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

Top Santé is the expert magazine women can really trust. Dedicated to health, psychology, anti-ageing, beauty, diet and nutrition, it's the only choice for women who want to make positive changes to look and feel healthier and happier!

Country: France
City: Paris
Country: Spain
City: Ibiza
Country: Canada
City: Toronto

FIASCO is a monthly print and digital unisex Fashion, Arts and Lifestyle magazine. FIASCO has grown quickly in popularity, currently enjoying a readership of 96,000, with online recently exceeding 7.5 million views. The magazine features new and existing talent, fashion, reviews, interviews, art and illustration. Based in London, but staffed also in New York, we have a worldwide network of contributors shooting globally.

FISACO enjoys a varied readership, with the majority of readers being located in the USA, UK and Asia. Our readership ages range from 15-35 years, with those typically interested in all things fashion, celebrity and art.

Country: United Kingdom
City: London

Vanity Fair is a magazine of pop culture, fashion, and politics published by Condé Nast Publications. The present Vanity Fair has been published since 1983 and there have been editions for four European countries as well as the U.S. edition.

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

The Daily Front Row is a fashion-industry publication, commonly known as The Daily. Brandusa Niro is the editor in chief. Formerly owned by IMG, Niro bought a controlling interest in the magazine in 2011.

Country: United States
City: New York

Vogue is the fashion authority. Setting the standard for over 100 years has made Vogue the best selling fashion magazine in the world. Each issue delivers the latest in beauty, style, health, fitness and celebrities and your subscription will include the must-have Spring and Fall Fashion editions. Before it's in fashion, it's in Vogue!

Vogue was founded as a weekly publication by Arthur Baldwin Turnure in 1892. When he died in 1909, Condé Nast picked it up and slowly began growing the publication. The first change Nast made was that Vogue appeared every two weeks instead of weekly. Nast also went overseas in the early 1910s. He first went to Britain, and started a Vogue there, and it went well. Then he went to Spain, however that was a failure. Lastly, Nast took Vogue to France, and that was a huge success. The magazines number of publications and profit increased dramatically under Nast. The magazine's number of subscriptions surged during the Depression, and again during World War II. In the 1960s, with Diana Vreeland as editor-in-chief and personality, the magazine began to appeal to the youth of the sexual revolution by focusing more on contemporary fashion and editorial features openly discussing sexuality. Vogue also continued making household names out of models, a practice that continued with Suzy Parker, Twiggy, Jean Shrimpton, Lauren Hutton, Veruschka, Marisa Berenson, Penelope Tree, and others.

In 1973, Vogue became a monthly publication. Under editor-in-chief Grace Mirabella, the magazine underwent extensive editorial and stylistic changes to respond to changes in the lifestyles of its target audience.

The current editor-in-chief of American Vogue is Anna Wintour, noted for her trademark bob and her practice of wearing sunglasses indoors. Since taking over in 1988, Wintour has worked to protect the magazine's high status and reputation among fashion publications. In order to do so, she has made the magazine focus on new and more accessible ideas of "fashion" for a wider audience. This allowed Wintour to keep a high circulation while discovering new trends that a broader audience could conceivably afford. For example, the inaugural cover of the magazine under Wintour's editorship featured a three-quarter-length photograph of Israeli super model Michaela Bercu wearing a bejeweled Christian Lacroix jacket and a pair of jeans, departing from her predecessors' tendency to portray a woman’s face alone, which, according to the Times', gave "greater importance to both her clothing and her body. This image also promoted a new form of chic by combining jeans with haute couture. Wintour’s debut cover brokered a class-mass rapprochement that informs modern fashion to this day." Wintour's Vogue also welcomes new and young talent.

Wintour's presence at fashion shows is often taken as an indicator of the designer's profile within the industry. In 2003, she joined the Council of Fashion Designers of America in creating a fund that provides money and guidance to at least two emerging designers each year. This has built loyalty among the emerging new star designers, and helped preserve the magazine's dominant position of influence through what Time called her own "considerable influence over American fashion. Runway shows don't start until she arrives. Designers succeed because she anoints them. Trends are created or crippled on her command."

Country: Turkey
City: Istanbul
Country: Bulgaria
City: Sofia

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