Vogue Collections China

Vogue Collections, launched in 2011, is a special edition published twice a year under copyright cooperation by China Pictorial. It gives an in-depth report on the Spring/Summer and Autumn/Winter shows, and includes substantial feature stories elaborating on key trends. In addition to the magazine, there is also an iPad edition of Vogue Collections.

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Country: Russia
City: Moscow

Vanguard Red is a digital magazine based in Auckland, New Zealand, devoted to showcasing the current and emerging talents of contemporary culture. With a focus on the new and emerging players in every facet of the arts - music, fashion, film, design, photography - they aim to feature those who are changing the game and in turn, document the future.

Country: New Zealand
City: Auckland

Fancy is the most popular girl in the class, a good friend who inspires, listens and is fun to be with. Every four weeks the reader gets an issue of the unique handbag-size Fancy. Fancy has a guiding function; it uses clear language, short sentences and straight talk. The readers have an above-average interest in beauty and fashion, but are also concerned about the serious things in life. Fancy has won several awards the past few years, among others one for the best brand extension. The Fancy diary is in the top three of best-sold diaries and the Fancy model competition is a great success. The website also attracts a lot of visitors.

Country: Netherlands
City: Hoofddorp

Playboy is a first class magazine with erotic photo art, world-class authors, exciting stories and honest interviews.

Country: Germany
City: Munich

With a fresh new look and more news content, practical business advice than ever before, Professional Beauty provides you with all the information you need to grow your business and make it a success.

Country: United Kingdom
City: London
Country: Austria
City: Vienna
Country: United Kingdom
City: London

P magazine is an aesthetic object-book designed as a collector's edition. Edited an curated by magnificent photographers Cecy Young & Mariana Garcia (www.marianagarcia.com) and supermodernist Design Studio Face, creators of page the magazine (www.pagethemagazine.com).

A hardcover limited edition book published annually with 192 pages of exclusive photography and content created by the finest contributors across the globe regarding arts, journalism, photography, fashion and everything that is beautuful.

Country: Mexico
City: Monterrey
WFM

WFM is the international fashion magazine for reports Runway of Milan, Paris, New York, London, Madrid, Barcelona, Tokyo, Hong Kong. - Plus Accessories, Beauty and Cosmetic, Watch & Jewelry, Shoes & Bags Both.

WFM-world fashion magazine is a guide of ready to wear and provides information on latest runway reports than any other fashion magazine.The content is relevant to what is hot and new trends in the upcoming season’s fashion for millions of glamorous women around the world.

Country: China
City: Hong Kong

“KISMET Magazine – we are the largest International online Fashion, Art, Music Magazine’s”

KISMET Magazine is 5 international online magazines, International, United Kingdom, Germany, United States of America, and The Netherlands.

KISMET Magazine in conjunction with Cool Designs has developed this online medium to ensure that they help the environment without printing. Their dedication is to help the environment and to introduce creative people that have reached an elite standard into the world of Fashion, Music and Art.

KISMET Magazine have been global leaders in establishing theirselves as the perfect source in finding outstanding talent. With a global following of KISMET Magazine, now they are growing at an outstanding pace, more visitors every month are wanting to see the world's best talent.

V Magazine was launched in September 1999 as the younger sibling publication to the limited-edition quarterly Visionaire. If Visionaire is a couture book, V is ready-to-wear. V is large-format and visually-driven, international in scope and collaborative in spirit.

It is edited by Stephen Gan with a focus on art, film, music, and fashion. V is noted for its extreme and artful fashion spreads by the world's greatest photographers, as well as its reportage of cultural figures and global youth culture. Contributors include Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin, Hedi Slimane, Mario Testino, Mario Sorrenti, and Karl Lagerfeld. Interview subjects have included Joan Didion, Salman Rushdie, Robert Altman, Brooke Shields, and Norman Mailer.

V recently launched an offshoot called VMAN.

In 2005, 7L and Steidl published V Best: Five Years of V Magazine, chronicling the seminal first five years of the publication.

Country: United States
City: New York

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

Vervegirl.com provides a social network allowing young women to experience and share life online. Share your feelings and stories through blogs, forums, rooms and chat. Get advice from articles and experts in beauty tips, latest fashion trends, health and fitness, career options, prom, study tips and lifestyle choices. Find out what is happening in the world of entertainment or browse the book club.

Country: Canada
City: Toronto
Country: France
City: Paris

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