To cater to a rapidly growing digital audience, Vogue and the CFDA have created six short-form videos documenting its latest Fashion Fund competition's five month process. Taking the series digital for the first time, meant Conde Nast Entertainment, who produced the series, changed everything about camera angles, shoot style and...
Nasty Gal founder Sophia Amoruso launched her second book, "Nasty Galaxy" in October, another step in growing her personal brand. Yet the retail arm of Nasty Gal this week announced it was declaring bankruptcy, in the hopes to restructure the business. Glossy takes a look at the retailers timeline to...
Puma reported that earnings before taxes rose 47 percent to $66 million, outperforming analyst estimates and hitting the higher end of its forecast for the year. The brand is attributing its success to a series of new and continued partnerships that have generated buzz for the company.
First CoverGirl appointed its first male brand ambassador. Now it’s appointing its first Muslim representative.
Social media is a hotbed for beauty content, so much so that Vogue's launching a separate Instagram account for the vertical. The publisher will pull images from its archives, as well as create social-only video for the platform, and build on the skin care and make up routines, as well...
American Apparel, which has grown notorious for its evocative ads and corrupt leadership, is rumored to be in talks with potential buyers to strike a bankruptcy deal. American Apparel filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy last month, announcing plans to maintain production in the U.S. despite ongoing challenges of keeping manufacturing...
From the onset, wearable technology was largely made by men, for men, said Ramon Llamas, IDC’s research manager of wearables. As more women enter the industry, they're making products with female consumers in mind.
GQ, the Cut and Cosmopolitan are turning to Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter, in very different ways, to push out election coverage, Tuesday. With very different audiences, the three have plans to interact with their audiences on social media, and repurpose some of their most popular pieces.
Teen Vogue announced today that it will transition from its monthly print magazine to a quarterly collectible issue centered around a specific theme. The Condé Nast-owned publication will also make an increased investment on digital, video and social content.