1000 Modèles

The 1000 Modèles magazines are guides that bring together specific themes: haute couture, ready-to-wear, accessories, men's fashion, design. The year's models are chosen by the l'Officiel teams during the fashion shows or fairs. The 1000 Modèles magazines are published without ads and only esthetics count and they make up an essential data base for what is new and trendy.

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Country: Malaysia
City: Petaling Jaya

Vogue Gioiello is the Italian magazine for gems jewels diamonds ornamental and fashion trend. They are reference guide for the trade:the language is severe, even technical if necessary; their photographers have matured a specific experience in the still life of the jewel, enhancing the gold's heat, the luminosity of the precious stone. But it's the Vogue style and taste in proposing fashion, the authority on trend and an international air that distingues it as the magazine for jewellery.

Country: Italy
City: Milan
Country: France
City: Paris
Country: Brazil
City: São Paulo

Sportswear International News editions boast a new look: Larger in format. Up-to-date in graphics. Sustainable in production. Focused in content. The new Sportswear International News editions reflect the new Sportswear International Magazine but focuses on one’s own backyard. Published twice a year to coincide with the ll-important Pitti Immagine Uomo trade show in Florence, the ilingual (Italian/English) Sportswear International News Italy covers Italy’s sportswear market in depth. Like its German counterpart, it is a prime informational tool and an ideal media platform in Italy’s fashion scene.

Country: Italy
City: Milan

SUPERIOR is an international magazine with the focus on young vanguard fashion-, beauty- and art- photography & film.

SUPERIOR Magazine stands for high-quality photography & film connected to fashion, offering its readers exciting, fresh photo editorials & films as well as background interviews and reports from the fields of fashion, beauty, art and design. Combining the talents of renowned photographers & film-makers and artists with outstanding newcomers, each edition of SUPERIOR Magazine is a fund of new insights and inspiration. The magazine’s sophisticated design provides an artistic showcase for all kinds of avant-garde visual expression and imagery.

SUPERIOR Magazine is published across all media channels with a strong link between the channels.

In our SUPERIOR BLOG a team of bloggers from all over the world present their very personal view on all themes of fashion, beauty, art and design.

SUPERIOR ONLINE appears monthly as a designed online magazine and has a worldwide circulation.

Exclusive print editions of SUPERIOR Magazine are published at varying intervals.

SUPERIOR Magazine can be found on social media platforms like Facebook, Google+, Twitter, Pinterest, YouTube and Vimeo.

Country: Germany
City: Berlin

Creating a magazine packed with informative editorial is one half of our goal. Taking that information and delivering it in a format that can consistently keep readers excited is their ultimate mission. NewBeauty's design and information architecture is unlike any other women's magazine in the market today.

Country: United States
City: Boca Raton

The French edition of Vogue magazine, Vogue Paris, is a fashion magazine that has been published since 1920.

1920–1950

The French edition of Vogue was first issued on June 15, 1920. Michel de Brunhoff was the magazine's editor-in-chief from 1929 into the 1940s.

Under Edmonde Charles-Roux (1950-1966)

Edmonde Charles-Roux, who had previously worked at Elle and France-Soir, became the magazine’s editor-in-chief in 1950. Charles-Roux was a great supporter of Christian Dior’s New Look, of which she later said, "It signalled that we could laugh again - that we could be provocative again, and wear things that would grab people's attention in the street." In August 1956, the magazine issued a special ready-to-wear (prêt-à-porter) issue, signaling a shift in fashion's focus from couture production. When later asked about her departure, Charles-Roux refused to confirm or deny this account.

1968-2000: Crescent, Pringle, and Buck

Francine Crescent, whose editorship would later be described as prescient, daring, and courageous, took the helm of French Vogue in 1968. Under her leadership, the magazine became the global leader in fashion photography. Crescent gave Helmut Newton and Guy Bourdin, the magazine's two most influential photographers, complete creative control over their work. During the 1970s, Bourdin and Newton competed to push the envelope of erotic and decadent photography; the "prone and open-mouthed girls of Bourdin" were pitted against the "dark, stiletto-heeled, S&M sirens of Newton". At times, Bourdin's work was so scandalous that Crescent "laid her job on the line" to preserve his artistic independence. The two photographers greatly influenced the late-20th-century image of womanhood and were among the first to realize the importance of image, as opposed to product, in stimulating consumption.

By the late 1980s, however, Newton and Bourdin's star power had faded, and the magazine was "stuck in a rut". Colombe Pringle replaced Crescent as the magazine's editor-in-chief in 1987. Under Pringle’s watch, the magazine recruited new photographers such as Peter Lindbergh and Steven Meisel, who developed their signature styles in the magazine’s pages. Even still, the magazine struggled, remaining dull and heavily reliant on foreign stories. When Pringle left the magazine in 1994, word spread that her resignation had been forced.

Joan Juliet Buck, an American, was named Pringle's successor effective June 1, 1994. Her selection was described by The New York Times as an indication that Conde Nast intended to "modernize the magazine and expand its scope" from its circulation of 80,000. Buck's first two years as editor-in-chief were extremely controversial; many employees resigned or were fired, including the magazine's publishing director and most of its top editors. Though rumors circulated in 1996 that the magazine was on the verge of a shutdown, Buck persevered; during her editorship, the magazine’s circulation ultimately increased 40 percent. Buck remade the magazine in her own cerebral image, tripling the amount of text in the magazine and devoting special issues to art, music, literature, and science. Juliet Buck announced her decision to leave the magazine in December 2000, after her return from a two-month leave of absence. The Sydney Morning Herald later compared her departure, which took place during Milan's fashion week, to the firing of a football coach during a championship game.Carine Roitfeld, who had been the magazine's creative director,was named as Buck's successor the next April.

Under Carine Roitfeld (2001-present)

Roitfeld aimed to restore the magazine's place as a leader in fashion journalism (the magazine "hadn't been so good" since the 1980s, she said) and to [restore] its French identity. Her appointment, which coincided with the ascendance of young designers at several of the most important Paris fashion houses, "brought a youthful energy" to the magazine.

The magazine’s aesthetic evolved to resemble Roitfeld's (that is, "svelte, tough, luxurious, and wholeheartedly in love with dangling-cigarette, bare-chested fashion"). Roitfeld has periodically drawn criticism for the magazine's use of sexuality and humor, which she employs to disrupt fashion's conservatism and pretension. Roitfeld's Vogue is unabashedly elitist, "unconcerned with making fashion wearable or accessible to its readers". Models, not actresses promoting movies, appear on its cover. Its party pages focus on the magazine's own staff, particularly Roitfeld and her daughter Julia. Its regular guest-editorships are given to it-girls like Kate Moss, Sofia Coppola, and Charlotte Gainsbourg. According to The Guardian, "what distinguishes French Vogue is its natural assumption that the reader must have heard of these beautiful people already. And if we haven't? The implication is that that's our misfortune, and the editors aren't about to busy themselves helping us out."Advertising revenue rose 60 percent in 2005, resulting in the best year for ad sales since the mid-1980s.

Country: France
City: Paris

DNA is Australia's best-selling magazine for gay men. Every month, you'll find great feature stories, celebrity profiles, pop culture reviews and sensational photography of some of the world's sexiest male models in our fashion stories. DNA was launched in Australia in 2000 and is available worldwide in bookstores and newsagents throughout Canada, US, UK and Europe. DNA can be ordered online and shipped anywhere in the world.

Many people ask why a gay magazine is called DNA and if it has anything to do with Deoyxribose Nucleic Acid. Yes and no. Back in 2000, there was a lot of talk about the ‘gay gene' in human DNA. We decided DNA was a great title for a gay magazine. It also gave us a chance to say that being gay has something to do with what's in your jeans!

Country: Australia
City: Sydney
Country: Thailand
City: Bangkok

The Beauty Magazine is the luxury health, beauty and fashion expert.

The Beauty Magazine offers everyone the information they need to live a beautiful life. They specialize in reporting on the latest luxury products and services as well as providing concise details on the most up to date health studies and trends. Throughout Europe and beyond their readers can expect a clear explanation of what really works, what the best fashion trends are and how to be happy and beautiful on the inside and out.

The Beauty Magazine is not only a valuable guide, but an entertaining, uncompromising, indispensable health, beauty and fashion resource.

Country: United States
City: Miami

GQ (originally Gentlemen's Quarterly) is a monthly men's magazine focusing upon fashion, style, and culture for men, through articles on food, movies, fitness, sex, music, travel, sports, technology, and books.

Country: United Kingdom
City: London

Vogue Pelle is dedicated to new development and latest trends in the world of leather fashion apparel, shoes, belts and accessories. A comprehensive coverage of new and best creations of leading designers, new colors, trims, leather textures. Beautiful ads, great quality photos make Vogue Pelle a great inspiring magazine for designers, manufacturers, and retailers in leather industry.

Country: Italy
City: Milan
Country: Mexico
City: Mexico City

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