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Danish Feminine Weekly

Femina:Danish Feminine The weekly magazine is the oldest weekly magazine in Denmark, founded by Aller in 1874; initially as a fashion magazine, it was rebranded as a women's magazine in 1952, positioned in the female group, its content covers food, interior design, health and beauty, psychology, culture and so on.

Femina Weekly is published in different editions in units and Sweden. In the second half of 2011, the Danish edition of Femina had a circulation of 54,117 copies. Different countries create different cultural atmospheres, but women's lives are connected wherever they are.

Denmark's Pershing Business Daily

BorSen: The Danish business daily BorSen It is an influential business newspaper in Denmark and Scandinavia, mainly covering domestic and worldwide business information, including investment, stock market, financing, currency, etc. The daily circulation is about 57,144 cents and has 158,000 readers.

BorSen Japan was founded in 1896 Founded in 1899 by businessman and editor Theodor Hans Carsten Grimm, it focused on business and stock exchange content, transforming from a full business newspaper press in 1970, and was acquired by the Swedish Bonnier Group in 1969.

Jyllands-Posten

The Jyllands-Posten (Danish: Jyllands-Posten) Denmark's leading newspaper. The newspaper supported the Conservative Party until 1938; from the 1920s to the 1930s, its reputation was swept away by its sympathy for fascism and its understanding of the dictatorship of Nazi Germany; in 1933, it even advocated the establishment of a dictatorship in Denmark; after 1938, it claimed to be an independent right-wing newspaper; after 1973, it became a liberal independent newspaper. The website is its official website, mainly providing information on news, politics, current affairs, sports, and special topics.

Blad|Danish Leaf Plant Magazine

"Blad" is a plant magazine from Denmark, which publishes a magazine every quarter. It has been released to the fifth issue. The feature of the magazine is to focus on the exploration of the minimalist design concept and its impact on creativity. Open each page, and the high-definition plant pictures printed in color make every A trace of texture is clear and full of artistic sense, leaving aside all environments or backgrounds, allowing people to appreciate each plant quietly.

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"BLAD" was co-founded by two university classmates, Jacobsen and Hotvedt Laursen, who both studied media. When making this magazine, I decided to abandon the boring and academic nature of traditional gardening magazines, and turn to urban organic life, targeting urban people aged 25 to 40. For most people, these plants cannot be named, and the lens magnifies their differences and beauty enough to be pleasing to the eye.

They invited some young local designers, photographers, artists, writers, and illustrators to treat plant life as an art form and discover some uncommon or forgotten plants. "We felt the need to get people interested in plants, which can be turned into some really poetic and sculptural art. "

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