- Title: UNITED KINGDOM: Vogue and Wired UK test iPad market
- Date: 11th November 2010
- Summary: LONDON, ENGLAND, UNITED KINGDOM (RECENT) (REUTERS) (SOUNDBITE) (English) ALBERT READ, UK GENERAL MANAGER, CONDE NAST, SAYING: "With Vogue, Vogue is our biggest magazine and defines the company historically and we have a very creative team who are very keen to do something creative with the iPad." VARIOUS SHOTS OF ALBERT READ USING THE VOGUE IPAD
- Embargoed: 26th November 2010 12:00
- Keywords:
- Location: United Kingdom
- Country: United Kingdom
- Topics: Arts / Culture / Entertainment / Showbiz
- Reuters ID: LVA9RWAS3T0T9TZBBF82VQNSNL5H
- Story Text: An iconic brand, a famous face, a new look on a new platform. After 94 years in print, British Vogue is making its iPad debut.
Harry Potter star Emma Watson, newly shorn, adorns the covers of the December 2010 issue, which is being hailed as a technological milestone.
"We're very pleased with it. It's something which is completely bespoke. Something we've created from scratch," said Conde Nast's UK General Manager Albert Read took us through a touching demonstration.
"So this is a magazine done with all the richness that the iPad offers. And we have a whole lot of other shoots. We have this one which I like a lot which is the Dash Cash shoot, which is a mixture of stills and video. So that women can see how the clothes are worn, how they sit on the body," he added.
Conde Nast has created iPad apps for a number of its titles in the U.S. but the British versions of Vogue and technology and trends magazine Wired are the first of its publications to get the treatment in the UK.
"With Wired, it's fairly obvious to some extent. The Wired constituency is very forward thinking and early adopting in terms of technology. The success of the U.S. Wired version made it seem like a no-brainer for us to go with a UK edition," Read said, adding, "With Vogue, Vogue is our biggest magazine and defines the company historically and we have a very, very creative team who are keen to do something with the iPad."
When the iPad was launched, there was a great deal of discussion about what touch-screen tablet computers would mean for the publishing industry. Read says his magazines are still in research and development phase.
"We're doing these as one offs. We're not committing beyond these first issues but we see this as something that's going to grow but what we don't know is whether it's going to grow quickly or slowly. We don't know what the take up is going to be both from the readers, how many devices are owned by Vogue readers and we don't know what the take up is going to be of the advertisers," said Read.
Vogue and Wired are traditionally titles which help to fuel trends. Now the creative teams behind these slick new offerings await the verdicts of consumers and advertisers to learn whether the era of tablet-oriented publishing has well and truly got underway in the UK. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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