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Condé Nast Store Launches with Art.com Partnership


Conde Nast Store vogue vintage illustration
Photo courtesy of Condé Nast
A Vogue illustration by George Wolfe Plank from April 1918.

Thumbtacks? We don't need no stinkin' thumbtacks.

Our days of taking an X-Acto blade to our cherished Vogue magazine collection in the name of DIY decorating appear to be over, thanks to the genius new partnership between Condé Nast and Art.com.

With the just-launched Condé Nast Store, shoppers can access, order, and frame iconic images from the publishing giant's many titles with just a few clicks of the mouse.

Droll cartoons from the New Yorker, fashion spreads from the likes of Vogue and Vanity Fair, and other archival footage are among the thousands of images on offer.

Simply purchase the pictures you love, select your preferred size, and then choose from a variety of matting, framing, and glazing options.

Voila! Bare walls no more.

Besides giving readers the chance to take their favorite spreads from the coffee table to the wall, the partnership marks an important expansion for Condé Nast.

Conde Nast Store vogue vintage photo

Photo courtesy of Condé Nast

A vintage Vogue image from July 1928 by Edward Steichen.

"The launch of the new Condé Nast store is one of the many ways we are engaging consumers above and beyond the printed page," Julie Michalowski, Condé Nast’s SVP of consumer business development, tells FashionEtc.

“The store gives the public a unique opportunity to own some of the most breathtaking vintage images and illustrations from Vogue, Vanity Fair, and Glamour. And with the holidays just around the corner, one of our beautifully framed prints is bound to make the perfect gift for the fashion-obsessed.”

Good point. Now excuse us while we delve into the archives.

Meanwhile, rare images of Kate Moss and Christy Turlington have hit the auction block.

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