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Cool and glamourus magazine from Monaco is visual treat into the world of rich and famous, ultimate fashion, latest style, accessories, exotic places, fast cars and more. Full of hundreds of stunning photographs by world famous photographers.

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GREY is a coherent, consistent, and rigorous biannual hardcover fashion publication, free of gossip and superficiality. GREY – featuring fashion stories, interiors, reportage, new designers, journalism, poetry, fiction, illustrations – appeals to sophisticated readers with a refined sense of style. GREY does not adhere to any trends or actively seek to vilify them. We believe that fashion is about the clothes and that a timeless approach to aestheticism is never out of style. GREY is an international publication; printed in Italy, written, primarily, in English. Our contributors are chosen for their uncompromising and singular vision.

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

Plaza Magazine International is an international publication, focusing on design, interior decoration and fashion with a "hip" Scandinavian perspective. Plaza Magazine is published 6 times per year by Plaza Publishing Group AB, and is sold is over 40 countries world wide. Plaza Magazine was founded in 1994.

The 200+ page magazine contains articles on fashion, design and interiors geared for the rich and glamourous. The magazine contains many ads from well-known houses such as Armani, Gucci, Hugo Boss, Rolex, Breitling, Chanel, Louis Vuitton, Ermenegildo Zegna, Canali, Corneliani and Chopard. Plaza Magazine can be difficult to find, especially outside of the most major American and European cities.

The magazine interviews people from all over the world for its articles, including designers, architects, Hollywood stars, musicians, house owners, company executives and story characters such as Harry Potter/Dr.Seus/Bart Simpson. With a prize- nominated design and in co-operation with the best - both Swedish and foreign - photographers and their teams they offer world-class pictures. Most of magazines photographers work for leading interior and fashion magazines all over the globe.

Plaza Magazine International is distributed and sold in over 40 countries all over the world. Plaza Magazine Sweden (Swedish version) is sold all over Scandinavia.

Country: Sweden
City: Stockholm

Viva! Beauty, a quarterly, features all the latest fashion news and most popular beauty trends from famous beauty experts. Viva! Beauty gives all the beauty and fashion news a woman can want.

Country: Ukraine
City: Kiev

Genlux Magazine is a luxury Magazine devoted exclusively to Fashion and Beauty.

Their editors carefully comb la and the world for the must-have items every genluxer needs.

Country: United States
City: Beverly Hills

Every month, Marie Claire covers all the aspects of what it means to be a woman with great editorial and visual quality and ambition. Fashion, beauty, society and celebrities... Marie Claire informs, denounces, surprises and entertains the women who help the world move in a positive direction. Reportages are Marie Claire’s distinguishing feature worldwide. Marie Claire explores the intimacy and lives of women, through journalistic enquiries on both serious and light issues, as well as portraits of both famous and anonymous women. In fashion, Marie Claire represents a unique style: a combination of spectacular fashion that serves as inspiration, alongside advice by the editorial team, to create appropriation and make luxury accessible. Beauty in Marie Claire is expert and offers the latest discoveries in terms of innovation and pleasure, through in-depth enquiries and analyses, rich advice and shopping pages, and super-feminine visuals.

Country: Colombia
City: Puerto Rico
Country: Australia

Paper Magazine is a New York City–based independent magazine focusing on fashion, pop-culture, nightlife, music, art and film. The magazine covers trends, new talent, New York City lifestyle and international lifestyle. Past cover models include Katy Perry, Gaell Garcia Bernal, Chloe Sevigny, Prince, Zac Posen, Rosario Dawson, Jay-Z, Wyclef, Vincent Gallo, Pharrell Williams, Fergie, Mariah Carey, Julianne Moore and The Scissor Sisters. In 2009 for its 25th anniversary, Paper had five different covers featuring 25 25-year-olds such as Taylor Hanson and Kid Cudi. It also held an anniversary party at the New York Public Library with performances by artists Liza Minelli, Queen Latifah, and The Virgins.

Paper Magazine was founded and launched in 1984 by editors Kim Hastreiter and David Hershkovits as a black and white 16-page fold-out (printed in the offices of The New York Times) focusing on pop-culture. The magazine evolved into an 8-inch by 10-inch format and eventually into a glossy magazine. Along with the magazine there is also a website with articles, photos, blogs, and interviews. The website also features PaperTV which showcases musicians, behind the scenes footage and party clips.

Paper Publishing Inc. also owns ExtraExtra, a marketing, event planning, and production company.

Country: United States
City: New York
Country: Vietnam
City: Ho Chi Minh City
Country: China
City: Peking

Uroda, the small format luxury guide for active women who are looking for inspiration, gives advice on taking care of the “body and soul” and on living in harmony with the world and oneself.

Country: Poland
City: Warsaw
Website: http://uroda.pl

“U My Number One” Magazine is the “Number One” title offering Handy content in an Ironic & Honest way."

UmnO Magazine was founded on March 2010 by Domino Aurora,

The publication was carried out as a monthly project untill September 2011,

when the magazine turned into bi-monthly in order to offer high quality content from a new perspective

Stablished in Paris and distributed along over 180 countries,

the actual magazine is an international title that features fresh original sections every season

Country: France
City: Paris

Condé Nast Publications first site launched without a magazine, Stylefinder.com meets the demand of shopaholics everywhere by showcasing the best fashion and beauty products available on the high street.

Updated daily, the site features 5,000 items at any one time, handpicked by our army of fashion experts from 450 mass market and designer labels, covering a range of prices, from £5 to £10,000.

Country: United States
City: New York

Tatler (also, informally, The Tatler) has been the name of several British journals and magazines, each of which has viewed itself as the successor of the original literary and society journal founded by Richard Steele in 1709. The current incarnation, founded in 1901, is a glossy magazine published by Condé Nast Publications focusing on the glamorous lives and lifestyles of the upper class. A 300th anniversary party for the magazine was held in October 2009.

The original Tatler was founded in 1709 by Richard Steele, who used the nom de plume "Isaac Bickerstaff, Esquire", the first such consistently adopted journalistic personae, which adapted to the first person, as it were, the seventeenth-century genre of "characters", as first established in English by Sir Thomas Overbury and soon to be expanded by Lord Shaftesbury's Characteristics (1711). Steele's idea was to publish the news and gossip heard in London coffeehouses, hence the title, and seemingly, from the opening paragraph, to leave the subject of politics to the newspapers, while presenting Whiggish views and correcting middle-class manners, while instructing "these Gentlemen, for the most part being Persons of strong Zeal, and weak Intellects...what to think." To assure complete coverage of local gossip, a reporter was placed in each of the city's popular coffeehouses, or at least such were the datelines: accounts of manners and mores were datelined from White's; literary notes from Will’s; notes of antiquarian interest were dated from the Grecian Coffee House; and news items from St. James’s.

In its first incarnation, it was published three times a week. The original Tatler was published for only two years, from 12 April 1709 to 2 January 1711. A collected edition was published in 1710–11, with the title The Lucubrations of Isaac Bickerstaff, Esq.

Several later journals revived the name Tatler. Three short series are preserved in the Burney Collection:

* Morphew, the original printer, continued to produce further issues in 1711 under the "Isaac Bickerstaffe" name from 4 January (No. 272) to 17 May (No. 330).

* A single issue (numbered 1) of a rival Tatler was published by Baldwin on 11 January 1711.

* In 1753–4, several issues by "William Bickerstaffe, nephew of the late Isaac Bickerstaffe" were published.

James Watson, who had previously reprinted the London Tatler in Edinburgh, began his own Tatler there on 13 January 1711, with "Donald Macstaff of the North" replacing Isaac Bickerstaffe.

Three months after the original Tatler was first published, Mary Delariviere Manley, using the pen name "Mrs. Crackenthorpe," published what was called the Female Tatler. However, its run was much shorter: the magazine ran for less than a year—from 8 July 1709 to 31 March 1710. The London Tatler and the Northern Tatler were later 18th-century imitations. The Tatler Reviv'd ran for 17 issues from October 1727 to January 1728; another publication of the same name had six issues in March 1750.

On 4 September 1830, Leigh Hunt launched The Tatler: A Daily Journal of Literature and the Stage. He edited it till 13 February 1832, and others continued it till 20 October 1832.

The current publication, named after Steele's periodical, was introduced on 3 July 1901 by Clement Shorter, publisher of The Sphere. For some time a weekly publication, it had a subtitle varying on "an illustrated journal of society and the drama" It contained news and pictures of high society balls, charity events, race meetings, shooting parties, fashion and gossip, with cartoons by "The Tout" and H. M. Bateman.

In 1940, it absorbed The Bystander. In 1961, Illustrated Newspapers, which published Tatler, The Sphere, and The Illustrated London News, was bought by Roy Thomson. In 1965, Tatler was rebranded London Life. In 1968, it was bought by Guy Wayte's Illustrated County Magazine group and the Tatler name restored. Wayte's group had a number of county magazines in the style of Tatler, each of which mixed the same syndicated content with county-specific local content. Wayte, "a moustachioed playboy of a conman" was convicted of fraud in 1980 for inflating the Tatler's circulation figures from 15,000 to 49,000.

It was sold and relaunched as a monthly magazine in 1977, called Tatler & Bystander till 1982. Tina Brown, editor 1979–83, created a vibrant and youthful Tatler and is credited with putting the edge, the irony and the wit back into what was then an almost moribund social title. She referred to it as an upper class comic and by increasing its influence and circulation made it an interesting enough operation for the then owner, Gary Bogard, to sell to the Publishers Condé Nast. She was subsequently airlifted to New York to another Condé Nast title, Vanity Fair.

Several editors later and a looming recession and the magazine was once again ailing and Jane Procter was brought in to re-invent the title for the 1990s. With a sound appreciation of the times - the need for bite not bitch - plus intriguing, newsworthy and gently satirical content, she succeeded in making Tatler a glamorous must-read way beyond its previous social remit. The circulation tripled to over 90,000 - its highest ever figure. Procter was also a gifted marketer and the first to realise the importance of the magazine as a brand. She created the various band on supplements such as The Travel and Restaurant Guides, the famous lists like The Most Invited and The Little Black Book and the hugely popular parties that accompanied them.

Country: United Kingdom
City: London

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