Flaunt

Since the publication of its first issue in 1998, FLAUNT has inevitably evolved with the times. Under the direction of its founding editors, what began as a luxury fashion title has progressed into a full fledged lifestyle publication interested in both the serious and fanciful examination of issues relevant to the realms of fashion, art, film, music, media, and literature, and always with the original intent of preserving the publicaion's core values of constructive inquiry and artistic freedom.

Flaunt is a wholly independent magazine published 10 times a year and distributed in 32 countries. The publication was recently named one of three finalists, chosen out of 2,800 entries, for a prestigious FOLIO award in the categories of Best Full Issue of a General Interest Magazine and Best Single Article in a Consumer Entertainment Magazine. The magazine also received three awards from PRINT for Excellence in Design, as well as a medal for editorial design from the Art Director's Club.

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Country: Turkey
City: Istanbul

FHM, originally published as For Him Magazine, is an international monthly men's lifestyle magazine.

The magazine began publication in 1985 in the United Kingdom under the name For Him and changed its title to FHM in 1994 when Emap Consumer Media bought the magazine, although the full For Him Magazine continues to be printed on the spine of each issue. Founded by Chris Astridge, the magazine was a predominantly fashion-based publication distributed through high street men's fashion outlets.

Circulation expanded to newsagents as a quarterly by the spring of 1987. After the emergence of James Brown's Loaded magazine (regarded as the blueprint for the lad's mag genre), For Him Magazine firmed up its editorial approach to compete with the expanding market and introduced a sports supplement. It then went monthly and changed its name to FHM. It subsequently dominated the men's market and began to expand internationally.

The magazine is printed on high quality glossy paper and the photography is of high technical quality. FHM became one of the best-selling magazines in Britain during the mid to late 1990s, selling more than 700,000 copies per month by 1999.

FHM was sold as part of the publishing company sale, from EMAP to Bauer Publishing in February 2008.

Country: Turkey
City: Istanbul

VOGUE BAMBINI is the magazine of reference for the child fashion. Fully bilingual, Vogue Children offers a comprehensive overview to put in the foreground

Country: Italy
City: Milan
Country: Austria
City: Vienna

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

Oakazine is a quarterly art, fashion and culture dossier taht profiles teh most cutting-edge minds in the arts and gives teh best photographers and stylists an arena to create teh editorials they want to create.

Oakazine is a publication for those who see the dawn before the rest of the world.

For the creative minds who reappropriate past art-forms, consider present art-forms and alloy them into something futuristic and never seen before.

Country: United States
City: New York

Berlin is in fashion: Many networks in the fashion industry, seven fashion shows, put about 800 labels and young designers, nine fashion schools and numerous retail shops and work in the capital trends. The Fashion Book Berlin has it all: the most creative designers, the finest shops and main events.

Country: Germany
City: Berlin

The Face was a magazine started in May 1980 by Nick Logan out of his publishing house Wagadon. Logan had previously created titles such as Smash Hits, and had been an editor at the New Musical Express in the 1970s during one of its most successful periods.

The magazine, often referred to as the "80s fashion bible", was influential in championing a number of fashion music and style trends, whilst keeping a finger on the pulse of youth culture for over two decades; its best selling period was in the mid-1990s when editor Richard Benson brought in a younger team that included art director Lee Swillingham. While Benson ensured the magazine reflected the UK’s revitalized art and music scene, Swillingham changed the visual direction of the magazine to showcase new photography. It was during this time that the work of fashion photographers Inez Van Lamsweerde, Steven Klein, David LaChapelle, Norbert Schoerner, Glen Luchford, Craig McDean and Elaine Constantine was first published.

In the early 1990s, the magazine contained an article suggesting that Australian actor and pop star Jason Donovan was gay. Donovan sued the magazine for libel in 1992 and won the case (but torpedoed his own career in the process). Subsequently, the magazine requested donations from readers to pay the substantial libel damages and court costs which came to £300,000. The magazine set up the "Lemon Aid" fund, so called because their article on Donovan had also stated he highlighted his hair with lemon juice to make it blonder. However, Donovan reached a settlement with the magazine to allow it to stay in business.

In 1999, Wagadon was sold to the publishers EMAP.

Notable names associated with the magazine were designer & typographer Neville Brody (Art Director, 1981-86), creative director Lee Swillingham (Art Director 1993-1999), Julie Burchill, Tony Parsons, photographers Juergen Teller, David Sims and writers including Jon Savage and Fiona Russell Powell.

By its May 2004 closure, the format had become stale, there were too many competitors, sales had declined and advertising revenues had consequently reduced. The publishers EMAP closed the title, in order to concentrate resources on its more successful magazines, however its fashion spin-off Pop still survives as a stand alone magazine brand.

Country: United Kingdom
City: London

Currently tag-lined “the world’s most independent fashion magazine”, DANSK was launched in 2003 as the creative playground for Style Counsel, Denmark’s leading fashion advertising and production agency. Slick and modern, the magazine presents international fashion seen through the smoothly minimalist eyes of DANSK – a rather distinct style, which can only ever be uniquely DANSK. It is published biannually in English and is distributed in over 20 countries worldwide.

A main idea behind DANSK was to fusion international fashion with the crème of Scandinavian labels, and to create a platform where this could be achieved with the same level of quality as seen in competing global fashion titles. Likewise, DANSK would feature renowned contributors who would give their take on “the DANSK eye” but also commission Scandinavian contributors to portray international fashion. In short, DANSK is based on a constant balance between the international and the national, which aims to create better potential for innovation. Similarly, the magazine changes its art direction annually and has reinvented itself numerous times.

For the 22nd issue, autumn/winter 2009, DANSK underwent its biggest reinvention to date. With a new team and a Gisele Bündchen clad cover, the magazine focused its attention on delivering an expert expression evident in supreme imagery, premium fashion, highly opinionated writing – a fashion title rarity – and an uninterrupted element of humour, all of which will take DANSK to a new and even better stage.

DANSK was founded by Uffe Buchard and Kim Grenaa. It lends its name to the annual DANSK Fashion Awards and the biannual official newspaper at Copenhagen Fashion Week, DANSK Daily.

Country: Denmark
City: Copenhagen
Country: Spain
City: Gran Canaria
Country: Italy
City: Milan
Country: Mexico
City: Mexico City

Clash Magazine is a multi-award winning music magazine that launched to critical acclaim in 2004, combining underground and mainstream music genres that includes fashion, film and entertainment in its subject matter. Clash Magazine is distributed through WHSmiths, HMV, Virgin, Borders and newsagents worldwide, and is published 12 times per year.

Country: United Kingdom
City: London

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