Sage Magazine Credit: Courtesy of Sage Magazine
Sage magazine has set up shop in Vermont. The ad-free biannual lifestyle publication is “centered around folks within the outdoors, activism platforms, and creative spaces,” according to its website. It primarily features lengthy interviews with foragers, farmers, activists, gardeners, makers and artisans of all stripes, paired with crisp photography and colorful illustrations.

Founder and creative director Bella Brodsky, a 19-year-old first-year student at the University of Vermont, recently announced via email the magazine’s new roots in the Green Mountain State.

To celebrate the launch of its seventh issue, Sage hosts an in-person celebration on Friday, March 18, at Swan Dojo in Burlington. Primarily a social mixer, the event will feature short video introductions from people profiled in the current issue as well as food and beverages from local companies like Runamok Maple and Carrier Roasting.

Sage focuses on connection to community and nature.

“I grew up in a lot of different organic farming spaces,” Brodsky said via video chat. “It just felt really grounded having my hands in the soil and being part of the processes of growing food.”

Brodsky explained that Sage grew out of a handprinted zine she made when she was still in high school in Connecticut. She said her readership enthusiastically demanded more content. With its fifth issue, Sage evolved into a hardbound, glossy, coffee-table-style book. Its sixth issue clocks in at just over 200 pages.

Bella Brodsky Credit: Courtesy of Sage Magazine
Brodsky said Sage shows that nature and the outdoors should be something the average person can access.

“[In] a lot of outdoor media, there’s this idea that to be outdoors you need to be summiting this crazy mountain, or skiing, or doing these really extravagant trips,” she said. “The idea with Sage is that is just to show that there’s so much diversity and variety with how people are connecting with the outdoors.”

Issue 07 features interviews with Samara Almonte, host and creator of Raíces Verdes, a storytelling platform that focuses on “racialized peoples reconnecting with their ‘green roots;”’ environmental author and activist Kamea Chayne;  artist Burcu Köleli; and many others. Now that Sage is Vermont-based, Brodsky said she’s interested in featuring Vermonters while continuing to showcase entrepreneurs and creative people from all over.

Sage is available in about 30 stores nationwide, from Connecticut to California. While physical copies of the magazine are not yet available in any Vermont shops, Brodsky said she hopes to have it in stock locally in the near future. The physical edition of Sage Issue 07 will be available for purchase at Friday’s event.

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Jordan Adams joined Seven Days as music editor in 2016. In 2021, he became an arts and culture staff writer. He's won awards from the Vermont Press Association and the New England Newspaper and Press Association. In 2022, he became a freelance contributor.