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This Old House (1-year)

This Old House (1-year)

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Publisher: The Time Inc. Magazine Company
Category: Magazine

List Price: $45.00
Buy New: $14.97
You Save: $30.03 (67%)



Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 28 reviews
Sales Rank: 103

Format: Magazine Subscription
Type: Time magazine
Subscription Issues: 10
Subscription Length: 12 Months
Issues Per Year: 10
First Issue Lead Time: 6-10 Weeks

ASIN: B00005R8BL

Release Date: November 23, 2001
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 3 months

Similar Items:

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  • Popular Mechanics (1-year)
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  • Fine Homebuilding
  • SmartMoney (1-year)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
THIS OLD HOUSE focuses on appreciation of craftsmanship and fine design, with the idea that the best value is derived from informed planning and the usage of premium materials and workmanship. Detailed information and photography provide an understanding of the equipment, materials and techniques needed to renovate a home, as well as how to communicate more effectively with architects, contractors, craftsmen, and designers.


Customer Reviews:   Read 23 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars This magazine is a keeper   December 28, 2008
I enjoy the t.v show This Old House and Ask This Old House. This magazine is a continuation of these. It has major repair ideas for sure, but, it also gives ideas on smaller-scale home projects. It is informative, imaginative and fun to browse through. If you use a little creativity and imagination, you can use some of their ideas in your own home on a smaller scale. This is the perfect magazine for a do-it-yourselfer like my husband and me. The ideas and possibilities are endless. Even if I can't do them myself in my own home, I enjoy the ideas I get from reading and searching the pages for ideas. This magazine is a keeper!


5 out of 5 stars This Old House   December 20, 2008
This Old House is a great magazine for DIYers -- lots of practical tips and ideas, step-by-steps for major projects, plus projects are rated for DIYer experience levels.


5 out of 5 stars I LOVE THIS MAGAZINE   November 23, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

This is my first subscription to this magazine and I am scared to miss an issue. My house is already renovated but I love to look at this house and I continue to get ideas to further change and improve my house and what to look for when I finally get a chance to get my dream old house!


5 out of 5 stars Great Ideas For Fixing Up Your House   November 5, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

This is a very informative magazine. It always has a number of different articles pertaining to a number of remodeling projects around the house,both inside and outside. If you are thinking of doing any projects now or in the near future,it would be great to subscribe to "This Old House" magazine. By reading what the experts have to tell you and seeing the pictures of the projects from start to finish,it will give you the incentive to start that project that you have been putting off. Try it for at least a year and see;I feel that you will be pleased with what you see as well as what you can accomplish on your own.


1 out of 5 stars Misinformation and dangerously shallow information   May 12, 2008
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

Have been getting increasingly irritated with the magazine. I finally got fed up and canceled and asked for a refund after finding many errors in the current issue.


I'm no home expert but I saw much misinformation and a lot of dangerously shallow information.

Some of many examples:

* It tells you to drill big holes in a tree branch to hang a swing. To cover the magazine legally, there is vague advice in tiny type about using a sturdy branch. Drilling holes will weaken the branch. And may well eventually kill the branch.

* Supposedly Norm Abram's toolkit has one of those expensive, useless many-bits-in-the-handle screwdrivers, instead of a set of simple inexpensive screwdrivers that actually work.

* They recommend WD-40 as a lubricant. It is well known that WD-40 is a terrible lubricant, due to the solids in it that make it an excellent rust-preventative.

* They say to use a metal scraper blade to clean a glass cooktop.


If you can't trust them on the topics you understand, you sure can't trust them on the topics you want to learn about.


Many of the articles are pushing products, probably from companies that advertise on the TV show. (I don't watch the TV show, so I'm not sure.)

At any rate, the products and tools they recommend are almost always very fancy and expensive.

Despite the endless references to "Master Carpenter Norm Abram" and so forth, the TV stars are barely involved at all in the magazine. How would they have time anyhow?

A lot of effort is put into slick, clever, coy writing and beautiful photos. (If you look at the fine print, the photos are all "produced" and "styled.")

Then I got it. I looked at the info up front and realized that the editorial office is in New York City. The writers and editors are professional magazine writers who live in New York apartments, writing about things they don't have personal experience with!

They must have a problem with people canceling. The phone number to cancel was in the tiniest possible type.


Get "Fine Homebuilding" or the "Journal of Light Construction."


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