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Welcome to Archer Magazine #11: the GAZE issue. (Let’s be clear: That’s ‘GAZE’, not ‘GAYS’.)

Peek the brilliant photos from our Archer Studio launch party. Thank you for being so lovely and hot, everyone.

It’s Phone-a-Dyke, Archer’s queer advice column. Today’s question: a queer woman is looking to hire a sex worker to explore her sexuality.

For this month’s Queer Fashion Files, we attend Australian Fashion Week and chat with designer Gary Bigeni.

Meet Daniel Nour: Egyptian and Australian; loud and painfully awkward; conservative and very confused (especially about other boys).

I thought I would be safe from the horrors of sexual violence in my queer feminist utopia. But it was within that sapphic bubble where I was assaulted.

Two trans women share a lively discussion around culture, sex work, the AIDS crisis, gender and intersex identity.

I’ve found there’s something beautifully democratic about traditional cruising – the darkness and anonymity working as great equalisers.

The world-famous Keith Haring mural painted on an exterior wall of a school building in Collingwood, Melbourne, turned 40 years old last year.

Welcome back to Phone-a-Dyke, Archer’s queer advice column. Today’s question from SecretBabyGay: Any dating tips for inexperienced queers?

There was a sense of danger and adventure in leaving the house as a queer drag queen, heading to a flower market in Hyderabad.

“These poems are really just owning my different identities – Filipino, lesbian, queer – without shame.” Kaya Ortiz chats with Alex Creece.

We’re thrilled to welcome you to Archer Magazine #21: the ART issue. Join our launch event on 14 June 2025 at LCI Melbourne.

“We, the diaspora, are an important part of the work of liberation, alongside Palestinian people who remained.” Micaela Sahhar chats to Alex Creece.

Come and join us as we celebrate the launch of Archer Studio, and the release of Archer Magazine #21: the ART issue.

For this month’s Queer Fashion Files, we’re featuring content creator and ace icon Allie Daisy King.

Welcome to Phone-a-Dyke, Archer’s new queer advice column. Today’s question: Are socks lesbian culture?

Advocating for queer-affirming death spaces – and creative ways of navigating grief – have empowered this author since leaving a repressive, religious environment.

Who gets to decide what is masculine and what is feminine? What if I said that frogs were feminine? That umbrellas were feminine?

The Archibald Fountain has a hidden history as a beat. The goal of my walking tours is to make this, and other hidden queer histories, known.

I stumbled into phone sex after sharing my woes with a psychic. Psychic hotlines were really popular then, and I was a frequent caller.

“Sex is such an interesting mode of inquiry – a petri dish for gaining knowledge about ourselves and our lusts and limits in the world.” Rachel Ang chats to Alex Creece.

Almost immediately, improv had become the most powerful tool I had for exploring and affirming my gender expression.

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Sexuality - Gender - Identity