Baila

BAILA appeals especially to working women in their 20s and is similar to Oggi, with and MORE.

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TJF Magazine is an international magazine for sophisticated readers interested in the evolution of society and the world of luxury.

Distributed in more than 70 countries worldwide and at leading international trade fairs, TJF Magazine punctually publishes updates on mega trends in design and offers news related to art, culture, society, and the world of jewellery, watches, and accessories including:

• Trends Forecasting

• Jewellery branding

• Luxury sector news

• Local and global trends

• Jewellery design

• Marketing

Country: Italy
City: Arezzo

TAR Magazine is about art and aesthetics with a social awareness.

TAR magazine is a biannual published internationally each fall and spring out of New York.

It has featured work by Jonathan Lethem, Juergen Teller, Ryan McGinley, Joan Didion, and Mathew Barney.

While maintaining a fine art perspective, contributors explore contemporary, environmental, and political issues on a global scale.

Country: United States
City: New York

Przyjaciólka, launched in 1948, is the most popular women's weekly on the Polish market. It features fashion stories and provides beauty, health and psychology advice, investigative reports and interviews with stars.

Country: Poland
City: Warsaw

Romantic, traditional, unusual, classic, trendy, for the best interpretation of the ceremony, but also to organize every detail, a guide full of ideas. The fashion is just one of the topics of the magazine, because a marriage is recognized by all: the atmosphere of the ceremony, the style of drink, the choice of a box or a floral decoration, the exclusivity of the honeymoon. Vogue Bride offers its advice to the sophisticated woman who wants to make the most beautiful day of her life. Vogue Sposa, a unique and irreplaceable magazine.

Country: Italy
City: Milan
Country: France
City: Paris

L'Officiel is a French fashion magazine. It has been published in Paris since 1921 and targets upper-income, educated women aged 25 to 49. As of 2006, it had a circulation of 101,719. A men's edition of L'Officiel and eleven foreign editions (as of March 2008) are also published.L'Officiel was first published by Andrée Castaniée in 1921. George Jalou joined the magazine as artistic director in 1932. Soon after, L'Officiel launched the careers of designers including Pierre Balmain, Cristobal Balenciaga, Christian Dior, and Yves St. Laurent, and the magazine became "the Bible of fashion and of high society". Jalou later became the magazine's general director, and ultimately purchased the publication. He transferred ownership of L'Officiel to his three children in 1986. Laurent became the president of Editions Jalou, Marie-José directed its editorial content, and Maxime was responsible for publication. After Laurent died of a heart attack in January 2003, Marie-José Susskind-Jalou became the company's president. In recent years, the publication has taken a more youthful, energetic approach to fashion.

Beginning in 1996, L'Officiel began licensing its brand for use by publishers outside of France. Foreign editions of L'Officiel are now published in Russia, Japan, India, China, the United Arab Emirates, Brazil, Greece, Latvia, the Netherlands, Ukraine, and Serbia. L'Officiel India is India's "premiere fashion and luxury magazine"; in 2007, its publishers announced that they would also publish L'Officiel India in the United Kingdom to target overseas Indians there.

A men's edition of L'Officiel, called L'Officiel Homme, is also published.

Country: Germany
City: Berlin

Non-no is a Japanese fashion magazine published by Shueisha. Like CanCam, non-no has a comparatively longer history than other Japanese fashion magazines e.g. Cawaii!, olive and so forth. The magazine is targeted at teens and young women in their early 20s.

On May 25, 1987 Shueisha launched the magazines male counterpart, Men's Non-no.

Country: Japan
City: Tokyo

Magazine that is distributed for free every Saturday with the publication of the newspaper El Comercio.

Country: Peru
City: Lima

For some, photography is intuitive and meditative. Something that feeds a need to create, fills a nullity, breathes life into an idea – when catharsis meets creativity. For others, it’s just about capturing moments, telling stories, seizing beauty and contextualizing the opposite. Curated by Think CONTRA, photographerandmuse.com is a site dedicated to photo editorials. It’s a collaborative and creative platform for inspiration, and a network that connects like-minded artists, exploring various outlets of invention. The muse could be a model, a friend, a landscape, a product, the foam of a wave. The equipment could be the latest in technology, or a film camera as disposable as the memory itself. Of the many possible combination’s, it matters not about the image, or the tools that captured it, but rather the connection between photographer and muse.

Country: United States
City: Austin

frankie magazine is a bi-monthly, Australian young women’s [and men's] magazine, published and owned by Morrison Media. frankie was launched in October 2004 by editor Louise Bannister and creative director Lara Burke (formerly of Morrison's now defunct teen title, Chik magazine). In early 2008, editor Bannister was replaced by Jo Walker, a former frankie senior writer.

The magazine's audience has grown swiftly since its inception, and is now estimated to be 136,000 globally.

The magazine's popularity can be largely attributed to its ability to capture the street-smart, 20-something demographic. Covering Art, Music, Fashion, Craft and Life, frankie spans a broad spectrum of interests, and hence readership.

frankie is recognised for its amusing, often biting articles, most notably by its senior writers, Mia Timpano, Benjamin Law, Edmund Burke, Marieke Hardy, Jason Treuen and comedian Justin Heazlewood, who collectively drive the "voice" of Frankie magazine, which is characteristically sharp, witty and anecdotal.

frankie is celebrated for its inspirational interviews with "everyday" people. For issue 13, Timpano conducted a series of unusual and powerful interviews with young female victims of torture from Iraq and Sudan.

The magazine traditionally features lesser known bands and artists, and as such is respected source of emerging talent. Early issues featured actress Emily Barclay and artist Abbey McCulloch, who would later be shortlisted for the Archibald Prize.

The magazine's reputation has also attracted celebrity writers, such as indietronica singer-songwriter Sarah Blasko, the band The Cops, who contribute lists of "things to do before they die".

frankie is noted for its cute, fetching design, traditionally featuring Polaroid camera photography, poster artwork and an unknown young woman on each cover.

Featured artists have included Abbey McCulloch, Princess Tina's Beci Orpin and Kat Macleod.

Country: Australia
City: Brisbane

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