Nicola

Nicola is a Japanese fashion magazine published by Shinchosha. The magazine is targeted to young girls from early to mid teens. The magazine is known for its models (called Nicomos).

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Country: Denmark
City: Copenhagen

Grazia, India's fastest-growing style magazine, is a fabulous mix of the latest trends, hottest beauty buys, thought-provoking features, and more. If you like your news fresh and up-to-the-minute, you'll love Grazia!

Grazia – which means grace – is an Italian women's magazine with a formula so unique and Easy Chic, it was voted UK's Best Magazine of the Year 2008 and is one of Europe's largest selling style magazines. In India, Grazia was launched in April 2008 by WWM, A Times Group Company.

What makes Grazia different from other fashion magazine is its unique content – Grazia blends the latest fashion trends with thought-provoking features and celebrity news to arrive at a format that is unlike any other – a mix that has quickly made us a favourite with thousands of women across the country. Grazia works with a distinctive Easy Chic philosophy, which decodes fashion and makes trends and style easy to understand and achieve. In a nutshell, Grazia offers a tone that is fresh, fun, and friendly, with advice that up-to-the-minute and bang-on trend.

Country: India
City: Mumbai
Country: Spain
City: Barcelona

Self Service is French style for international garcons and belles. Stylish to the extreme, this coffee table magazine is filled with pages of glossy photos, glamarous people, society gossips, travel and cultural happenings and the very latest fashion.

Country: France
City: Paris

Grazia is the first Dutch weekly glossy magazine with a modern mix of high-end, inspiring fashion & beauty, well-informed celebrity news and emotional real-life stories. This mix fully corresponds with the interests of the modern woman and is always presented in bite-size pieces with contemporary art direction.

Country: Netherlands
City: Hoofddorp

It is a new concept and a new publication dealing with fashion, very different from those already available in the market. Gist100 features an analysis and a summary of the collections. The name of the magazine refers to 100 kinds of gists (key points, themes). Gist100 focuses on "fast and accurate understanding" relying on such instant means as keywords and images. Gist100 is divided in 9 sections including colour, material, style and fantasy. The colour and the fantasy sections in particular have drawn the hottest attention from the buyers.

Country: South Korea
City: Seoul

Redbook is an American women's magazine published by the Hearst Corporation. It is one of the "Seven Sisters", a group of women's service magazines.

The magazine was first published in May 1903 as The Red Book Illustrated by Stumer, Rosenthal and Eckstein, a firm of Chicago retail merchants. The name was changed to The Red Book Magazine shortly thereafter. Its first editor, from 1903 to 1906, was Trumbull White, who wrote that the name was appropriate because, "Red is the color of cheerfulness, of brightness, of gayety." In its early years. the magazine published short fiction by well-known authors, including many women writers, along with photographs of popular actresses and other women of note. Within two years the magazine was a success, climbing to a circulation of 300,000.

When White left to edit Appleton's Magazine, he was replaced by Karl Edwin Harriman, who edited The Red Book Magazine and its sister publications The Blue Book and The Green Book until 1912. Under Harriman the magazine was promoted as "the largest illustrated fiction magazine in the world" and increased its price from 10 cents to 15 cents. According to Endres and Lueck (p. 299), "Red Book was trying to convey the message that it offered something for everyone, and, indeed, it did... There was short fiction by talented writers such as Jack London, Sinclair Lewis, Edith Wharton and Hamlin Garland. Stories were about love, crime, mystery, politics, animals, adventure and history (especially the old West and the Civil War)."

Harriman was succeeded by Ray Long. When Long went on to edit Hearst's Cosmopolitan in January 1918, Harriman returned as editor, bringing such coups as a series of Tarzan stories by Edgar Rice Burroughs. During this period the cover price was raised to 25 cents.

In 1927, Edwin Balmer, a short-story writer who had written for the magazine, took over as editor; in the summer of 1929 the magazine was bought by McCall Corporation, which changed the name to Redbook but kept Balmer on as editor. He published stories by such writers as Booth Tarkington and F. Scott Fitzgerald, nonfiction pieces by women such as Shirley Temple's mother and Eleanor Roosevelt, and articles on the Wall Street Crash of 1929 by men like Cornelius Vanderbilt and Eddie Cantor, as well as a complete novel in each issue. Dashiell Hammett's The Thin Man was published in Redbook. Balmer made it a general-interest magazine for both men and women.

On May 26, 1932, the publisher launched its own radio series, Redbook Magazine Radio Dramas, syndicated dramatizations of stories from the magazine. Stories were selected by Balmer, who also served as the program's host.

Circulation hit a million in 1937, and success continued until the late 1940s, when the rise of television began to drain readers and the magazine lost touch with its demographic. In 1948 it lost $400,000, and the next year Balmer was replaced by Wade Hampton Nichols, who had edited various movie magazines. Phillips Wyman took over as publisher. Nichols decided to concentrate on "young adults" between 18 and 34 and turned the magazine around. By 1950 circulation reached two million, and the following year the cover price was raised to 35 cents. It published articles on racial prejudice, the dangers of nuclear weapons, and the damage caused by McCarthyism, among other topics. In 1954, Redbook received the Benjamin Franklin Award for public service.

The next year, as the magazine was beginning to steer towards a female audience, Wyman died, and in 1958 Nichols left to edit Good Housekeeping. The new editor was Robert Stein, who continued the focus on women and featured authors such as Dr. Benjamin Spock and Margaret Mead. In 1965 he was replaced by Sey Chassler, during whose 17-year tenure circulation increased to nearly five million and the magazine earned a number of awards, including two National Magazine Awards for fiction. His New York Times obituary says, "A strong advocate for women's rights, Mr. Chassler started an unusual effort in 1976 that led to the simultaneous publication of articles about the proposed equal rights amendment in 36 women's magazines. He did it again three years later with 33 magazines." He retired in 1981 and was replaced by Anne Mollegen Smith, the first woman editor, who had been with the magazine since 1967, serving as fiction editor and managing editor.

Norton Simon Inc., which had purchased the McCall Corporation, sold Redbook to the Charter Company in 1975. In 1982, Charter sold the magazine to the Hearst Corporation, and in April 1983 Smith was fired and replaced by Annette Capone, who "de-emphasized the traditional fiction, featured more celebrity covers, and gave a lot of coverage to exercise, fitness, and nutrition. The main focus was on the young woman who was balancing family, home, and career." (Endres and Lueck, p. 305) After Ellen R. Levine took over as editor in 1991, even less fiction was published, and the focus was on the young mother. Levine said, "We couldn't be the magazine we wanted to be with such a big audience, you have to lose your older readers. We did it the minute I walked in the door. It was part of the deal."

Redbook's articles are primarily targeted towards married women. The magazine features stories about women dealing with modern hardships, aspiring for intellectual growth, and encouraging other women to work together for humanitarian causes. The magazine profiles successful women, such as Christa Miller, to provide inspirational testimonies and advice on life.

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

BITEKI is a fashion trend and beauty magazine that “pursues the beauty of our age.” It is especially popular with young working women from their mid-20s to early 30s

Country: Japan
City: Tokyo

Desirable Magazine is a women’s fashion magazine. Desirable Magazine was founded in 2010 by Handy Desire and Renaldo Creative. Renaldo & Handy’s mission is to provide an alternative to traditional fashion magazines.

They highlight the latest fashion trends, fashion news, horoscope, feature new designers, provide beauty tips, and more.

Country: United States
City: Orange
Country: Czech Republic
City: Prague

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