History of Vogue
- 1892
The price was 10 cents.
The meaning behind the making of the magazine was "ceremonial side of life" mostly aiming for young women in the higher society. The New York upper class.
- 1905
Conde Nast turned the magazine into a unisex magazine.
It was soon shifted to be a women's magazine.
They targeted the upper class and included weddings.
After the first war vogue began to print in England.
It was soon shifted to be a women's magazine.
They targeted the upper class and included weddings.
After the first war vogue began to print in England.
- 1920
They published their first colour magazine in 1932. The photograph was a woman swimmer holding a beach ball.
Nast introduced the two-paged spread and colour printing.
After his death Diana Vreeland took over and turned vogue into a magazine that appealed to the youth (sexual revolution).
Focused more on fashion and sexuality.
Vogue became a monthly publication and their response change to life style of the reader.
Target audience: free, working and liberated woman in the 70s.
The magazine changed to having texts with interviews and health issues.
- 1988