Lula (magazine), the Glossary
Lula: Girl of My Dreams is a biannual British culture and fashion magazine launched in 2005 by fashion photographer Damon Heath and stylist Leith Clark.[1]
Table of Contents
8 relations: Charlotte Gainsbourg, Greta Gerwig, Kirsten Dunst, Leith Clark, Lizzy Caplan, Materialism, Nora Baldenweg, Stacy Martin.
- Fashion magazines published in the United Kingdom
- Magazines established in 2014
Charlotte Gainsbourg
Charlotte Lucy Gainsbourg (born 21 July 1971) is a French and British actress and singer.
See Lula (magazine) and Charlotte Gainsbourg
Greta Gerwig
Greta Celeste Gerwig (born August 4, 1983) is an American actress, screenwriter, and film director.
See Lula (magazine) and Greta Gerwig
Kirsten Dunst
Kirsten Caroline Dunst (born April 30, 1982) is an American actress.
See Lula (magazine) and Kirsten Dunst
Leith Clark
Leith Clark (born 1979) is a Canadian born English fashion stylist, editor, and fashion journalist.
See Lula (magazine) and Leith Clark
Lizzy Caplan
Elizabeth Anne Caplan (born June 30, 1982) is an American actress.
See Lula (magazine) and Lizzy Caplan
Materialism
Materialism is a form of philosophical monism which holds that matter is the fundamental substance in nature, and that all things, including mental states and consciousness, are results of material interactions of material things.
See Lula (magazine) and Materialism
Nora Baldenweg
Nora Baldenweg (born 22 July 1981) is a Swiss Australian musician, vocalist, composer, producer and creative director in fashion.
See Lula (magazine) and Nora Baldenweg
Stacy Martin
Stacy Martin (born 20 March 1990) is a French actress.
See Lula (magazine) and Stacy Martin
See also
Fashion magazines published in the United Kingdom
- 10 Magazine (British magazine)
- Ackermann's Repository
- Arena Homme +
- Asian Woman
- Blitz (British magazine)
- British Vogue
- Company (British magazine)
- Dazed
- Ever Manifesto
- Exit (magazine)
- Fiasco (magazine)
- Finch's Quarterly Review
- Fused Magazine
- Garage (magazine)
- Girl Talk (magazine)
- I-D
- Icon (lifestyle magazine)
- InStyle UK
- La Belle Assemblée
- Look (UK magazine)
- Love (magazine)
- Lula (magazine)
- Magazine of Female Fashions of London & Paris
- Marmalade (magazine)
- Men's Health (British magazine)
- More!
- Pop (fashion magazine)
- Queen (magazine)
- Rebel Magazine
- Ritz Newspaper
- Rubbish (magazine)
- Schön!
- Sleazenation
- Stylenoir
- Stylist (magazine)
- System (magazine)
- Tank (magazine)
- Tatler
- The Face (magazine)
- The Queen: The Ladies Newspaper and Court Chronicle
- The Tatler (1709 journal)
- Trendspotting (magazine)
- Umbrella Magazine
- Vanity Teen
- Wonderland (magazine)
- Xmag
Magazines established in 2014
- Austin Way
- BALLOONS Lit. Journal
- BDJ Team
- Backbencher (magazine)
- Banana (magazine)
- Black Denim Lit
- Dabiq (magazine)
- Dar al-Islam (magazine)
- Ekonomist (magazine)
- Entropy (magazine)
- GQ Thailand
- GlobalCapital
- Hebdomada Aenigmatum
- Kindline
- Krautreporter
- Latterly
- Linux Voice
- Lost (magazine)
- Lula (magazine)
- Monthly Comic Garden
- Nina Iraq
- No Tokens Journal
- OOMK
- Omenana Magazine
- One Throne Magazine
- Organiser (magazine)
- Popular Science Italia
- RUMAG
- Roopbaan
- Scandinavian Traveler
- Sidetracked (magazine)
- Soap Hub
- Star Spangled War Stories
- Technologist (magazine)
- The Attic (magazine)
- The California Sunday Magazine
- The Dodo (website)
- The Intercept
- The Mandarin (website)
- The True North Times
- Transform magazine
- UK Defence Journal
- Uncanny Magazine
- Voxeurop
- VultureHound
- Womankind (magazine)
- Wussy Magazine
- Zanan magazine
- Zanan-e Emruz
References
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lula_(magazine)
Also known as Lula Magazine.