The Face Vol. 4 No. 19 - 1

The Face Vol. 4 No. 19

Ties that bind

£9.95

Fresh faces, FACE families, ties that bind, lots of dancing and Willy Chavarria's favourite people.

Launched by Nick Logan in London in 1980, The Face is the original, definitive style magazine.

From the beginning it was a cultural trailblazer, covering music, fashion, film, TV, society, politics and global current affairs.... ​​Read More

Fresh faces, FACE families, ties that bind, lots of dancing and Willy Chavarria's favourite people.

Launched by Nick Logan in London in 1980, The Face is the original, definitive style magazine.

From the beginning it was a cultural trailblazer, covering music, fashion, film, TV, society, politics and global current affairs. And it covered them with invention, innovation, wit and class – and not to mention with groundbreaking graphic design.

The gallery of cover stars is as eclectic as it is iconic: from Kate Moss to Alexander McQueen, New Order to The Stone Roses, Grace Jones to David Beckham, Beyoncé to Björk. The talent behind the stories was legendary, too, as the magazine worked with the best writers, photographers, stylists and designers in the world. The Face didn’t only report on the culture. It became the culture. For over 25 years, The Face was at the heart of British and international creativity.


The Face is a British music, fashion and culture monthly magazine originally published from 1980 to 2004, and relaunched in 2019. The Face was Britain’s first youth magazine to present ‘youth subject matter’ beyond music alone. A strong voice of urban identity in the age of Thatcher, it rapidly became an icon of ‘style culture’, the benchmark for the very latest trends in music, fashion, photography and film.

Softcover
Summer 2024
English
In Stock
The Face is a British music, fashion and culture monthly magazine originally published from 1980 to 2004, and relaunched in 2019. The Face was Britain’s first youth magazine to present ‘youth subject matter’ beyond music alone. A strong voice of urban identity in the age of Thatcher, it rapidly became an icon of ‘style culture’, the benchmark for the very latest trends in music, fashion, photography and film.