If yout want to learn more about gardening from reading glossy magazines, both the photos and the articles matter.
In the third and final post in my series of wishing I could mash a few gardening do-over buttons (doing thngs differently), I’m liberated to confess to you -- I need to read more.
Do you find this hard to believe? I do, too.
Those glorious, glossy magazines I’m so fortunate to write for are often left unread. Oh, I look through them; every page, in fact. I begin with the cover, reading the captions of what lies within. They pique my interest, and I get all giddy knowing what’s to come.
But then, I get stuck studying the cover shot for every detail. As I crack open the magazine, I find myself staring at the photos. Often, I’ll start a story, only to be drawn back to the pictures. They mesmerize me.
Religiously, I read the photo captions. If the caption hints at something the photo doesn’t explain, I go back to the story to find out more. But I realize there are many times that a photo caption doesn’t give enough details, and I find out later, when talking with friends, I may have missed the gist of the entire story.
During a recent trip to Des Moines, meeting with James Baggett, editor of Country Gardens magazine, we talked about writing captions. He said that generally, too many captions are written as an afterthought. His advice to me was to give my captions as much thought as the featured piece.
He’s right. I should know; there are others out there, like me, reading the captions and nothing else.
This has changed as I mashed my read more do-over button. I want to learn more from the story than the pretty pictures tell. I want to learn from the experiences featured in the story. That’s what it’s really about.
If I read more, I might learn not to make the same mistakes, or even better, learn the root of their inspiration, sparking my own.