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Opus: Difference between revisions

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They accepted no advertising and wrote only about what they want to write about.
They accepted no advertising and wrote only about what they want to write about.


When Ian announced that he was quitting Opus, Chris and JJ continued, spurred on by Ian's belief that they wouldn't be able keep it going without him. After Volume 3 they hit readership figures that made the cost of production not too prohibitive and Opus fell behind with it's publishing schedule.  There was only one issue in 1996.
When Ian announced that he was quitting Opus, Chris and JJ continued, spurred on by Ian's belief that they wouldn't be able keep it going without him. After Volume 3 they hit readership figures that made the cost of production not too prohibitive.  


In 2004, Vol.5, No. 11 appeared after a hiatus of four years and it was announced that the  Vol.5, No. 12, would be their  last. <ref>http://www.opusmagazine.co.uk/newstory.htm</ref>
Opus fell behind with it's publishing schedule and there was only one issue in 1996.
 
In 2004, Vol.5, No. 11 appeared after a hiatus of four years and it was announced that the  Vol.5, No. 12, would be their  last. <ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20090413133614/http://opusmagazine.co.uk/newstory.htm</ref>


They also run a small magic convention in the UK once a year.
They also run a small magic convention in the UK once a year.
== References ==
 
<references />
{{References}}

Latest revision as of 15:08, 4 June 2015

Opus
OPUS.jpg
First issue
Frequencymonthly, then intermittent
PublisherIan Keable-Elliott
First issueSeptember, 1987
Final issueNovember 2005
Total issues60

OPUS was a British independent, which began as a monthly magazine by Ian Keable-Elliott, Chris Power (as illustrator), J.J. (Johnny Johnston, as promoter) and David Britland (as technical advisor on tricks.)

They accepted no advertising and wrote only about what they want to write about.

When Ian announced that he was quitting Opus, Chris and JJ continued, spurred on by Ian's belief that they wouldn't be able keep it going without him. After Volume 3 they hit readership figures that made the cost of production not too prohibitive.

Opus fell behind with it's publishing schedule and there was only one issue in 1996.

In 2004, Vol.5, No. 11 appeared after a hiatus of four years and it was announced that the Vol.5, No. 12, would be their last. [1]

They also run a small magic convention in the UK once a year.

References