Create your class magazine
Name your classroom magazine or let us suggest one like The Room 12 Times or Mrs. Alvarez's Tribune.
You've spent a year getting to know every kid in your classroom. Featurie turns those small, funny, ordinary moments into a printed keepsake magazine or newspaper — where every single student becomes the star of their own feature story.
"I cannot wait to see what story it writes about Emma."

"…and on page seven, the future looks bright for this chess champion."
Name your classroom magazine or let us suggest one like The Room 12 Times or Mrs. Alvarez's Tribune.
Drop in the class photo you already have. We use it as the reference for every kid's portrait — no extra picture day.
Type the roster or paste a CSV. Add the kids one by one, the way you'd line them up at the door.
What does Emma love? What does Theo want to be when he grows up? The personalities make the stories.
Featurie turns each kid's notes into a delightful feature — funny headline, warm article, charming portrait.
Flip through the whole thing like a real magazine. Tweak any word. Reorder pages. Make it sound like you.
Save a print-ready PDF, or order beautifully printed copies for every kid to take home.

Upload your class photo. Featurie reads every face, matches them to the names on your roster, and draws a one-of-a-kind portrait for each kid in the style you choose.
You tell Featurie what makes each child them — a fun fact, a memory, what they love, what they want to be when they grow up — and it writes the kind of headline a small-town paper would put on the front page.

Animal Affairs Desk
Mira, age 6, has logged more hammerhead facts than most grown-ups have logged steps.

Food & Dining
Theo's menu — pretzels, three kinds of cheese, opinions — has the playground talking.

Arts & Culture
Sofia's mural took three afternoons, four markers, and one very patient teacher.

Local Politics
Witnesses say everyone got a turn. Diplomacy, they whisper, is back.

Sports
Coach Wilson called it 'the save of the semester.' Jamal called it 'fine.'

Science
Working prototype, says Ella. Returns to 2019 confirmed.
Backyard Beat
Jackson, age 9, has zoned the back forty for cheetahs, a koi pond, and one very opinionated tortoise.
Construction began in early spring with a roll of chicken wire, three cardboard signs, and a clipboard. By June, Jackson had drafted habitat plans, hand-lettered enclosure labels, and assigned himself the role of head zookeeper, lead architect, and weekend tour guide.
His mom says the rule is simple: no real lions, and the watering can stays in the shed at sundown. Jackson plans to be a wildlife biologist — and, if there's time, run his own nature documentary channel. "Animals already have stories," he says. "I just give them a place to live."

Every Featurie edition is printed for keeps — the kind of thing a parent stashes in a drawer and a kid finds again, fifteen years later.

Half-size newsprint. Easy to mail, easy to keep on the fridge.
Premium uncoated stock. The keepsake families shelve forever.
Every format opens to the same heart: real kids, real stories, given the magazine treatment they deserve.

Mira's shark obsession becomes a punchy tabloid feature — hero portrait, big serif headline, and a margin quote: "I think it might be a baby megalodon."

Sofia's mural gets the keepsake treatment: a full-bleed editorial portrait on the left, an elegant serif headline and pull quote on the right, on heavyweight uncoated stock.
A school year is a quiet, accumulating thing. The kid who learned to read in November. The one who finally raised her hand in March. The one whose lunchbox notes you'll remember for the rest of your career.
Yearbooks line everyone up in rows. Group photos crowd them together. We wanted something else — a magazine where each child gets the headline, the portrait, and the column inches. The way a small-town paper might write about someone genuinely remarkable. Because every one of them is.
So we made a tiny newsroom for teachers. You bring the year. We bring the press.
— The Featurie Team
Unlimited editing, print-ready PDF. Email to families, print at home, keep forever.
Tabloid newsprint, a physical copy for every kid in the class and one for the shelf.
Premium paper, bound. The keepsake families keep on the bookshelf for years.
Start your class magazine in a few minutes. Add your kids. Hold the finished magazine in your hands by the end of the week.
Also lovely for troops · teams · studios · clubs · youth groups