Vogue Magazine November 1999 Kate Moss, Gisele Bündchen Cover No Label VG


Price:
Sale price$150.00

Description

Vogue Magazine November 1999 – Kate Moss & Gisele Bündchen Cover (No Label, Very Good Condition)

This November 1999 issue of Vogue Magazine features Kate Moss and Gisele Bündchen on the cover, two of the most influential models of their generation. As the century drew to a close, Vogue marked the moment with retrospectives on the past hundred years of style while highlighting the supermodels, designers, and cultural icons who shaped the end of the 1990s. The magazine is in very good condition with only minor edge wear, making it an excellent collectible for fashion enthusiasts, Vogue collectors, and fans of Moss and Bündchen. The exact item shown in the listing photos is the one you will receive. Please review all images carefully to confirm condition.

Each issue is shipped with a protective plastic covering. Combined shipping is available upon request.

Highlights from this issue include:

  • Style Fax by André Leon Talley – Key notes on the season’s fashion inspirations.

  • Talking Fashion – Editorial reflections on industry trends.

Vogue’s View features:

  • Resort Report 2000 – Must-have looks for global destinations.

  • Carrying On – Marina Rust on the art of traveling light.

  • Designer Jeans, Redux – Amy Larocca traces the evolution of luxury denim.

  • The Big Chill – Joanne Chen on staying stylish in winter sports and cold-weather wear.

  • After a While, Crocodile – The Lacoste revival and its enduring reptilian logo.

  • Karaoke Cool – Daisy Garnett on karaoke as a fashion scene phenomenon.

  • Tracing a Trend: Mac Attack – A cultural and style snapshot.

  • Galliano’s Clutches – Katrina Szish on John Galliano’s ornate handbags.

  • Neil Barrett Arrives – Emily Eakin on the designer’s high-tech travel pieces and debut womenswear.

  • Fashion Fiction by Plum Sykes – A playful narrative on style obsessions.

  • The Vogue File – Curated cultural and fashion highlights.

Point of View features:

  • Women – Annie Leibovitz and Susan Sontag celebrate extraordinary women in history and culture.

  • The Übermodels – Annie Leibovitz photographs the world’s most iconic models.

  • At First Sight – The spring 2000 collections and their Americana influences.

  • The Look of the Century – Hamish Bowles surveys a hundred years of fashion.

  • Highlights of the High Life – Charles Gandee revisits defining decades of luxury, with reflections from Bill Blass, David Bailey, Pat Hansen, Anne Bass, and more.

Health & Beauty highlights:

  • Opera Buff – Angela Ragaza on opera singers and shifting body ideals.

  • Social Studies – Joanne Chen explores the psychology of social phobia.

  • Wandering Hands – Carla Power on massage as a universal language.

  • Fantasy Island – Helena Bonham Carter’s spa retreat adventure.

  • The Turning Point – Roxanne O’Connor captures ballet’s backstage transformations.

  • Journey to Oz – Kristina Zimbalist profiles nutritionist Oz Garcia.

  • Guest Editor: Donatella [surname illegible] – Skin-care and glow-therapy tips.

  • Beauty Addict – Christine Shea on the rise of ultra-luxury skin-care lines.

Features:

  • Up Front – Julia Reed on politics, pop culture, and home.

  • Hollywood & Culture – Essays and interviews reflecting on the end of the century.

  • The Übermodels – Annie Leibovitz documents the phenomenon of supermodels.

  • The Look of the Century – Fashion retrospectives from the 1930s through the 1990s.

Additional Sections:

  • Vogue’s Index

  • In This Issue

  • Vogue’s Last Look

  • Horoscope by Athena Starwoman

  • People Are Talking About – Film, books, art, food, and cultural notes, including reviews by John Powers, Cameron Crowe’s interview with Billy Wilder, Susan Orlean’s The Orchid Thief, and Jeffrey Steingarten’s food columns.

This issue is especially notable for its dual cover featuring Kate Moss and Gisele Bündchen, paired with Vogue’s sweeping retrospective The Look of the Century. A must-have collectible for fashion historians and anyone interested in the cultural shifts of the late 1990s.

You may also like

Recently viewed