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Landscape Management gracefully aging

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Graphic: Landscape Management
Graphic: Landscape Management

A look at how Landscape Management’s design and focus have evolved over five decades.

1962
 – Weeds and Turf debuts.
Notable: Noticing a rise in demand for contract outdoor chemical applications, Pest Control magazine (now Pest Management Professional) begins running a monthly supplement called Weeds and Turf.

1965
 – We adopt a new name, Weeds Trees and Turf.
Notable: “Trees” is added to the now standalone publication’s name to reflect a shift in readership. The tagline is “Monthly magazine of methods, chemicals and equipment for vegetation maintenance and control.”

1970s
 – Weeds Trees & Turf gets a groovy new logo.
Notable: Lawn Care Industry, a news-driven, tabloid-sized publication, accompanies Weeds Trees &Turf starting in 1977.



1987 – 
We debut a new name: Landscape Management.
Notable: By now we focus on landscape, golf and grounds professionals. Lawn Care Industry continues as a separate publication.



1991
 – A new LM logo and redesign appear in October.
Notable: The editor’s note touts: “What you’ll be reading now is a combination USA Today, Business Week and the ‘old’ Landscape Management.” Lawn Care Industry rolls into LM.

1995
 – LM gets another facelift, starting in November.
Notable: The editor’s note mentions the magazine’s new tech-y feature: an email account for readers to communicate with the staff. (In case you’re curious, it was 75553.502@ compuserve.com!)



1999
 – The September issue features another new logo and redesign.
Notable: LM’s focus becomes more vertical, dropping coverage of the golf market with the relaunch earlier that year of sister publication Golfdom.

2009
 – LM gets a modern look.
Notable: LM’s award-winning art director, Carrie Parkhill Wallace, puts her stamp on the publication’s design with a new, sans-serif typeface for the logo, starting with the January issue. It’s still our look today.

Marisa Palmieri

Marisa Palmieri

Marisa Palmieri is an experienced Green Industry editor who's won numerous awards for her coverage of the landscape and golf course markets from the Turf & Ornamental Communicators Association (TOCA), the Press Club of Cleveland and the American Society of Business Publication Editors (ASBPE). In 2007, ASBPE named her a Young Leader. She graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Journalism, cum laude, from Ohio University’s Scripps School of Journalism.

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