Allow us to guide you through our second ode to Montréal: its vibrant fashion scene, accomplished musicians, and talented tattoo artists. Some of us are now graduating this spring, perhaps leaving Montréal to never come back. We are from New Jersey, New York, Bristish Columbia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, Quebec, Ecuador, England, and France, just to name a few. We come together with our art and love for a city, showing you what it has to offer. Through short stories, photography, collages, interviews, and poems, we have woven together a tale of Montréal. You can use this as inspiration for what to wear when the temperature drops to -20 degrees, where to get your next fine line tattoo, or which local artists to check out the next time you want to go to a live show.

thank you to our sponsors:

Allow us to guide you through our second ode to Montréal: its vibrant fashion scene, accomplished musicians, and talented tattoo artists. Some of us are now graduating this spring, perhaps leaving Montréal to never come back. We are from New Jersey, New York, Bristish Columbia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, Quebec, Ecuador, England, and France, just to name a few. We come together with our art and love for a city, showing you what it has to offer. Through short stories, photography, collages, interviews, and poems, we have woven together a tale of Montréal. You can use this as inspiration for what to wear when the temperature drops to -20 degrees, where to get your next fine line tattoo, or which local artists to check out the next time you want to go to a live show.

thank you to our sponsors:

At Home With Le Ren
“I think there are songs that have revealed different meanings to me over time. There's a song called “Your Cup,” which is a love song. When I was writing it, it was talking about the beauty of becoming intertwined with somebody, and now that I'm looking back at that song, I think I see that it's also about the danger of becoming too intertwined with someone and not being able to see yourself as separate.”READ MORE >>>

The Magic of Marlaena Moore
“When I was really young, I thought that songwriting came from pure magic, where you get hit with a lightning rod. You're like, ‘inspiration has come and we have granted you a song.’ I would go through tantrums when I was writing songs that I didn't feel were good enough. I think my songwriting really changed when I did Pay Attention, Be Amazed because it was just work. It was me going: ‘I'm going to do songwriting like I'm working at a job, and I'm going to remove the celestial, existential expectation on it. I'm going to just work on things until I think they're good.’”READ MORE >>>

read more interviews from this issue! Claude and Camille (pxssy.club.house), Marontate (Annie Wren)