The Business of Fashion
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
Adele appears on the covers of both American and British Vogue November issues as the singer kicks off the promotion for her upcoming album.
While Vogue has been sharing more content since Condé Nast merged its US and international divisions, each Vogue produced its own separate content for the occasion.
For British Vogue, Adele was styled by editor Edward Enninful and photographed by Steven Meisel. For American Vogue, Adele was styled by Tonne Goodman and photographed by Alasdair Mclellan. In addition, the magazines published two separate profiles, the fruit of two separate interviews.
The issue marks the first time the same star has appeared on both Vogue covers at once, and is part of a growing effort at the publisher to entice stars by promising more exposure or to get more mileage out of single shoots or articles by publishing them in more regions. In September, The Weeknd appeared on almost all covers of GQ globally simultaneously. And this week, Glamour released a cover story with Camila Cabello across eight markets.
Learn more:
What Anna Wintour’s Big Promotion Means for Condé Nast
As the publisher focuses on returning to profitability, a new unified content strategy under Anna Wintour, more powerful at the publisher than ever, aims to make its strategy more efficient and intertwined.
The editor of Vogue.com will become British Vogue’s head of editorial content, Condé Nast announced, as editor-in-chief Edward Enninful prepares to step back from the title.
Two years into her role as editor-in-chief, New York Magazine’s fashion vertical is a more diverse publication, but also one that’s operating in a different environment than it was in 2021.
A new docuseries on Naomi Campbell, Cindy Crawford, Christy Turlington and Linda Evangelista promises a long-overdue deep dive into a fabulous chapter of fashion history that wasn’t always what it seemed.
Air Afrique, a Black-owned, Paris-based collective founded by creatives Lamine Diaoune, Djiby Kebe and Jeremy Konko, will launch a new print magazine during Paris Fashion Week on June 23.