Issue 1 | January & February 2017
Issue 2 | February & March 2017
In the front that Bombay puts up as an ever-busy metropolis, the writer stumbles into its un-rushed secret.
A growing tribe of labels are taking storytelling seriously. Our take.
I made sure to plan my Bhutan trip around The Tshechus, and I’m glad I did. Here's why.
There's a biting, existential comic-strip blog you need to know about.
Snapshots from a time when street-side gods and goddesses joined hands to point out paths and pavements.
A miniature artist goes behind the inspiration and influences on two pieces that are close to his heart.
Donald Glover's unpolished public image and full-of-passion art is important. Especially now.
World Poetry Day | March 2017
Remembering the great poet, who passed away just days before World Poetry Day today
History and all things local | Issue 3, March & April 2017
Why an illustrator, who usually steers clear of lettering challenges, took up a project to illustrate Tamil and Devnagri vowels.
Hindi films set in the past are mostly cruel to the characters that inhabit them.
A fort, fortress, stepwell, and stunning sunset...just about 100kms from Udaipur.
The summer special | Issue 4, April & May 2017
A happy-making artist that we think everyone should #LookoutFor
On that all-too-familiar moment, sandwiched between last breath of electricity and the first hum of the generators.
The traveller-storyteller issue | Issue 5, May & June 2017
Not all travel stories are magazine-friendly ones, but it's still important to tell them. Here's why.
A story of a chance encounter and its beautiful result.
On journeys taken inside a second-hand bookstore (in lieu of sight-seeing)
Spending three days under the same tree that Buddha attained enlightenment under
Curating stories from train windows. A quick chat with project founder Shanu Babar.
The little things | Issue 6, June & July 2017
The daily course of pushing and shoving on the local train leads to little conversations
A personal handbook to making that big little-thing called procrastination, awesome
Preview: An interactive art installation made of little paintings on matchboxes
Hostile weather conditions, a little chance experiment, and a new direction
Handmade | Issue 7, July & August 2017
Graphic illustrations of three people, who get their hands dirty in their everyday work.
A social anthropologist who is critically exploring a Japanese philosophy through printmaking.
How making an origami suitcase is similar to mentally wrapping up and moving on.
A mother-daughter duo conquers insecurities through handcrafted friendship bands
Understanding the making of pretty, blue-toned cyanotype photographs.
A visual tour of a 157 year old handwoven carpet-making enterprise.
A quick guide to making a handmade, healthy delicious version of Reese’s peanut butter cups.
A mixer-grinder brand's merchandise finds its way into a pre-wedding ritual, carrying over special meaning.
Bucket-list stories | Issue 8, August & September 2017
Here's to those rare, life-long wishes that just don't get articulated often enough.
Cities | Issue 9, September & October 2017
A metropolitan's sense of calm, reflected in wrinkly, peaceful humans.
A travelling classroom for creating freely and fearlessly.
Music of food | Issue 10, October & November 2017
The way to your food isn't always through the oral or olfactory trail.
The sounds of many, many words interspersed between kachodi-sizzles
A cartoonist extends Pavlolv's theory of classical conditioning— to characters you'd recognise.
Because filter kaapi is more than just a hot drink. It is a whole experience.
The stories behind our clothes | Issue 11, November & December 2017
A lost online order leads to a brief conversation with the hands that made some of it.
A project documenting traditional attires from 31 countries around the world
How star chefs in the country are incorporating Indian fabric and weaves into their lives in the kitchen
New beginnings | Issue 12, December 2017
Internet films, web series, and the beginnings of everyday-female strong leads
How popular cinema, in the last two decades, has interacted with the idea of time.
A regular '90s Indian household, Titanic, and beginning of 'English movie' watching
An artist’s journey from one artwork to the next is a series of fresh starts; Vincent Van Gogh’s life serves as a reminder of the same.