com always has more content. YouTube hosts the videos, but those are on the site too; Instagram gets extracts of the website. The only thing not on the site is IG stories and occasionally videos, like the off-hand Walkie Talkie ones we started recently. 

Surprisingly, the proportion of people that consume PS primarily through Instagram has actually fallen, to 22% of respondents from 28% five years ago (even though we do more). And no one thinks we should start doing more on Reels or TikTok - a tiny 0.61% of people thought that was a good idea. 

Interestingly, YouTube and Instagram have swapped places in the answers to the same question (which channel would you like to see more focus on?). It’s not a lot, but roughly 24% thought we should do more on YouTube, while 16% thought Instagram. Five years ago, those numbers were the other way around. 

Which channels would you like to see more focus on?

We then asked two questions about completely new media for PS: a subscription channel and a hard-copy magazine. 

As I hopefully made clear in the comments, we have no plans to make PS paid-for. The existing business model that combines advertising and products works well. But given the rise of platforms such as Substack, it was worth asking. Indeed, I find it interesting that in some ways Substack is the return of old blog-style content from 20 years ago, just with different funding.

The feedback on the subscription model was encouraging, if we ever decide to go down that route. Just over half said they were happy to subscribe (1324 people) and the average they said they would pay was £7 ($10). That’s impressive given that at other publications I know, five times the number of people ended up paying than said they would, and for roughly twice the price. 

It should be said that of course the survey audience is self-selecting. About 2400 people responded (100 less than last time) and they will by definition be among the most engaged. That’s why the data is always best combined with other analytics. 

But given PS’s primary focus on providing value to its existing readers - rather than growing as big as possible, inevitably into the mainstream - this type of survey is of particular use. And the traffic shows we’re growing anyway. 

Which of these other areas are you passionate about?

Other interesting results included:

  • Average reader income (mean) is £151k, up from £130k in 2019
  • Average quarterly spend on clothes is £1,375, down from £1,420
  • 1432 people said they would buy a hard-copy magazine
  • Watches remains third among other reader passions, after food and travel
  • Style advice and product reviews remain the most popular content types

There were a lot of good suggestions around improving the website and new products, but I won’t go into those here. Perhaps I’ll do that in the future when we make some of the changes.

I also should say congratulations to Thibault, who was selected to win the £500 PS-credit prize for taking part in the survey. He’s already bought himself an oxford shirt, a cotton sweater and Casual Style Guide. A nice bundle. 

How should PS primarily fund itself?

Overall, I was pleased and frankly relieved to see that we seem to be taking the right direction on media. TikTok and Reels might be big in society overall, but they’re not what PS readers want. It’s important, I guess, to not be swayed by talk of general trends at the expense of catering to your particular followers. 

Generally our policy has always been to move with readers - to take up new ones when they start using them, but not before. It’s what we did on Instagram and it’s what I would assume we’d do on new media like TikTok. Surveys are crucial to making sure we get that right. 

Lastly, I was amused by a recent conversation I had with a friend who used to work at a luxury menswear magazine we all know. He was amazed we printed detailed results of our survey, and were actually truthful about them. “Ours were entirely made up,” he said. “I mean, we definitely knew readers that earned $1million a year, but we had no idea what the average was, we never did a survey. So we just put $600k or something down as the average because it looked good.”

Here’s to having real numbers to talk about, and having pretty much all good news. It’s nice not having to make anything up. 

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AKG

Thanks Simon. Nicely put together summary of the survey results.
The income seems on the higher side – can you share the median also?
I think people underestimate they spend on clothing – but that may be only me.
Finally, what is SEO in the initial paragraphs? Sorry google wasnt super helpful.
Cheers
AKG

Kevin O'Neill

The blight of SEO – led content is so last year!
It’s refreshing to read real content on PS; your personality shines through. We will know you’ve been hacked if an article is called “12 things you gotta know about tailoring” !

Markus S

Congratulations! The results of the survey don’t surprise me. I can’t imagine that the same depth of content and discussion can be offered on Instagram or YouTube.
The only thing that surprised me is that readership only increased by 17 per cent between 2019 and 2024. I would have thought that readership would be many times higher now than in 2019.

Alfred N

That’s quite an achievement, congratulations! And I like to think evidence that quality generates results.

Lindsay McKee

Please do not change the media as I don’t do Social Media at all, eg TikTok, Facebook, Instagram etc.

Georgios

A very interesting survey that i took part very happilly, since its the only blog i read 1-3 times a week (depending on the time and what is covered, i read almost everything except history articles). Happy to see that i am on the poor side and most are doing better than me. May i ask for a duffle advice ? I started traveling a lot the last 6 months and want something with good quality and very practical. I dont need laptop or electronic cases and the volume would be perfect around 35-40L. I like the bennet winch weekender in canvas but its way out of my price range. The filson one is also great but really heavy which brings a lot of problems when i fly cheap, which is almost always. Do you know of any other brand i shoud look ? It could be something more technical/military too, since i am more ready to lose some of the style but not the practicality or quality.

Dario

Hi Georgios,

I can recommend the weekender I use:
https://www.saddler.dk/p/orlando-weekend-bag-dark-brown
I can see that it is cheaper than the one you mention, and I really use it for everything… from carry on to sports and beach bag. It is on the heavier side, especially when it is full, so it can be a little cumbersome in some airports that don’t have carts for carry on luggage, if you have to walk a lot between gates. But it does look great and the suits arrive in great condition.

Marcus

Hi Georgios,
I have bags from Satchel & Page, Bradley Mountain and Bleu de Chauffe. Have a look at these brands and see if any fit your needs. Cheers

Christopher

Hi Georgios. Hook and Albert make an excellent product for the price point. I have their leather garment weekender, but they make a very similar version if not the exact same in heavy duty nylon. It’s lighter and less expensive but still very smart. I recommend the brand highly as all of their products are great value for the price point. It’s still an expensive, high end American brand, but not anywhere near as high as Bennett Winch or Mulberry. Worth a look. Good luck!
https://www.hookandalbert.com/collections/bags/products/slate-nylon-garment-weekender-bag

Georgios

Thank you all for your great answers. Some brands i didnt even know they existed and the products looked so good. Today was my lucky day though since i found in ebay a vintage small filson duffel in brown, at a very good price with leather strap and i couldnt resist. When it arrives i can post a photo.

Robert

Hey Georgios- RL currently offering on-line a bag similar to the BW listed as “Leather Trim Hybrid Garment Duffel “…not leather and surely not same quality as BW, but with current -30% sale it will set you back only $300. I find RL quality spotty, but I have had good luck with their bags. More flash than cash. Hope this helps.

John

Great survey and really interesting results – here’s to many more excellent years of Permanent Style.
One suggested improvement (as someone dull who makes graphs all day): sort the segments / answers within each pie chart in descending order of magnitude. The current set up saddens my eyes.

Tamaki

Also, I might be a bit colorblind, but I find a bit hard to distinguished between the two greens and the two reds in the first plot

Tamaki

Thank you for the results, Simon!
On the topic of your friend luxury menswear magazine: the transparency and openness about the polling results reflects and contributes to the perception of PermanentStyle as a reliable and trustworthy menswear source. Truly a ‘menswear critic’ as you once described yourself.

Rune

Thanks Simon,
Very interesting results and I am happy to find myself agreeing with the majority of respondents.
How did you invite people for the survey? I read most, if not all, of your blog posts and I must have missed the invitation somehow and i expect others may have as well.
Also, it would be interesting to see some statistics on geographic distribution of readers! Many of your review articles are based on products from a select few regions around the world and I suspect there are many readers like myself who are challenged by either the need for travel or very limited knowledge on relevant opportunities in our own region. Knowing that there are others with similar interests close by could help bring people together and share experiences.
Best,
Rune

Nick

I think all of this shows that PS is in rude health! Congratulations Simon.
Any chance you could tell us what the median income is?

JL

I think a very interesting output is the preference for youtube over instagram. I suspect that might be linked to the length of video one can post? I’ve always found youtube so much better as you get content beyond a 20 second snip…

Nick

I agree that Youtube may be an interesting avenue. To be honest, even though it is very well made, I am not the biggest fan of PS youtube content. The interviews are nice, but for me that could also be written format. I think it’s definitely worth exploring how video can capture what does and photographs can’t. The Armoury TV may be source of inspiration, and they weren’t the best to begin with but got better with experience.

SamS

I always find video context annoying to consume. I can read an article in a few minutes, figure out if there’s anything I really want to deep-dive into, and then re-read it (or part of it) a couple of times more.

Video forces me to consume the context at the pace set by someone else. It’s MUCH harder to find the things I want to re-watch in a video, compared to a quick read-though. Video can have an advantage in showing how clothes look in motion and can reveal both the good and the bad (with photos you can easily select the “best” pictures), and I can see some how-to instructions being done better in video, but I otherwise find it a very frustrating medium. And of course, youTube adverts are very intrusive, unlike the PS ones.

Another challenge is that video is much harder to consume on-the-go. I’ll read an article for a 5 minute tube ride, I won’t get out my headphones (if I even brought them), connect them to the bluetooth, and watch 2 minutes of a video for the same ride.

Daniel

I tap in on this conversation instead of making a new comment. I believe that readers value the website and YouTube, as someone before pointed out, because they’re better suited for in depth content and that’s pretty much the usp of ps.

Sure, it’s more difficult to scan a video than an article but then they are to different mediums with different possibilities. I’ve been following the armoury tv for years and think it’s great, though 2-3 minutes are frustratingly short. YouTube gives another sort of in depth coverage that I like and it would add something I believe to the website. Other channels I appreciate are Jenny Elle and Teddy Baldassere for watches and Bedos leatherworks for shoe repairs.

SamS

I’m clearly injured by work: I kept writing “context” when I meant “content”. I need a vacation!

Joel

Not a fan from Instagram (nor tiktok) here either. I tend to agree on written content being favoured here. Youtube is great for some guides, such as how to press, take care of shoes etc. The other place I like video content is that unlike a picture for which you pose, a video displays how the garment behaves on its wearer, how soft or stiff it is.

Will

Today of all days you lead with a pie chart! 🙂 Opening PS just now, I thought for a moment that I was seeing another breakdown of the UK’s general election results!

Alex

Hey Simon. You have had some strong views in the comments section about PS moving away from its original readership / focus on tailoring, and moving into casual wear. Presumably the site’s growth in itself is the answer on this point in one respect, but how did this issue come through on the survey?

Parker

So the average reader’s annual spend is about what is needed to get a bespoke suit on SR? Interesting.

Mike

Congratulations, Simon! Thanks to you and the team for all you do!
I was one who responded in the affirmative to more YouTube content. The main reason is that sometimes it’s nice to be able to actually see exactly what you are educating about, be it process or construction.
As an example, the videos you made on how to wash delicate knitwear was really useful. Seeing videos like that, or say *showing* the different construction details/attachments/seams/fabric of a garment can be really helpful as opposed to only reading about it and matching with one of the embedded still photos.

Mike

Excellent! I look forward to it!

Eric Twardzik

What’s this-a media company giving its audience what they actullay want, and not simply following the directives of an algorithm or a social media tycoon’s latest gimmick? Madness!

Stephen

Excellent!

Neil

Thanks for sharing data, it is highly unusual for businesses to put out such information in total, rather than cherry pick what looks good.
Interesting thing about age profile. Is 41 – 42 the age men become more serious about their looks, possibly because they are fading along with hairlines?
I think you are right to be lead by the audience on what platforms to use, you must either lead, which is time consuming and expensive, or follow your audience and not be swayed bythe purveyors of such services.
I do read most articles, but the main value is the repository of guides which are peerless especially when coupled with your deep understanding and common sense approach to cost.
Glad to see the followers expanding

RIchard

Hi Simon,
Interesting results – I’m on the younger end of the spectrum. Certainly glad to hear there is no intention for TikTok or a subscription model.
One thing I will add my voice to is improvement in your graphs and visual diagrams.
As someone who works with these on a daily basis just some minor tweaks and different colour choices would help improve these. For example the top chart has two very similar blues and greens and not all have keys to them.
Richard

Edwin Rothengatter

Interesting to see the average income, it’s on the semi high end? Then again the average age is 41,5, so that explains a little more I guess.
If you need any advice on GA4 or SEO, please let me know. I work in online advertising as a senior marketing specialist (although I dislike the senior naming, I consider myself experienced, not senior as an 29 year old).
Interesting poll data!

Lawrence

Thanks Simon! Appreciate the detail here. Really interesting and builds trust.
I think a blog works really well for this sort of content. Old technology that works is better than new that doesn’t.

James Fettiplace

Hi Simon. I would perhaps slightly caution the figures for salary, which of course can’t be verified. I didn’t disclose mine deliberately as it’s pretty personal data (and I want as few a people as possible to be in possession of it for security reasons, data hacks etc). And for people on extremely high incomes, they are usually particularly weary of disclosing it, so I find it interesting that this figure is so high. Appreciate that you have an international audience but this ‘average’ is in about the top 2-3% of UK salaries.
It certainly gives you a guide, and the consistency (inflation adjusted) from 2019 is reassuring, but I would perhaps take it with a slight pinch of salt.
Well done on the increase in readership – it’s testament to the quality of PS.

m

Put that salt shaker away, 800k bespoke customers and average reader being in top 1% of global earners sounds like a mighty great pitch for advertisers, whether it’s entirely accurate or not.

Stephen

Hi Simon,
A very interesting piece, which (incidentally). to a great extent reflected my input. Definitely the right approach to use real data. It leads to informed decision making as illustrated throughout your article.
What appears consistent with trends in western society in general is that salaries have gone up and because the cost of living has increased, discretionary spend has decreased (assuming PS level clothing is discretionary). Which demonstrates to me, at least, your sound approach to the survey and your analysis of the data. Probably influenced a great deal by your background.
Long may PS last as a blog!

John E

Hi Simon, interesting results. I’m glad you choose to engage with readers as honestly as you do. I wonder if you might be interested in some further analysis of the survey data. There’s a lot more to be gleaned than the general distributions you’ve covered. For instance, looking at preferences through the lens of age would help you decide what things to cover and in what way. If younger readers skew more casual and prefer Instagram, then you might want to use IG for casual wear reviews and reserve YouTube long format videos for tailoring, for example. I’m also interested to see if there’s a strong correlation between respondents’ income and their “other passions” selection. I’d love to dig into it if you’d like to share the dataset.

John E

That’s probably for the best!

Alan

Interesting results and reassuring that the consensus generally seems to be for more of the same. I think it’s always good to explore new mediums but I think PS fundamentally has something that works and does not exist elsewhere. The only space that offers anything quite as unique for menswear is Derek Guy’s (dieworkwear) Twitter feed, which I thoroughly enjoy reading but see as complimentary to what I use PS for.

I’m slightly amused that this post, containing lots of coloured charts, comes on the same day as news coverage with coloured graphs dominates the UK! Feels oddly personal to me, as I spent all of yesterday staffing a poll and then counting votes while dressed as a stereotypical PS reader in a Neapolitan-inspired jacket, oxford shirt, flannels and loafers. I even followed some of your recent advice and wore greys and browns to avoid partisan colours.

Luke

I wore a blue tie in Liverpool yesterday and wondered afterwards whether the guy I was meeting thought it was a political statement (it wasn’t). Wish I’d come across that advice beforehand

Alan

I think any other day of the year a blue tie would be neither here nor there. In my case my poll clerk guidance specifically said to avoid wearing party political colours, which realistically restricts you to neutrals. It was Simon’s recent updated ‘which office are you’ piece that has inspired me to wear brown with black and grey (more than I already was), which made me decide that a predominantly grey and brown outfit would satisfy the need to be smart and non-partisan.

Realistically anything other than a bright red, blue or yellow tie would probably have been fine but I belong to that breed of people who overthink clothes (also known as PS readers), so even a navy jacket felt too risky.

Chris L

Thank you for sharing the results Simon!
Shamefully, I don’t think I participated in this survey but did in 2019. I think the idea of some kind of hardcopy magazine would be cool. As a “coffee enthusiast” I subscribe to Standart magazine which releases harcopies only (with a small sample of coffee from a good roaster!) on a quarterly basis. Thought I’d shared as for me a quarterly hard copy magazine would be ideal if it were coming from PS.
A somewhat weird thought I had was have you ever thought of adding gifs to your articles? I think the amount of still pictures and the words associated with them do a good job of allowing us to understand the drape of the fabric, but seeing the fabric in motion as you walk or something I think would be an interesting addition to give us a better perspective of how a fabric behaves.

m

One of the key strengths of PS is the tight grip and uniform creative vision Simon has for the content. If he were to sell the website one day it would surely go downhill.
If there were changes I’d be weary of diluting the core content too much and risk alienating core audience in search for a new one. For example I used to visit Notebookcheck.com often to keep up with laptop reviews, it truly was a top site but these days it seems most of the articles are about electric cars and Chinese smart appliances. Sure I can filter the useless stuff but the experience is already tainted. That being said there is definitely some room for PS expand to new content and other mediums as long as it’s enhancing the core content and not trying to replace it.

Currently there are articles coming up thrice a week. I think there could easily another two articles without it becoming overbearing. Out of the options offered, watches seem like a no brainer, surely the largest overlap of interests for average PS reader. Not to mention that watch companies have deep marketing budgets to advertise for that 1% frequenting here. Having the right man write a weekly watch article, I think, would be welcomed by many. There are a lot of watch sites out there that are already reporting on the latest limited editions and stereotypical hype watches so obviously the content would have to be relevant to PS. Maybe more vintage pieces and other wristwatches of good taste.
If there were an extra article besides watches it could be rotated by other interests listed, written by guest authors. Personally I’d enjoy culture, food, drinks and tourism the most but if an article is written from fresh and PS relevant angle then anything goes.

Zawaad

As a 24 year old working a very casual office job and living in New York, I find myself torn in multiple ways regarding clothing as a whole. As a metalhead I still enjoy wearing band merch acquired at shows, albeit with black jeans and cowboy boots or loafers, rather than skinny jeans and bulky shoes. As an office professional I feel compelled to make more of an effort to dress more presentably, but still feel out of place in a super casual environment. My friends and family don’t particularly understand why I’ve begun to enjoy “dressing like someone’s grandpa”. And god forbid they find out how much some of these items cost, my mother is still under the assumption that my Alden cordovan loafers were no more than $300 HAH. My partner has been gracious throughout this clothing journey of mine, graciously listening to me yap on and on about selvedge denim, cordovan, and the collection of tailored jackets I want to purchase (lol). My question, throughout all this word vomit, is essentially: How have you reconciled the choice to be an enthusiast of classic menswear (or clothing in general), throughout different stages of your life? Is there such thing as too young, or too old, to want to start dressing in a certain manner? What’s the number one piece of advise you’d give an early mid 20’s man trying to learn from your blog and build a personal style?

PS. I had a great time meeting you and Jaime for your book launch at The Armoury this year, I look forward to seeing you again at the pop-up!

Carl

Interesting,

Especially as I am a former Head of Research at a Polling Firm and a Business Intelligence Firm.

I think that the blog should continue to be the ”core” of PS. YouTube can be a good thing for ”how to” guides but I personally prefers text when video dont really add any value. I actually hate most video reviews because they are unnecessarily long. Sometimes it takes two minutes for the ”reviewer” to just open a box.

Instagram is good for looks. I also think that it may lead to new readers if used in a smart way.

Keep up the good work!

James

The fact the blog is still the main way people consume content makes sense, even if it’s not on trend. Quality, whether in a blog or clothing, takes time: https://calnewport.com/on-slow-writing/

Carl

I have run a small magazine group in Asia for twenty years, and I see the same things you do. I think more and more that, in spite of or perhaps because of all the new ways of communication, the importance has to and is going back to the actual thing you want to talk about.

stephan

Thank you for sharing these results, very interesting! I would just caution that less than 2% of readers responded to the survey, and you don’t know whether they are representative of all readers, so I would be careful about drawing conclusions about PS’ greater readership based on these results. Perhaps this survey more accurately reflects the view of people who read your blog regularly and take strong interest in PS.

Tamaki

Hi Simon,
I would warn, just as Stephan did, that people who comment, email, and go see you in events are likely the same who filled the survey. Thus it is a reinforcement about the same sub-population of PS readers: less variance, still some possible bias.

of course, the most engaged people are likely the ones that are the most impactful to the website, both in terms of participation and for the revenues generated through ads, since I can foresee a positive correlation between PS engagaement and probability of products from advertisers

clee

don’t think TikTok and Reels type of short video would suit this site, I like the current format but I can see it being harder and harder to acquire new readership stay 5 years down the line, not sure how it would evolve but pretty sure you would stay by evolving too


Marc

I have been a PS reader for about six years now, visiting the website every week or two.
Being a quiet observer and not active in the comments, I felt like dropping a line today.
PS is outstanding in many ways and not just in the field of menswear. It’s a great example of how to run a blog with specific content in a very considerate and professional way.
It’s not just what you do, Simon. It’s how you do it.
And the survey results clearly show that.

ray_bentos

I find the mean salary interesting as if this was normalised by country, I suspect the data would be vastly different between the UK and USA (which I presume are your two biggest reader demographics).

UK perceptions will be skewed by the £300k+ earners based in the US (Drs, Tech, Finance) whereas these very high salaries are much rarer in the UK.

As ever, when talking about a population, the median is generally the more interesting/relevant metric.

Rav

As always, thanks for sharing the results in such a candid fashion Simon. I participated in 2019 but missed this round unfortunately – which leads to a suggestion…
I binge-read the site on my computer when I get a chance to catch up on articles and commentary, mainly due to the ease of consumption on the larger screen. However, given my travel schedule, I would love if there was an easier way to engage via a phone-size screen – ideally an app of some sort. I know my engagement would increase given the opportunity.
Nothing too fancy mind you but a useful feature would be a way to create/save a personalized archive of past articles and posts of interest. I often find myself scouring the site for a random mention of a particular topic or brand that I recall reading but forgot when or where (whether the main topic or buried in the body of the text somewhere).
Regardless, kudos to you and the PS team for the continued success!

Rav

Throwing out a few ideas off the top of my head… Direct access to transact via the PS shop. Embedded videos so media is all in one place – no need to link to external/alternate apps or sites. Calendar showing trunk shows, events, etc. relevant to PS readership, with ability to save to your personal calendar. Perhaps even appointment scheduling but that might be a bridge too far.
I can think of a few more since I would love to consolidate certain other app capabilities under a single umbrella but better to not try to be all things to all people.

Malthe

Dear PS
I did not participate in the survey, so I would like to contribute in the comment section.
I believe that what you do is fantastic. Using a blog might sound old fashioned, but not to the youth. Owning your own content and producing “slow” asynchronous communication is what the world craves more and more. The fast consumed marketing oriented material posted on TikTok, shorts and instagram is not of much interest in the long run. It might help people forget how much time their commute consumes, but it rarely contribute to the collective wealth in any way imaginable.
Many of your posts and comments are still consumed, several years later. I still search for key words on PS and other fantastic blogs and I still use and comment on some of the older posts, because they are still relevant and available. If not relevant in a fashion context, then at least relevant in a comparison and as a reference.
It is sort of a vault that keeps growing exponentially in wealth, especially when you link the old articles to the new.
For heavens sake, don’t change.

Peter Hall

I would be really interested in a quarterly hard copy magazine. Long form journalism is always enjoyable. Perhaps, available via Patreon subscription?