TheBeautyMagazine.com

The Beauty Magazine is the luxury health, beauty and fashion expert.

The Beauty Magazine offers everyone the information they need to live a beautiful life. They specialize in reporting on the latest luxury products and services as well as providing concise details on the most up to date health studies and trends. Throughout Europe and beyond their readers can expect a clear explanation of what really works, what the best fashion trends are and how to be happy and beautiful on the inside and out.

The Beauty Magazine is not only a valuable guide, but an entertaining, uncompromising, indispensable health, beauty and fashion resource.

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Country: Norway
City: Oslo

The essential guide to 500 top people in Thailand, recognized for their outstanding achievements – from captains of industry and entrepreneurs to dedicated philanthropists and the most promising leaders of tomorrow.

Country: Thailand
City: Bangkok

The most updated guide to fashion and beauty, Votre Beauté is here to inspire you!

Country: Greece
City: Athens
Country: Russia
City: Moscow

SCawaii! is the fashion bible for adult gyaru who have graduated from senior high-school and are at junior college or work part-time. A third of the readers are 18 or 19 years old, the rest are between 20 and 24. SCawaii! offers a mixture of Harajuku and Shibuya styles.

Country: Thailand
City: Bangkok
Country: Hong Kong S.A.R., China
City: Hong Kong

Harper's Bazaar is a world-renowned arbiter of fashion and good taste. Since its inception in 1867 as America's first fashion magazine, Bazaar has been home to extraordinary talents of Man Ray and Richard Avedon, and continues that tradition today with photographers including Peter Lindbergh and Sølve Sundsbø.

Sophisticated, elegant and provocative, Harper’s Bazaar is the style resource for women who are the first to buy the best, from casual to couture. With style, authority and insider insight, Bazaar focuses strictly on fashion and beauty, and covers what’s new to what’s next.

Month after month, Harper’s Bazaar showcases the world’s most visionary stylists and talented designers to deliver readers a visually stunning portrayal of the world of fashion and beauty.

In addition to publishing in the United States, Bazaar prints 27 editions around the world.

Country: China
City: Beijing

S+ Specchio is a monthly magazine. It is an associated supplement of the daila newspaper La Stampa which is produced by the La Stampa publishing house.

Country: Italy
City: Milan

It has been available in the news-stands, in Italy and abroad, for many years. Its frequency coincides with the international fashion shows. Exclusive photos and never ordinary bilingual texts, are flash that draw the attention on the trends that are really important and that offer absolutely international sight of the Haute Couture and of the Prêt-a-Porter. Already from the first issue, Book moda has asserted to itself rules of absolute rigour in all the numberless aspects that make the image and the substance of a really prestigious magazine. A peculiarity is the exactness in the information, coincise and exhaustive in the choice of the users target. Considering the dealed topics , BOOK MODA addresses itself to the experts and to a wide public of qualified readers. BOOK MODA is an advertising means for the most qualified Made in Italy, not dispersive, ideal for campaigns of products directly or indirectly bounded to the fashion word.

Country: Italy
City: Milan
Country: Spain
City: Madrid
Country: Brazil
City: São Paulo

The French edition of Vogue magazine, Vogue Paris, is a fashion magazine that has been published since 1920.

1920–1950

The French edition of Vogue was first issued on June 15, 1920. Michel de Brunhoff was the magazine's editor-in-chief from 1929 into the 1940s.

Under Edmonde Charles-Roux (1950-1966)

Edmonde Charles-Roux, who had previously worked at Elle and France-Soir, became the magazine’s editor-in-chief in 1950. Charles-Roux was a great supporter of Christian Dior’s New Look, of which she later said, "It signalled that we could laugh again - that we could be provocative again, and wear things that would grab people's attention in the street." In August 1956, the magazine issued a special ready-to-wear (prêt-à-porter) issue, signaling a shift in fashion's focus from couture production. When later asked about her departure, Charles-Roux refused to confirm or deny this account.

1968-2000: Crescent, Pringle, and Buck

Francine Crescent, whose editorship would later be described as prescient, daring, and courageous, took the helm of French Vogue in 1968. Under her leadership, the magazine became the global leader in fashion photography. Crescent gave Helmut Newton and Guy Bourdin, the magazine's two most influential photographers, complete creative control over their work. During the 1970s, Bourdin and Newton competed to push the envelope of erotic and decadent photography; the "prone and open-mouthed girls of Bourdin" were pitted against the "dark, stiletto-heeled, S&M sirens of Newton". At times, Bourdin's work was so scandalous that Crescent "laid her job on the line" to preserve his artistic independence. The two photographers greatly influenced the late-20th-century image of womanhood and were among the first to realize the importance of image, as opposed to product, in stimulating consumption.

By the late 1980s, however, Newton and Bourdin's star power had faded, and the magazine was "stuck in a rut". Colombe Pringle replaced Crescent as the magazine's editor-in-chief in 1987. Under Pringle’s watch, the magazine recruited new photographers such as Peter Lindbergh and Steven Meisel, who developed their signature styles in the magazine’s pages. Even still, the magazine struggled, remaining dull and heavily reliant on foreign stories. When Pringle left the magazine in 1994, word spread that her resignation had been forced.

Joan Juliet Buck, an American, was named Pringle's successor effective June 1, 1994. Her selection was described by The New York Times as an indication that Conde Nast intended to "modernize the magazine and expand its scope" from its circulation of 80,000. Buck's first two years as editor-in-chief were extremely controversial; many employees resigned or were fired, including the magazine's publishing director and most of its top editors. Though rumors circulated in 1996 that the magazine was on the verge of a shutdown, Buck persevered; during her editorship, the magazine’s circulation ultimately increased 40 percent. Buck remade the magazine in her own cerebral image, tripling the amount of text in the magazine and devoting special issues to art, music, literature, and science. Juliet Buck announced her decision to leave the magazine in December 2000, after her return from a two-month leave of absence. The Sydney Morning Herald later compared her departure, which took place during Milan's fashion week, to the firing of a football coach during a championship game.Carine Roitfeld, who had been the magazine's creative director,was named as Buck's successor the next April.

Under Carine Roitfeld (2001-present)

Roitfeld aimed to restore the magazine's place as a leader in fashion journalism (the magazine "hadn't been so good" since the 1980s, she said) and to [restore] its French identity. Her appointment, which coincided with the ascendance of young designers at several of the most important Paris fashion houses, "brought a youthful energy" to the magazine.

The magazine’s aesthetic evolved to resemble Roitfeld's (that is, "svelte, tough, luxurious, and wholeheartedly in love with dangling-cigarette, bare-chested fashion"). Roitfeld has periodically drawn criticism for the magazine's use of sexuality and humor, which she employs to disrupt fashion's conservatism and pretension. Roitfeld's Vogue is unabashedly elitist, "unconcerned with making fashion wearable or accessible to its readers". Models, not actresses promoting movies, appear on its cover. Its party pages focus on the magazine's own staff, particularly Roitfeld and her daughter Julia. Its regular guest-editorships are given to it-girls like Kate Moss, Sofia Coppola, and Charlotte Gainsbourg. According to The Guardian, "what distinguishes French Vogue is its natural assumption that the reader must have heard of these beautiful people already. And if we haven't? The implication is that that's our misfortune, and the editors aren't about to busy themselves helping us out."Advertising revenue rose 60 percent in 2005, resulting in the best year for ad sales since the mid-1980s.

Country: France
City: Paris

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