Men's Health Malaysia

Country:

ELLE Arab World boasts the latest global trends in fashion, beauty, woman's apparel, accessories and supplements it with elaborated regional content to fit the UAE reader’s ego and taste.

Country: United Arab Emirates
City: Dubai

Arena was a British monthly men's magazine. The defunct magazine was created in 1986 by Nick Logan, who had started The Face in 1980, to focus on trends in fashion and entertainment. British graphic designer Neville Brody, who had designed The Face, designed Arena's launch appearance. On March 3, 2009 Bauer Consumer Media announced that Arena would be suspended from publication. The last edition was sold on March 12 2009.

The magazine featured articles on food, movies, fitness, sex, music, toys, and books. It was pitched at a similarly upscale audience to GQ, attempting to offer a more adult read than lad mags like Maxim and FHM, and gearing itself specifically towards the "black collar worker".

Arena launched the careers of several prominent British media professionals, among them Dylan Jones, the editor of GQ UK who had served as Arena's editor in the late 1980s.

In July 2006, facing competition from the internet, the editorial team behind Arena launched a team blog which features regular posts from its contributors.

In spite of this, magazine circulation continued to fall and in 2007, Giles Hattersley, chief interviewer at The Sunday Times was brought in as Editor. Hattersley oversaw a revamp of the publication and in November 2007, the magazine relaunched with a new design and new palate of content, featuring David Beckham on its cover.

Hattersley returned to The Sunday Times in March 2008 and was replaced in the interim by deputy editor Mat Smith. Smith left in August 2008 to take over as features director at Esquire UK.

As of April 2009, international editions of Arena outside the UK continue to be published. These editions include Ukraine, Turkey, Korea and Thailand. Arena Singapore, the first English language edition outside the UK, was launched on October 27, 2006 by the publishing division of Mediacorp. Mediacorp had announced on 30 April 2009 that it was closing the Singapore edition of ARENA.

Country: United Kingdom
City: London

The Singapore Women's Weekly is Singapore´s fastest-growing women´s magazine. Women trust The Weekly as a friend that entertains and informs about the best of everything - fashion, beauty, glamour, health, family, self-help and relationships, interiors, food and entertaining. And the mix is served with a down-to-earth attitude and a compelling dose of common sense that readers really appreciate.

Country: Singapore
City: Singapore

WWD is the media record for senior-level executives in the global fashion, retail and beauty industries.

Country: United States
City: New York
Country: Ukraine
City: Kiev

31 Rue Cambon is distributed worldwide in all the Chanel stores. The magazine takes its name from the iconic apartment of brand founder Coco Chanel’s Parisian apartment.

Country: France
City: Paris

Polina meets the needs of the Ukrainian woman by providing information, advice and entertainment.

Country: Ukraine
City: Kiev
Country: Netherlands
City: Hoofddorp

MANHATTAN is the luxury lifestyle magazine for New York’s elite. Catering to the interests, sensibilities and 24/7 lifestyle of the city’s most affluent and influential readers, MANHATTAN delivers the absolute best the city has to offer. Going behind the velvet rope and giving readers exclusive access to the people, products, services and destinations that are defining the city’s luxury lifestyle right now. From fashion, watches and jewelry, to shopping, art, fine dining, real estate and the social scene, MANHATTAN covers it all.

Country: United States
City: Manhattan

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

Ever Manifesto is an irregularly and freely published magazine. It is distributed in print at fashion shows and published in PDF on its website: Evermanifesto.com. There is no prescribed schedule of publication.

The founders of the publication (Charlotte Casiraghi, Alexia Niedzielski, and Elizabeth von Guttman) announced its creation, website, and forthcoming debut manifesto in September 2009. The announcement coincided with a press conference for Città dell'arte Fashion: Bio Ethical Sustainable Trend.

With the catch phrase "everlution" (a neologism), the website for the magazine declares: "Fashion is change and reinvention. Sustainability is just the next step. Break the rhythm of fashion. March to a new drum. The magazine aims to "inspire positive transformation in how we live by generating sustainable solutions for both work and play that are aimed at protecting our planet for future generations." The magazine is intended to stimulate thought, debate, and change for improvement.

The publication is distributed for free at the 10 Corso Como boutique during Milan Fashion Week and again at Colette in Paris during Paris Fashion Week. Casiraghi explained that the magazine will not have a predetermined publication schedule. "We want to publish when we have something to say or people to support," she said. "It will be short and meaningful so that people will read it." The staff collaborate with experts and researchers to publish new issues ("manifestos," as they call it on the website) when there are new developments. Thus, there is no set schedule for the frequency of publication. Each "manifesto" will focus on a specific and unique theme that unites the field of science and the arts in a vision of sustainability.

Country: United Kingdom
City: London

Pages