Shape Magazine (or Shape) is a monthly English language fitness magazine started by Weider Publications in 1981. Weider was purchased by American Media in 2002.
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Shape Magazine (or Shape) is a monthly English language fitness magazine started by Weider Publications in 1981. Weider was purchased by American Media in 2002.
Featuring insider reporting supplied by a network of specialist correspondents in over twenty countries, Solitaire showcases the latest jewellery fashion and watch trends in an easy-to-digest bi-monthly format and a stylish presentation even other magazines talk about.
New York is a weekly magazine principally concerned with the life, culture, politics, and style of New York City. Founded by Milton Glaser and Clay Felker in 1968 as a competitor to The New Yorker, it was brasher and less polite than that magazine, and established itself as a cradle of New Journalism.The magazine has, as a rule, published fewer national and more urban-tabloid stories than its sometime rival, but has also freely veered outside the city's borders, publishing many noteworthy articles on American culture by writers such as Tom Wolfe, Jimmy Breslin, Nora Ephron, Kurt Andersen and John Heilemann. In its current incarnation under editor-in-chief Adam Moss, "The nation's best and most-imitated city magazine is often not about the city—at least not in the overcrowded, traffic-clogged, five-boroughs sense," wrote Washington Post media critic Howard Kurtz, as the magazine has increasingly published political and cultural stories of national significance. Since its 2004 redesign and relaunch the magazine has won more National Magazine Awards than any other publication. It was one of the first city magazines, and one of the first dual-audience "lifestyle magazines," and its format and style have been emulated by some other American regional city publications.
Vogue Girl, launched in 2011, sold out immediately and the app was downloaded more than 550,000 times. It became the leading new-generation media brand for fashion conscious women with its multiple platforms spanning the magazine, website, blogs, SMS and apps. Vogue Girl magazine is published biannually.
True Love Magazine is considered a sister publication to Afrikaans Sarie and English Fair Lady. These three titles are published by Media24 (Naspers).
True Love is situated in the giant media house's Johannesburg offices.
Playboy offers everything that fascinates men. The most attractive female beauty, lifestyle, in-depth interviews and the latest must-have gadgets. But also travel, films, music, literature and culinary. Playboy has it all. This wide range of subjects is the great strength of the self-willed quality monthly with the internationally famous brand name. Moreover, it regularly offers an exclusive report of a beautiful, naked Dutch female celebrity, stylishly photographed by a top photographer. In a word, Playboy is a bull’s eye for a broad group of men aged 18-45 who enjoy the pleasures of life.
ELLE became the world's largest fashion magazine by suggesting but never prescribing; by offering a rich mix of high and low; and above all by leading the reader to discover her personal style.
A mission is nothing if not a promise: ELLE pledges that even while we change—as every living thing must—we will never lose our intelligence, our wit, our cool, and our ability to be just a little ahead of the times.
Good-humored and irreverent, it is a benchmark to the modern man’s behavior, fashion and beauty.
VEOIR MAGAZINE is an independent biannual fashion magazine based out of New York, but staffed around the world. It contains high-end fashion stories created by some of the most inspiring creative minds in the industry who believe in creating unforgettable stories.
The magazine is born out of the ideology to not just dream, but to create an equal stage for talent and is realized for the real lovers of fashion, photography, style and beauty alike. VEOIR is luxurious and timeless, yet youthful and progressive.
FACTORY isn't printed anymore; was formerly known as Tokion.
The magazine was started in 1996 by Lucas Badtke-Berkow and Adam Glickman, two American expatriates living in Japan, as a cultural bridge between Japan and the United States. In 1998, Tokion opened an American office in Los Angeles. In 2000 it moved into a retail space/office in New York City, while maintaining a retail space/office in Tokyo. While in New York, the magazine's focus shifted from Japanese-influenced content to street culture aesthetics and then to a more global arts magazine featuring interviews with recognized artists such as Lou Reed, Richard Prince, James Brown, Francesco Clemente, Roger Corman, Ed Ruscha and Jeff Koons, while continuing to cover up-and-coming artists such as Harmony Korine, Miranda July, Cory Arcangel and Simone Shubuck. In 2007 Kate Sennert was named editor-in-chief.
In 2002, Badtke-Berkow sold the magazine to Glickman. Badtke-Berkow began publishing Paper Sky and Mammoth magazines in Japan, while Glickman began publishing Japanese and US editions. In 2005, the Japanese edition was sold to Infas Publishing Company. In 2006, the American edition was sold to independent publisher Larry Rosenblum. In 2009, Tokion and Creativity Now were sold out of foreclosure to Donald Hellinger, president of Nylon Holding, Inc., who later closed the magazine.