Vs. (magazine)

Vs. is an international fashion and lifestyle magazine published twice per year. Featuring sleek design, luxury fashion stories, editorial edge, and large format, glossy, print size, Vs. was founded by Jakob F. Stubkjær and Vibe Dabelsteen in 2005. Vs.'s offices are based in New York, United States.

Vs.
Kylie Minogue on the cover of Vs.
Categoriesfashion
FrequencyBiannual
FounderJakob F. Stubkjær and Vibe Dabelsteen
Year founded2005
CountryUSA
Based inNew York City
LanguageEnglish
Websitevsmag.com

Vs. features some of the most prominent figures in fashion and mainstream culture from supermodels and celebrities to emerging talents within fashion, beauty, music, art, film and culture. Every issue has four different covers. Fall/Winter 2010 featured Naomi Campbell, Eva Mendes, Christina Ricci and Rachel Weisz on the front cover, and the Spring/Summer 2011 issues featured Kylie Minogue, Sky Ferreira,[1] Paris Hilton and Oh Land [2]

Vsmagazinelive.com is the LIVE edition of the printed magazine. With all the notions of web exploited, that is the motion, the audio, the pace, the form. Vsmagazinelive.com features new content every day from historic film clips to exclusive Vs. fashion productions, daily style and fashion news, as well as trends, industry and cultural updates. [3]

Headquarters in NYC

Models

The following models and talent have featured on the front covers of Vs. Magazine.

gollark: I don't want to support things which are called "organic".
gollark: If you claim to care about something, but then mostly just ignore it, that's not exactly very meaningfully "caring".
gollark: I mean, yes, people care abstractly. If you ask them "hey, are you unhappy about some poverty-stricken countries being poverty-stricken" they'll say yes. But people do not actually practically care enough to do anything.
gollark: You STILL haven't demonstrated anything being basic.
gollark: It's like with, say, random poverty-stricken countries. They could probably have quite a lot of their problems solved if people actually cared very much. But they don't, because moral obligation actually drops off according to the inverse-square law.

References

  1. Nate Freeman, Article in The Observer, The Observer, February 2011 Archived February 18, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  2. iO Tillett Wright, "Notes From the Underground | Oh Land", T: The New York Times Style Magazine blog site, April 2011
  3. "Vs. Magazine", Models.com
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