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Country: Poland
City: Warsaw
Country: Japan
City: Tokyo
PAF

PAFmagazine is an independent online Fashion Magazine dedicated to showcasing the work of artists from all across the fashion world. Our vision is to retain a keen focus; exploring a diverse variety of Photographic and Fashion aesthetics with every issue. Featuring both emerging and established creatives, PAFmagazine is a dialog between creative minds from around the world, aimed to inspire through our high fashion editorials and photo-stories from fashion shows around the world. PAFmagazine welcomes all submissions from artists and is not solely limited to photographers.

Country: Denmark
City: Copenhagen

Scott Schuman is The Sartorialist. With a keen eye and a pulse on the style zeitgeist, Scott's iconic influence extends beyond his blog: he is also a photographer and writer for GQ and Style.com and has been featured in French Vogue and Fantastic Man. Scott's work has also been shown at the Danziger Projects Gallery and at Hyeres in France. Most recently, Scott was part of the Fall 2008 GAP Icon campaign.

The Sartorialist is renowned among style influentials the world over and they let their voice be heard within the blog: The Sartorialist has an active, participatory audience that averages 100+ comments for each blog post.

Accolades include:

- TIME magazine: Top 100 Design Influencers 2007

- The Guardian: World's 50 Most Powerful Blogs

- Technorati: #51 in Top 100 Blog List

- Blogspot: #5 on Top Blog List

Country: United States
City: New York

Glamour launched in 2004 and quickly established itself as South Africa's leading fashion and beauty magazine targeting the country's most vibrant market: upwardly mobile, acquisitive, urban women aged between 16 and 34. With 54 per cent of the readership being young black women, the magazine reflects South Africa's rapidly changing demographics, while the recently launched website is attracting dramatically increasing numbers of users. Glamour magazine is published monthly.

Country: South Africa
City: Cape Town
Country: Austria
City: Wiener Neudorf
Website: http://maxima.at

The theme for Marie Claire is “More than a Pretty Face”. The magazine gives readers information about different women around the world and their needs, struggles, and stories of life.

The goal of the magazine is to provide readers with a substantial amount of information about new looks in the fashion industry as well as current issues that women of the world are facing. Moreover, it also adds relationship information, along with a section dedicated to answering specific questions from readers. It provides information pertaining to different items of clothing and accessories, as well as which would be a better deal. Each month recognizes a particular female celebrity by placing her on the cover of the magazine and featuring her in a main article, along with providing monthly horoscope.

Country: Brazil
City: São Paulo

Gap Press Men Tokyo New York fashion magazine from Japan solely dedicated to fashion shows and runway events happening in fashion hubs of Tokyo/New York/London. Gorgeous photographs in double page spreads highlight the new lines and collections of designers and hottest labels in fashion industry. A source of inspiration for designers and creative people in fashion industry.

Country: Japan
City: Tokyo

Commons&Sense man was created in answered to the question - what is common sense?

Commons&Sense man presents a unique take an the zeitgeist in fashion, beauty, art, interior, music, and the societyin which we live in.

Commons&Sense man presents the kind of fashion which you cannot find in all those "catalogue-like" magazines with A to Z descriptions. They present the latest fashion opinions form Tokyo, and so appeal directly to fashion people.

What the Japanese fashion community has been longing for is jsut what Commons&Sense man has to offer.

Country: Japan
City: Tokyo

Playboy is an American men's magazine, founded in Chicago, Illinois in 1953, by Hugh Hefner and his associates, and funded in part by a $1,000 loan from Hefner's mother. The magazine has grown into Playboy Enterprises, Inc., with a presence in nearly every medium. Playboy is one of the world's best known brands. In addition to the flagship magazine in the United States, special nation-specific versions of Playboy are published worldwide.

The magazine has a long history of publishing short stories by notable novelists such as Arthur C. Clarke, Ian Fleming, Vladimir Nabokov, P. G. Wodehouse, and Margaret Atwood. Playboy features monthly interviews of notable public figures, such as artists, architects, economists, composers, conductors, film directors, journalists, novelists, playwrights, religious figures, politicians, athletes and race car drivers. The magazine throughout its history has expressed a libertarian outlook on political and social issues.

Playboy's original title was to be Stag Party, but an unrelated outdoor magazine, Stag, contacted Hefner and informed him that they would protect their trademark if he were to launch his magazine with that name. Hefner and co-founder and executive vice-president Eldon Sellers met to seek a new name. Sellers, whose mother had worked for the Chicago sales office of the short-lived Playboy Automobile Company, suggested "Playboy."

The first issue, in December 1953, was undated, as Hefner was unsure there would be a second. He produced it in his Hyde Park kitchen. The first centerfold was Marilyn Monroe, although the picture used originally was taken for a calendar rather than for Playboy. The first issue sold out in weeks. Known circulation was 53,991. The cover price was 50¢. Copies of the first issue in mint to near mint condition sold for over $5,000 in 2002. The novel Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury, was also serialized in the March, April, and May 1954 issues of Playboy magazine.

The logo, the stylized profile of a rabbit wearing a tuxedo bow tie, was designed by art designer Art Paul for the second issue and has appeared ever since. A running joke in the magazine involves hiding the logo somewhere in the cover art or photograph. Hefner said he chose the rabbit for its "humorous sexual connotation," and because the image was "frisky and playful."

An urban legend started about Hefner and the Playmate of the Month because of markings on the front covers of the magazine. From 1955 to 1979 (except for a six month gap in 1976), the "P" in Playboy had stars printed in or around the letter. The legend stated that this was either a rating that Hefner gave to the Playmate according to how attractive she was, the number of times that Hefner had slept with her, or how good she was in bed. The stars, between zero and twelve, actually indicated the domestic or international advertising region for that printing.

Since reaching its peak in the 1970s, Playboy has seen a decline in circulation and cultural relevance because of competition in the field it founded — first from Penthouse, Oui (which was published as a spin-off of Playboy) and Gallery in the 1970s; later from pornographic videos; and more recently from lad mags such as Maxim, FHM, and Stuff. In response, Playboy has attempted to re-assert its hold on the 18–35 male demographic through slight changes to content and focusing on issues and personalities more appropriate to its audience — such as hip-hop artists being featured in the "Playboy Interview".

Christie Hefner, daughter of the founder Hugh Hefner, joined Playboy in 1975 and became head of the company in 1988. She announced in December 2008 that she would be stepping down from leading the company, effective in January 2009, and said that the election of Barack Obama as the next President had inspired her to give more time to charitable work, and that the decision to step down was her own. “Just as this country is embracing change in the form of new leadership, I have decided that now is the time to make changes in my own life as well,” she said.

The magazine celebrated its 50th anniversary with the January 2004 issue. Celebrations were held at Las Vegas, Los Angeles, New York, and Moscow during the year to commemorate this event.

The magazine runs several annual features and ratings. One of the most popular is its annual ranking of the top "party schools" among all U.S. universities and colleges. For 2009, the magazine used five considerations: bikini, brains, campus, sex and sports in the development of its list. The top ranked party school by Playboy for 2009 was the University of Miami.

In June 2009, the magazine reduced its publication schedule to 11 issues per year, with a combined July/August issue and on 11 August 2009, London's Daily Telegraph newspaper reported that Hugh Hefner had sold his English Manor house (next door to the famous Playboy Mansion) for $18 m ($10 m less than the reported asking price) to a Daren Metropoulos and that due to significant losses in the company's value (down from $1billion in 2000 to $84mil in 2009) the Playboy publishing empire is up for sale for $300 m. In December 2009, they further reduced the publication schedule to 10 issues per year, with a combined January/February issue.

Country: South Africa
City: Johannesburg
Country: United States
City: Montpelier

London’s b-Store has long been a Mecca for contemporary design. A haunt for the stylish, their eponymous publication - launched in September 2009 - embraces the wider b-Store ethos; passion in design, integrity in individuality and a nod to more sartorial affairs.

In the tricky world of magazine publishing, b Magazine has been developed in reaction to the amplified way in which information reaches its audience, often resulting in the dilution of intelligent and informed journalism. b Magazine challenges the way in which we consume. Adopting the traditional format of a fashion and lifestyle title, b Magazine is interspersed with inspired wisdom and intuitive photography.

b Magazine represents the b-Store brands extended family. Its members are uncomfortable with negotiating shelves stacked with glossies selling nothing more than symbols of wealth and the convention of celebrity. b Magazine sells ideas. It sells information. Editorially driven, b looks at creatives from a unique angle – concerned with what they are reading, rather than what they are wearing, worried more about familiarity over fantasy.

b is published by b Store and retails for £5.00 in key independent book shops.

Country: United Kingdom
City: London

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