Professor Elemental celebrated Valentine’s Day with the release of The Love Album, in which the chap hop maestro waxes poetic on matters of the heart. Once again, he’s assisted by longtime collaborator Tom Caruana.
The new costume ball will feature music, dancers, clowns, circus arts, and burlesque performers. Walter Sickert and the Army of Broken Toys will be the headliners.
Since its inception, The Steampunk Explorer has included a directory of steampunk authors, but it was a bare-bones affair. That’s changed with our new author pages.
New steampunk Kickstarters this week include a whimsical card game/RPG, an illustrated YA mystery novel, a set of enamel pins, and a not-safe-for-work comic book adventure.
Madame Askew and The Grand Arbiter presented the awards in an online ceremony on Friday night. Other honorees included costumer Tony Ballard-Smoot, maker Charles E. Mason II, cosplay group Airship Ashanti, and Steampunk Lady Scientists Danaus & Sidonne.
The steampunk calendar is heating up this weekend with CONpossible in Atlanta and MegaCon in Orlando. Meanwhile, Whitby Steampunk Weekend will return to North Yorkshire, and the Cog and Compass fest will take place in New Zealand.
Madame Askew and the Grand Arbiter will present their Third Annual Tippy Golden Teacup Awards on Friday, Jan. 31, beginning at 6:30 p.m. Pacific time. It will stream live from their virtual tea parlour on Zoom. They’ll be joined by guest presenter Eve Riot.
Once again, San Francisco’s Regency Ballroom will be transformed into a neo-vintage wonderland as The Edwardian Ball returns on Friday, Jan. 31 and Saturday, Feb. 1.
Deadline reported that The Daughter of Doctor Moreau, the acclaimed 2022 novel by Silvia Moreno-Garcia, is being developed for television by producer Debra Moore Muñoz.
A novel by Ef Deal and short stories by Robin Pond and Valerie B. Williams took top honors in the steampunk categories of the Critters Annual Readers Poll presented by the Critters Workshop.
This week’s crowdfunding roundup includes a new steampunk comic book series from a former Marvel editor, plus a set of 3D printable terrain models for tabletop games.
When do we celebrate International Steampunk Day? What about Nikola Tesla Day or World Octopus Day? These, and other special days, are now in the calendar.
The Steampunk Explorer has two new homes in the Fediverse. Our Mastodon account now has a new location—and a new handle—and we’ve begun posting images on a photo-sharing app called Pixelfed that’s similar to Instagram.
Following a lull around the holidays, two publishers of steampunk comics are back on Kickstarter with new projects, while author Jessica Lucci is funding a forthcoming steampunk novella set in the 18th century.
The video accompanies a track from their new album Songs From The End Of The Pier. It’s their third music video, but the first to be released since the album came out in November.
When The Steampunk Explorer re-launched on Dec. 30, our calendar listed just 191 events taking place in 2025. But we got busy over the weekend and it now has more than 600 listings.
The Steampunk Explorer now includes expanded directories of major events, including sci-fi and pop culture conventions in addition to steampunk events. These are separate from (but linked to) our calendar listings.
In the U.S., January 1 wasn’t just New Year’s Day. It was also Public Domain Day, when creative works from 1929 and sound recordings from 1924 entered the public domain. This year’s batch is a good one.
It’s been a busy year for U.K. author Paul Eccentric, as publisher Caffeine Nights released three books in his steampunk series The Periwinkle Perspective.
Studio Foglio, the artists behind the popular Girl Genius gaslamp fantasy comics, launched a Kickstarter campaign for a set of costume medals depicting characters from the series. Four are available: Empress of All Cats, Emperor of All Cats, Aetheric Machinist First Class, and Official Animal of the Party.
Thomas Benjamin Wild Esq., the “uke-toting, tweed-clad troubadour” from Bedford, U.K., is out with his fourth album, Carry On While The World Burns. As with his previous releases, the album delivers catchy, old-timey tunes with humorous takes on culture, politics, and the challenges of everyday life.
Lee Presson and the Nails have retired from live performances, but Presson is still bringing the swing band together for music videos. His latest is “Friend Like Me,” a cover of a song from the 1992 Disney movie Aladdin.
Her latest collection of cover songs is “extra sultry and vibey,” she writes, “including many of the tunes previously released in the EPs Music to Snuggle Your Old Lady To and Music to Pine For Your Old Lady To.”