Build your wardrobe with the latest fashion styles found only from Burda patterns. BurdaStyle Modern Sewing: Dresses for Every Occasion includes 25 projects from the archives of BurdaStyle magazine. All of the must-have essentials of a woman's dress wardrobe are.
- Where To Buy Burda Magazine
- Burda Fashion Magazine 2020
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- Burda Style Magazine 2019
Description: Burda Tissue paper Ideal for tracing pattern pieces, for tracing and stitching embroidery. 5 sheets 150cm x 110. Great for use with Burda Style and Ottobre magazines. UPDATE: Burda World of Fashion Magazine and How I Avoid Tracing AT ALL COSTS! 3 Comments Posted by cdnmich on March 14, 2011 Since I posted my original article on how to scan Burda World of Fashion patterns instead of trace, I have come up with some tweaks and shortcuts, based on my experience and others.
Content Director | Rashana Rebecca Jennings |
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Categories | Fashion Sewing pattern collection |
Frequency | Monthly |
Publisher | Aenne Burda † |
First issue | 1950; 70 years ago |
Company | Verlag Aenne Burda GmbH + Co. KG Hubert Burda Media |
Country | Germany |
Based in | Offenburg |
Language | 17 Languages |
Website | www.burdafashion.com |
ISSN | 0007-6031 |
Burda Style (formerly Burda Moden) is a fashion magazine published in 17 languages and in over 100 countries. Each issue contains patterns for every design featured that month. The magazine is published by Hubert Burda Media.
History and profile[edit]
In 1949, Aenne Burda expanded her family business into women's magazines publishing, founding a fashion magazine printing and publishing company in her home town of Offenburg, Germany. The same year she debuted the magazine Favorit, which was later renamed to Burda Moden. The first issue of Burda Moden magazine was published in 1950 with a circulation of 100,000. It gained popularity after 1952, when it began to include patterns for clothes.
In 1987, Burda Fashion became the first Western magazine to be published in the Soviet Union.[1] In 1994 it became the first Western magazine to appear in the People’s Republic of China.[2]
Burda Style launched in the United States in 2013, in partnership with F+W Media.[3][4]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^Pietiläinen, Jukka (2008). 'Media Use in Putin's Russia'. Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics. 24 (3): 365–385. doi:10.1080/13523270802267906.
- ^'All about Burda'. Burda Fashion. Hubert Burda Media. Archived from the original on 5 February 2010. Retrieved 20 July 2009.
- ^'Hubert Burda Media and F+W Media to Create Burda Style USA'. F+W Media (Press release). 11 April 2013. Archived from the original on 14 March 2014. Retrieved 14 March 2014.
- ^Mickey, Bill (4 March 2014). 'F+W Expands Licensing Deal with Hubert Burda Media Into JV'. Folio Mag. Retrieved 14 March 2014.
External links[edit]
Born | Anna Magdalene Lemminger 28 July 1909 |
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Died | 3 November 2005 (aged 96) Offenburg, Germany |
Nationality | German |
Occupation | Publisher |
Known for | Burda fashion magazines |
Spouse(s) | Franz Burda II (died 1986) |
Children | Franz Burda junior [de] (1932–2017) Frieder Burda (1936–2019) Hubert Burda (1940) |
Website | http://www.aenne-burda.com/ |
Aenne Burda (28 July 1909 – 3 November 2005), born Anna Magdalene Lemminger, was a German publisher of the Burda Group, a media group based in Offenburg and Munich, Germany. She was one of the symbols of the German economic miracle.[1]
Biography[edit]
Aenne Burda was born in Offenburg, German Empire. She chose her name after the popular song Ännchen von Tharau. She was daughter of a train driver. She left convent high school at 17 and became a cashier at the Offenburg electricity company. In 1930 she met printer and publisher Franz Burda, son of Franz Burda, the founder of the Burda printing company. The couple married a year later, on 9 July 1931.[2] They had three sons, Franz (1932-2017), Frieder (1936–2019) and Hubert (1940). She was the mother-in-law of actress Maria Furtwängler.
Burda founded two charitable foundations, supporting young academics and seniors in her hometown of Offenburg respectively.[3]
Where To Buy Burda Magazine
Aenne Burda died in her native Offenburg, Germany, at the age of 96, from natural causes.
Magazine publishing[edit]
Aenne and her husband helped to expand the family business into women's magazines. In 1949 Aenne Burda founded a fashion magazine printing and publishing company in her home town Offenburg. The same year she started publishing magazine Favorit, which was later renamed to Burda Moden. The first issue of Burda Moden magazine was published in 1950 with a circulation of 100,000. It became popular in the market after 1952, when it began to include sheets of paper with patterns for clothes. In 1987 Burda Moden became the first Western magazine published in Soviet Union. Burda Fashion is currently published in 90 countries in 16 different languages.[1][4][5]
In 1977 she launched Burda CARINA magazine, a fashion and lifestyle magazine targeting a younger female audience.
Quotes[edit]
- 'My aim is to put together practical fashions at an affordable price that can be worn by the largest possible number of women.'[6]
- 'I have learned to grow old with a young heart, thus retaining my enjoyment of life, my joie de vivre.'[7]
Awards[edit]
- 1974 Great Cross of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
- 1979 Offenburg’s Ring of Honour for her role in the city’s economic development
- 1984 Bavarian Order of Merit
- 1985 Baden-Württemberg Order of Merit
- 1989 Jakob Fugger Medal by the Bavarian Publishers Association (the first time this was awarded to a woman)
- 1989 Aenne Burda is made an honorary citizen of her hometown Offenburg
- 1990 Karl Valentin Order of Merit
- 1994 Golden Order of Merit from the province of Salzburg, Austria
- 2001 Awarded the German Federal Republic’s highest Order of Merit with Star for her exceptional achievements as a business woman
Bibliography[edit]
- Aenne Burda: Ansichten, Einsichten, Erfahrungen. Articles previously published in Burda Moden, 1975–1989, ISBN3-88978-039-3
- Aenne Burda (Hrsg.): Handarbeitsbücher für Schule, Beruf und Haus. Modeverlag Burda, Lahr (Schwarzwald)
- Judith Betzler: Aenne Burda. Die Macht des Schönen. Econ, München 1999, ISBN3-430-11194-3
- - Excerpt, 22 pages, (pdf file)
- Peter Köpf: Die Burdas. Europa Verlag, Hamburg 2002, ISBN3-203-79145-5
References[edit]
- ^ ab'Aenne Burda_1909-2005' (in Czech). Archived from the original on 2009-06-19. Retrieved 2009-08-01.
- ^'Hubert Burda Media.de/com - UNTERNEHMEN - Historie'. Aenne Burda. Archived from the original on 2013-01-16. Retrieved 2013-01-19.
- ^http://www.interactive-weekly.com/press/press_releases/aenne_burda_dead_at___2264?ext_print=disp&http.uri=/hps/client/hbmi/bdspress/bu3_press_long/hbmi_article_mainnav/press/press_releases/BDSPRESS_RELEASE_2264.hbsArchived 2011-07-13 at the Wayback Machine
- ^Burda Style. 'Fashion, Sewing Patterns, Inspiration, Community, and Learning | BurdaStyle.com'. Burdafashion.com. Archived from the original on 2010-02-05. Retrieved 2013-01-19.
- ^[1][dead link]
- ^'German Fashion Empress Aenne Burda Dies at 96'. Dexigner. 2005-11-05. Archived from the original on 2012-02-29. Retrieved 2013-01-19.
- ^'Hubert Burda Media.de/com - UNTERNEHMEN - Historie'. Aenne Burda. Archived from the original on 2012-07-17. Retrieved 2013-01-19.
External links[edit]
Burda Fashion Magazine 2020
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aenne Burda. |
Burda Fashion Magazine Subscription
- Hubert-Burda-Media.de Hubert Burda Media company's website.
- BurdaFashion.com Burda Fashion (magazine) website.
- Aenne Burda – Publisher and Grande Dame of German fashion[permanent dead link]