The Indian edition of Cosmopolitan uses size as a means to grab attention. |
Size does matter, after all. So thinks Cosmopolitan, the youth lifestyle magazine, which has chosen to ring in its tenth anniversary in India with quite a bang. |
|
So you have a ravishing Sushmita Sen in all her bronze glory splashed across the cover of an outsized "" literally "" issue of Cosmopolitan. |
|
The decision to "go big", evidently, is being marked with much fanfare. "It's a moment of celebration, as it's a special landmark year for all of us," enthuses Mala Sekhri, publishing director, "So we thought of creating a double impact for readers as well as advertisers." |
|
Double impact? At the rate at which the magazine has been disappearing from news-stands, Sekhri has reason to be doubly pleased. "All the pages look brilliant," feels Sekhri. |
|
Advertisers, no doubt, are more than just a little pleased to get so much extra space for lifesize face shots and the like, known to work especially well for beauty and eyecare products. |
|
The visual impact aside, the large and bulky magazine is nevertheless quite unwieldy for a reader to browse through without the support of a table. |
|
While Sekhri agrees that the issue could be a trifle cumbersome for some, she claims it was an experiment worth doing. "After all, even magazines like She, W or the UK Cosmopolitan are all bigger in size," she points out. |
|
So, is the magazine's newfound size devotion here to stay? |
|
The publisher is unwilling to spill the beans. "All I can say for now is that February's will not be a tall issue. I can't reveal anything about the other issues," she responds. But she does reveal this: the reader is in for plenty of other surprises. |
|
|
|