Apple Watch Gets Its First Advertising With a Stylish 12-Page Spread in Vogue

Apple Watch gets a 12-page spread in the March issue of Vogue, part of the run-up to the wearable device’s launch in April. Rate-card value: north of $2.2 million.

All three versions of the watch—the luxe 18-karat gold model, a sports watch and the leather-bound standard edition—are featured in the magazine’s “Spring Fashion Blockbuster,” and the images we’ve seen so far look appropriately stylish. (Scroll down to see for a sample of pages from the ad section.)

The sleek, angular devices are tastefully displayed in classic Apple style against plain white backgrounds. In one shot, the watch’s face appears to rise from a milky mist, the muted hues of its app icons signaling its time has arrived. Another shows a rising segment of the band in stark relief, suggesting a silvery stairway to heaven (by which I mean the nearest Apple Store, naturally).

More than anything, these arty abstractions resemble jewelry advertising, with the Apple Watch cast as the latest shiny bauble for the tech-crazed masses. Tres chic! Tres Apple!

Observers have generally lauded the strategy of positioning the watch as a fashion accessory, though some point out that Google Glass went the Vogue route with a spread two years ago and failed to catch on with the masses.

In my view, that’s an unfair comparison. The failure of Google Glass has been analyzed to death, but ultimately, its lack of “cool”—perched on users’ faces, for everyone to see—was perhaps a fatal, if unavoidable, flaw.

Apple Watch, a far more discreet wearable, won’t provide such a sorry spectacle. Like fine timepieces of old, it’s designed to be admired while remaining unobtrusive. Folks who catch a glimpse of the gadget won’t confer Glasshole-type scorn on wearers. Instead, the device will inspire curiosity and a desire to buy.

It will be in vogue in for years. Just watch.



Models Pose as High Fashion Dolls in Their Store Packaging in Creepy Photos From Vogue

Dolls. An iconic childhood toy. You can dress them, accessorize them, cut off all their hair with a pair of Fiskars until they look just like I Made Bad Life Choices Barbie, then wake up in the middle of the night to find them staring at you ominously by the light of the moon. Great fun, really.

Vogue Paris has married nostalgia with modern fashion in a photo series of models posed as luxury fashion dolls—in their store packaging. Stunning and creepy. Simultaneously beautiful and the stuff of nightmares.

Each brand is represented thoughtfully—the luxury Italian brand Moschino with all pink and poodle hair; Louis Vuitton, which will put an LV logo on anything; the Valentino doll is Zooey Deschanel’s life in a box; Ralph Lauren looks like a gilded flight attendant; Saint Laurent, IDK, there are roller skates and a guitar; and the ultra-feminine Chanel, I can smell the No. 5 from here.

Check them out in the current Vogue Paris edition, but if you’re not a subscriber (quelle horreur!), you can see them here.

Via Laughing Squid.



Debate on Photo Retouching Flares Online, With Roles Reversed

A call for untouched photos of Lena Dunham from the new issue of Vogue had some wondering about the target and the far different terrain women’s magazines cover nowadays.

    



Ad-Free Issue of September Vogue Is an Engineering Marvel, but It Will Cost You

For anyone who avoided picking up this year's September issue of Vogue because it would cause back trouble to carry around, here's another option—an ad-free version is for sale on Craigslist, with all the advertisements either cut out or blacked out. This allows you to enjoy an "uninterrupted read" without all that pesky filler.

The only problem? The price. "I calculating the ad expenditure of this issue for 280 Full Page Ads and 45 Double Page Spreads," says the seller. "This was the amount advertisers spent so you could buy your copy of VOGUE at just $12 at your local bookstore. So obviously, without the ads, I will have to pass on the cost to you." That explains the asking price of more than $4 million. Seems maybe they forgot to divide that by the number of issues printed?

Full text of the Craigslist ad below. Via PSFK.

I am selling an "Ad-Blocked" issue of Vogue US, September Issue 2013. What I did was to cut out all the pages with advertisements, and left only the articles. For the pages I couldn't remove, I went over them with a big fat permanent marker. Now you can enjoy an uninterrupted read of the most anticipated issue of this fashion bible.

If this price is a little higher than you anticipated, let me explain. By referencing VOGUE's media rate cards, I calculating the ad expenditure of this issue for 280 Full Page Ads and 45 Double Page Spreads. This was the amount advertisers spent so you could buy your copy of VOGUE at just $12 at your local bookstore. So obviously, without the ads, I will have to pass on the cost to you.

There is good news though: the rate card did not include premiums for this being a "September Issue", which I am sure will bump the price up even more.

So what are you waiting for? This is a steal!


    

The Media Equation: Wintour’s Reign Extends Beyond Vogue

Anna Wintour has always been a big deal, but her influence within Condé Nast is now on the march in ways that are not just reshaping the magazines but the organization.

    



Bodies of Water

Focus sur cette série de photographies intitulée « Bodies of Water » de Steven Meisel et réalisée pour l’édition italienne du magazine Vogue. Elle met en scène le mannequin américain Carolyn Murphy dans, et sous l’eau. Des images magnifiques et sensuelles à découvrir dans la suite de l’article.

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Hamish Bowles, He Was Born Dandy

Hamish Bowles, Vogue’s new columnist, brings an international aesthetic developed very (very) early on.

    



DealBook: Mayer, Yahoo’s C.E.O., Goes Chic

A Marissa Mayer profile in the September issue of Vogue, titled “Mogul, Mother, Lightning Rod,” draws attention to her fashion choices.

    

New York Receives National Magazine Awards’ Top Prize

New York magazine was declared the magazine of the year among what are considered the industry’s most coveted honors.

    

Condé Nast Creates New Job for Anna Wintour

As the magazine company’s artistic director, Anna Wintour, the editor of Vogue, will take over some responsibilities once held by S. I. Newhouse Jr.

Tom Munro

Spécialisé dans le milieu de la photographie à la “Parsons School of Design”, voici le travail de Tom Munro disponible sur son portfolio. Des contributions dans Vogue, Numéro, Details et avec la chanteuse Madonna. De nombreuses campagnes avec les marques Armani, Givenchy ou Lacoste.



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