View-Publications.com

Country:

City:

Vogue Deutsch is published in Germany by Conde Nast Verlag GmbH twelve times a year. The Editor-in-Chief is Christiane Arp and the Creative Director is Reto Brunnter. The paper quality and printing is typically European with a hard semi-gloss cover. The German Vogue eye is very like a mix between French, Italian, and American Vogue. For me, it is very hard to pinpoint with a definative description. Colour is very important to German Vogue, as evidenced by it's colour-drenched interior and it's subtle use of colour on most covers. All of the inside photo editorials are original, using such varied photographers as Christophe Kutner, Mario Testino, Karl Lagerfeld, Mark Abrahams, Arthur Elgort, Rankin, and Ruven Afanador. As of yet, they have not been bitten by the celebrity bug (but getting close), which as far as I'm concerned, is a sign of loss of creativity. Models are mostly multi-cultural. Vogue Deutsch began publishing with the August 1979 issue.

Country: Germany
City: Munich
Country: Australia
City: Collingwood

160g is a digital FASHION, MUSIC & ART STYLE magazine focusing on the newest tendencies in the world of fashion and art.

From ART COVERAGE to the music behind the scenes and fashion of course, 160g is the place to catch a glimpse of the hottest and newest trends.

It is a CUTTING EDGE publication that presents the content's bold

WITH STUNNING CLARITY and HIGHLIGHTS the stars of tommorow for readers ahead of the game.

Since launching in September 2009, "160g is PIONEERING the concept of mixing high fashion with pop art culture."

160g clearly REFLECTS the TRENDS and the MOOD of the moment

and tommorow through the world of FAHION & ARTS.

Country: France
City: Paris

POSTER is a public showcase (a “poster”) of visionary/inspirational people who are shaping our future. Their work exemplifies what readers aspire to and are inspired by. They are the “poster children” for design, fashion, culture and business. No, this is NOT another design or fashion magazine!

POSTER is a visual and textual embodiment of that desire for inspiration and information; POSTER will feed the readers’ creative growth;

In addition to design, architecture, fashion, art, POSTER also delves headfirst into music, business, travel, and global affairs – areas demanded by an increasingly discerning, educated audience with a hunger for creativity, inspiration and information.

Country: Australia
City: Surry Hills

Inspiration is made easy by a new bimonthly magazine called Distill, which reprints the most directional and challenging fashion stories published around the globe, from mainstream super-glossies to tiny niche publications — all for the price of one magazine. The idea is so simple, you wonder why someone didn’t think of it before.

Country: United Kingdom
City: London

Cosmopolitan is an international magazine for women. It was first published in 1886 in the United States as a family magazine, was later transformed into a literary magazine and eventually became a women's magazine in the late 1960s. Also known as Cosmo, its current content includes articles on relationships and sex, health, careers, self-improvement, celebrities, as well as fashion and beauty. Published by Hearst Magazines, Cosmopolitan has 58 international editions, is printed in 34 languages and is distributed in more than 100 countries.

Country: Bulgaria
City: Sofia

Her World is Singapore's no 1 women's title - always at the forefront of fashion, beauty, lifestyle and issues affecting our readers.

Country: Singapore
City: Singapore

On February 16th the first installation of Purple Fashion's new online presence was launched. http://purple-diary.com can be considered as the extension of the magazine but as a digital voice that offers immediate access to the world of Purple — including Olivier Zahm’s personal pictures as well as a look into the next issue of the magazine.

Country: France
City: Paris

i-D is a British magazine dedicated to fashion, music, art and youth culture. i-D was founded by designer and former Vogue art director Terry Jones in 1980. The first issue was published in the form of a hand-stapled fanzine with text produced on a typewriter. Over the years the magazine evolved into a mature glossy but it has kept street style and youth central to every issue.

The magazine is known for its innovative photography and typography, and over the years established a reputation as a training ground for fresh talent. Photographers Chris Dowling, Wolfgang Tillmans, Juergen Teller, Terry Richardson and Ellen von Unwerth, Kayt Jones have produced work for i-D. The magazine celebrated its 250th edition at the end of 2004 and its 25th anniversary in 2005. The July Issue of 2009 was the magazines 300th publication, boasting many interesting articles and iconic photography, true to the magazines concept. The content, focused mainly on ideas from past issues and bringing these ideas into 2009. Raquel Zimmerman was the covergirl for this edition.

The magazine pioneered the hybrid style of documentary/fashion photography called "the straight up". At first, these were of punks and New Wave youth found on English streets and who were simply asked to stand against any nearby blank wall. The resulting pictures - the subjects facing the camera and seen from "top to toe" - are a vivid historical documentary photography archive, and have established the posed "straight up" as a valid style of documentary picture-making.

Tipped on its side, the "i-D" typographic logo reveals a winking smiley. Most issues of i-D magazine have featured a winking cover model.

i-D has also held numerous exhibitions worldwide and published several books.

In 1984, Tony Elliott (Time Out) became its publishing partner with 51% share of the company. Terry remained editor-in-chief and creative director, but he also worked on other commercial projects. In 2004, Terry - together with his wife, Tricia - regained total control of the company.

i-D's silver anniversary in 2005 was celebrated with an exhibition (i-Dentity) and guest-edited issues. Terry invited a number of creative collaborators to work with him on different issues, around the central theme of identity.

Country: Japan
City: Tokyo

Collezioni Close Up Bags & Accessories is a new publication series with professional analyses about fashion shaping details as shown in leading designer collections during the latest fashion weeks in New York, London, Madrid, Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo, Milan and Paris. All the shows are carefully analysed by experienced designers to select and categorize the most directional and influential looks images: more than 700 pages: 144 format: cm. 24,5 x 33

Country: Italy
City: Modena

PINKY is a Japanese fashion magazine published by Shueisha. Launched in 2004 as a sister magazine of Seventeen, PINKY is targeted at teenagers and young women in their early 20s or early 30s

Country: Japan
City: Tokyo

E! stilo a lifestyle magazine for the modern lifestyle. This magazine informed women about showing the latest in fashion, beauty, design, cuisine and culture.

Country: Poland
City: Warszawa

Sleazenation was a monthly London based fashion and lifestyle magazine printed by Swinstead Publishing. The founding editor was Steve Beale, who left in 1999 to work at EMAP on The Face and Arena. Subsequent editors were Stuart Turnbull, Steve Slocombe and Neil Boorman. The magazine closed at the end of 2003 and was relaunched shortly afterwards as "Sleaze" magazine. The magazine was an early champion of influential photographers including Ewen Spencer and Jonathan de Villiers, particularly through the black and white, documentary-style photography of nightlife which used to accompany the club listings.

During its tenure Sleazenation worked with a number of well-known art directors such as Stephen Male (who helped mould the face of i-D magazine in the 1980s), Nick Booth, Guerilla 6, Stephen Duffy and Rob Lowe (better known as Supermundane) although it is Scott King's time at the magazine which helped solidify the magazine in many people's minds. During his tenure the magazine adopted the slogan, "An ideal for living through fashion, art, music and design".

Scott King's "Cher Guevara" cover from the February 2001 issue won several magazine awards and was featured in the Barbican exhibition 'Communicate: Independent British Graphic Design since the Sixties'. He also contributed cover headlines such as "Now even more superficial/Over 100 pages of hype & lies" and "Absolute sell out". The re-invigorated 'Sleaze' came under the art direction of Rob Lowe but only lasted 4 issues before being closed down. The former editor Neil Boorman and former music editor Stuart Turnbull went on to run free London bi-monthly magazine 'Good for Nothing' which ran for 8 issues before closing around the end of 2005.

Sleazenation had an attendant picture library, PYMCA (Photographic Youth Music & Culture Archive). This was overseen by Steve Lazarides, who would go on to manage Banksy.

Country: United Kingdom
City: London

WWD is the media of record for senior executives in the global women’s and men’s fashion, retail and beauty communities and the consumer media that cover the market.

WWD Magazines set the trends the world follows, engaging fashion, retail and beauty power players with compelling issues that offer the first look at what's next in global fashion.

Country: Japan
City: Tokyo
Country: China
City: Hong Kong

Pages