We've got it all right here, folks! Everything that's ever been written up, photographed, and discussed on the Sad Mag website. Enjoy browsing our archives!



Moonshine is not a type of liquor, it’s a catch-all term for any spirit that has been made illegally or by using a backyard still. Whiskey, rum, brandy, vodka are all commonly referred to as moonshine if they meet the basic requirement that they are made by some guy in his backyard. People think of moonshine and 90% alcohol comes to mind (also its terrible taste). It’s true, what comes out of our still is that strong, but we pay close attention to taste and fermentation. We water it down and charcoal filter it. Finally, we age with fresh fruit and toasted oak chips to give it flavour. It doesn’t taste like a commercial product. It tastes more personal and not as neatly categorized as liquor store aisles.

The process of making liquor is a little like alchemy. The whole thing is a steam punk’s wet dream. Huge copper containers with pipe and hose jetting out every which way, steam flowing through the pipes and, somehow, dripping out pure alcohol. In actuality, it’s science 101. The entire process is based simply around the idea that alcohol and water have different boiling temperatures. We make a wine, heat it up enough to turn the alcohol into vapors and then turn the vapors back into liquid. That’s it, the rest is details.

Distilling is slow. I get up at six in the morning to turn everything on and I finish around nine in the evening. The day set aside for distilling is a sort of forced leisure, where all I can do is sit around and slowly watch alcohol accumulate drip by drip. The whole process could be an art history diagram to explain minimalism; we’re getting down to the essence of something, stripping away all the unnecessary to get to the pure form. It exists in accordance with my own life in that I need a device like this to allow leisure. I wouldn’t set aside an entire day to slow down if it was not for distilling.

We always intended this as an artwork before we started. We are not interested in the artisan craft of the distilling process, although, we have been doing it for a year and after drinking many of our “artworks” we have become significantly more concerned with the craft. Our upcoming exhibition “The Secrets of Building an Alcohol Producing Still” will bring our still to a local gallery and to ignite this project in a public and critical setting.

The Everything Co. is a collaborative art project started in Montreal. We are interested in the dichotomy of work and leisure; we see all art as a playful process of work. For now, our identities must remain anonymous because the nature of our current artwork is illegal.

The Everything Co. will be holding 12 speakeasies throughout the city at various locations in coming months. Please email everythingcothe@gmail.com to get on the mailing list and be informed of these upcoming events!

It ain’t easy bein’ a green queen, honey. Some go through new outfits like tubes of concealer, but these drag artists incorporate more than just glitter and fake genitals into their performances. These two kings and two queens are glamorous and eco-conscious, modeling outfits they’ve sourced from found materials instead of buying them brand new. Yes, you can work it without wasting it.

Veronica Vamp

“Being thrifty is a great way to be an eco-queen: re-using outfits, re-vamping them and re-purposing unexpected items is a great way to stay green. Be original and surprising.”
“I look for materials at thrift stores, scrap bins and sales. I am flat broke, but look fucking gorgeous!

“It’s all about attitude. ‘Cause the truth is, most of my outfits are held together with duct tape, glitter, rainbows, and unicorn dust that I pick up at my local 7-11. Fashion is about having fun.”

Lou Souls
“It’s a camping look.”

“My favourite colour is blue, so I like Blue Buck. To make the hat you have to get a 24-pack of canned beer, which Blue Buck unfortunately doesn’t serve, so red racer is a really good choice.”

“There’s no need to go for the higher-end beers to make an outfit. Making the lower-end beer look expensive is basically what Lou does. It’s Keith Urban meets Jon Bon Jovi.”

Photos by Christine McAvoy.

See the full spread in Sad Mag No. 10 VANIMAUX. On stands now!

In collaboration with the Vancouver Aquarium School Programs and Qmunity’s Youth Project, Sad Mag hosted The Sea Legs pinhole photography workshop  on June 20, 2012, in an effort to con­nect queer youth with Van­cou­ver artists in a safe space. The ocean composes most of the earth’s surface and the majority of life on the planet. We often anthromorphize animals, talking about genders and reproduction calling a barnacle he or she, but we must remind ourselves that these animals are beautiful without visible gender. We can’t normalize the ocean based on human assumptions. These animals are diverse, successful and most of them have no visible difference between male and female or no gender at all. The theme of the work­shop was focused on the education/preservation of local sea life and of tra­di­tional pho­tog­ra­phy as a fine art form.

Using old boxes from the gift shop, juice bot­tle lids, pop cans, expired film, and used film can­is­ters, par­tic­i­pants con­structed pin­hole cam­eras to pho­to­graph sea crea­tures in the edu­ca­tional wet lab.  Aquar­ium vol­un­teers provided education on the  var­i­ous spec­i­mens native to the Van­cou­ver shore­line, while par­tic­i­pants had a chance to han­dle some of the sea crea­tures before photographing them. Sad Mag’s Edi­tor in Chief, Cre­ative Direc­tor, Designer, and Pho­tog­ra­phers worked with par­tic­i­pants at photo-sta­tions (which were pro­fes­sion­ally lit by the amaz­ing Jonathan Wong). Select images from the work­shop have been pub­lished in the VANIMAUX issue and many more will be dis­played at the issue launch exhi­bi­tion, Van­i­maux II,  opening on August 2, 2012 at 7:00pm at the Gam Gallery (110 E.Hastings St). The images range from pur­ple ten­ta­cles, to abstract inter­pre­ta­tions of her­mit crabs, urchins, and anemones. Intensely colored, soft and dreamy, these are experimental 35 mm film photographs by:

William Flett
Kiesha Janvier
Theodore Lake
Esther Lemieux
Calvin Ling
Vinson Ng
Jaedyn Starr

Check out a few of their amaz­ing images below:

 

 

 

Sad Mag has a big ol crush on Christine McAvoy. Not only does she frequently adorn our release parties and bacchanals with her charming photobooths, capturing Sad Mag party-goers and performers alike (so you can never forget your best Vanimal costume), but she also contributed her analog photography skills to Issue 10– the first time she has been featured in our print pages! She’s also a megababe who knows the best things to eat and drink in the city, which might be the most valuable quality a person can possess. Here’s our Q&A so you can get to know her better:

Sad Mag: Who are you?

Christine McAvoy: I’m Christine and I’m a photographer… of many things!

SM: What did you photograph for Sad Mag #10?

CM: Some of Sad Mag’s favourite Drag Kings and Queens wearing eco-friendly costumes, doing an eco-friendly activity [for the Green Queens feature]! It was a lot of fun.

SM: What’s your favourite location in Vancouver for a shoot?<

CM: Any any of Vancouver’s best restaurants, does that count? Hmm, or maybe the Vogue Theatre or Biltmore for live music… Other than that, there are very few natural landscapes in Vancouver that aren’t ideal to shoot at…this place is beautiful.

SM: What was your first camera?

CM: A Mickey Mouse camera that I got in Disney World in 1994. My brother and I were allowed to choose one souvenir, and that’s what I got… It took 110mm film and I loved it.

I still have it, and I’m sure it would still work if I knew where to get 110 film (and where to have it developed). I still remember sending the film away at Shoppers Drug Mart. And now I feel old, thanks.

SM: Who are your other favourite Vancouver photographers?

CM: You mean my competition? Just kidding… There are so many talented people in this city (and all of my friends from Ryerson that I left in Toronto). My #2 and go-to will always be . The list of other photogs would be too long and I’d be afraid to leave someone out. That’s like asking me my favourite Vancouver band!

SM: Best drink for summer?

CM: Right now I’m on a Parallel 49 Brewing – Seedspitter Watermelon Wit kick…it’s AWESOME on a patio in the hot sun. Steamwhistle and Phillips Blue Buck are always my go-to beers. So ‘cold beer’ would be my answer.

SM: Favourite summer beach?

CM: Kits on a weekday when it’s not as busy. With raspberries, a hidden beer, and a book.

SM: Where can we find more of your work?

CM: A VAST majority of my work is on Vancouver Is Awesome, my portfolio is here (but it needs to be updated badly.)

Clement has a portfolio case full of bits and pieces, old woodprint scraps, and ink and paint swatches as a kind of storehouse of materials. “I like the idea that bits of discarded pieces of paper can regain value and take on a new role. I love the thrill of finding exactly the right piece. It is through this layering process that my drawings come to life. The anatomically correct beetle escapes the mundane realm of ‘textbook drawing,’ and escapes the flat surface of the paper too. Through my flowing lines and vibrant colours, I hope to give my beetle, bird or tree, personality.”

Sarah Clement, interviewed by Carmen Mathes for Sad Mag #10

Get your issue at our release party, August 2nd, 2012!

On August 2nd, join Sad Mag at the Gam & Remington Galleries (located side-by-side at 110 E Hastings @ Columbia) for an incredible group show to celebrate the release of Sad Mag #10, VANIMAUX. 

The theme of the issue (“Food. Fur. Foraging.”) was inspired by the first Vanimaux show, held in October 2009 at the AMS Art Gallery.

The exhibition includes photographs, illustrations, and installations by local artists: Jeneen Frei Njootli, Jeff Dywelska, Sarah Clement, Julie Andreyev, Angela Fama, David Ellingsen, Monika Koch, Rachelle Simoneau, Cody Brown, Lenkyn Ostapovich, Everything Co. and others.

Come drink local brew, see the latest issue, and take a look at our examination of Food, Fur, and Foraging in Vancouver.

Vancouver. Animals. VANIMAUX.

VANIMAUX II
Gam Gallery & Remington Gallery (110 E Hastings)
7:00PM-11:00PM
RSVP on Facebook
Official Afterparty: The Pride Ball at the Cobalt (917 Main St)

Poster by Pamela Rounis