C Y L Moda Íntima

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Country: United States
City: Royal Oak
Country: South Korea
City: Seoul
Country: United States
City: San Francisco
Country: Portugal
City: Lisbon

OPEN LAB is an independent arts and culture magazine for the creative community and it’s rebels. They strive to impregnate the minds of countless creatives by becoming a platform for self-thinking risk takers. Their goal is to ignite creativity in others by featurng works from artists, designers, and musicians of all level with a unique point of view.

Country: United States
City: New York

The Contributing Editor is a magazine devoted to featuring the work of established and emerging creative talent.

Contributing Editor was launched in September 2008 by Matthew Edelstein and Ryan Schmidt as the platform for new ideas in fashion, art, and photography. Contributing Editor stands for everything that’s right now.

Country: United States
City: New York

C-Heads Magazine loves to inspire ♥ Trends, fashion, photographers, models, music, art, lifestyle, clubbing and travelling around the world and kitties.

C-Heads Magazine is an independent, non commercial and international online-magazine.

It is all about photography, music, art, fashion, trends and lifestyle. They show talents, newcomers and well-known artists from all over the world. People that inspire.

They think that art is an important part of life. The playful side of life. Breathtaking pictures telling stories. Music that touches and supplies the soundtrack of life. Fashion that can show who you are and what you want to express. Art that shows our individuality and connects us to each other. Inspire and be inspired.

Country: Austria
City: Vienna
Country: United Kingdom
City: London
Country: Singapore
City: Singapore

For the 21st century man who wants to look sharp + live smart, GQ.com will give our reader the access, the tools and how-to's to enhance his life.

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.

Gentlemen's Quarterly was launched in 1931 in the United States as Apparel Arts, a men's fashion magazine for the clothing trade, aimed primarily at wholesale buyers and retail sellers. Initially it had a very limited print run and was aimed solely at industry insiders to enable them to give advice to their customers. The popularity of the magazine amongst retail customers, who often took the magazine from the retailers, spurred the creation of Esquire magazine in 1933.

Apparel Arts continued until 1957 when it was transformed into a quarterly magazine for men which was published for many years by Esquire Inc. Apparel was dropped from the logo in 1958 with the spring issue after nine issues, and the name Gentlemen's Quarterly was established.

In 1979 Condé Nast Publications bought the publication and editor Art Cooper changed the course of the magazine, introducing articles beyond fashion and establishing GQ as a general men's magazine in competition with Esquire. Subsequently, international editions were launched as regional adaptations of the U.S. editorial formula. Jim Nelson was named editor-in-chief of GQ in February 2003; during his tenure he worked as both a writer and an editor of several National Magazine Award-nominated pieces. During Nelson's tenure, GQ has become more oriented towards younger readers and those who prefer a more casual style.

Nonnie Moore was hired by GQ as fashion editor in 1984, having served in the same position at Mademoiselle and Harper's Bazaar. Jim Moore, the magazine's fashion director at the time of her death in 2009, described the choice as unusual, observing that "She was not from men's wear, so people said she was an odd choice, but she was actually the perfect choice" and noting that she changed the publication's more casual look, which "She helped dress up the pages, as well as dress up the men, while making the mix more exciting and varied and approachable for men."

GQ has been closely associated with metrosexuality. The writer Mark Simpson coined the term in an article for British newspaper The Independent about his visit to a GQ exhibition in London: "The promotion of metrosexuality was left to the men's style press, magazines such as The Face, GQ, Esquire, Arena and FHM, the new media which took off in the Eighties and is still growing.... They filled their magazines with images of narcissistic young men sporting fashionable clothes and accessories. And they persuaded other young men to study them with a mixture of envy and desire."

Country: United States
City: New York
Country: Sweden
City: Stockholm

Vogue Espana, also known as Spanish Vogue, is published twelve times a year. Using a wonderfully eclectic eye, Vogue Espana features mostly models for covers rather than celebrities. Vogue Espana has a healthy emphasis on fashion from the world without forgetting it's own Spanish heritage of beautiful and lively colour and movement. Although the latin version of Vogue en Espanol is often confused with Vogue Espana and even called Spanish Vogue, they should not be confused because of the difference in content. Vogue en Espanol is mostly recycled from other editions of Vogue, while Vogue Espana always uses original content and covers. Vogue Espana often features spanish photographers Juan Gatti and Nacho Pinedo and Mexican Enrique Badulescu as well as European photographers Jacques Olivar and Thomas Schenk. Vogue Espana has been published since at least 1988.

Country: Spain
City: Madrid
Country: Australia
City: Geelong

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