UK Harper's Bazaar November 2025 : Jennifer Aniston by Emma Summerton | the Fashion Spot

UK Harper's Bazaar November 2025 : Jennifer Aniston by Emma Summerton

Zorka

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MORNING STAR
Photography:
Emma Summerton
Styling: Julia von Boehm
Hair: Chris McMillan
Make-up: Mary Phillips
Model/Celebrity: Jennifer Aniston


UK Harper's Bazaar Digital Edition
 
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@Zorka Please post the Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons interviews found in the back of the issue. Thank you.
 
My sincere apology for the broken image links, the OG post will be updated soon!
 
@Zorka Thank you so much for the Miuccia Prada and Raf Simons interviews.
 
Looking at the digital version, it seems to be 202 pages. Inside front cover campaign is Vuitton bags with Emma Stone. Apparently this issue also comes with the annual Art supplement, with a choice of four different covers (and a special one only available at PAD).

Jennifer Aniston is an unexpected cover choice for UK HB, and in the actual magazine, the yellow shots are more broken up by the normal white pages of the interview, so it's not as intense as scans suggest.

However, I'm currently reading her Vanity Fair interview, and I wonder how different this one is going to be.

Agata Pospieszynska is the backbone of UK Bazaar, her shoots may not make the headlines, but they offer quiet beauty and consistency, and a sense of realism that Vogue doesn't seem interested in upholding with its recent experimentation with fake editorial backgrounds.

The Travel section goes to Greece.
 
Agata Pospieszynska is the backbone of UK Bazaar, her shoots may not make the headlines, but they offer quiet beauty and consistency, and a sense of realism that Vogue doesn't seem interested in upholding with its recent experimentation with fake editorial backgrounds.
Yes, quiet beauty. I am in love with many of their recent fashion editorials.
 
Such an awkward and unflattering cover. Quite a missed opportunity because I'm always down for a Jennifer Aniston cover! I hate the yellow colouring, and the slightly questionable styling. The close-up portrait of Jennifer wearing the fluffy hat, or the one with the blazer, would've made for a better cover.
 
I have come to the conclusion, that the only way to understand the appeal of mediocre women like Jennifer Anniston, and Taylor Swift, is to be a mediocre white woman. 🤔
 
I "liked" the Jannifer Aniston cover story because I like seeing a new magazine and there are elements that I do like in the photography and styling of the photo shoot. However, the yellow tint of Aniston's photographs works for the inside images but it is a NO for the cover. Adding a yellow tint does not make it a convincing artsy cover for their "The Art Issue."
 
Looking at the digital version, it seems to be 202 pages. Inside front cover campaign is Vuitton bags with Emma Stone. Apparently this issue also comes with the annual Art supplement, with a choice of four different covers (and a special one only available at PAD).

Jennifer Aniston is an unexpected cover choice for UK HB, and in the actual magazine, the yellow shots are more broken up by the normal white pages of the interview, so it's not as intense as scans suggest.

However, I'm currently reading her Vanity Fair interview, and I wonder how different this one is going to be.

Agata Pospieszynska is the backbone of UK Bazaar, her shoots may not make the headlines, but they offer quiet beauty and consistency, and a sense of realism that Vogue doesn't seem interested in upholding with its recent experimentation with fake editorial backgrounds.

The Travel section goes to Greece.
I always look forward to your summary before I consider buying a physical copy! Thank you!!
 
These days, it can take a week or more for the actual print magazine to be delivered to me, so my comments are - more often than not - based on the digital version.

Recently, I went through my collection of UK Bazaars, which meant I was reading each issue from first page to last - and I get more of an education from UK Bazaar's content than I do from any current edition of Vogue. (The only other magazine I read that educates me more is World of Interiors.)

What I appreciate about the print edition is enjoying the details of the editorials in a better way than scans allow.

You'd think that would hold true of all magazines - that things look deeper on paper than they do on screen - but I don't find that Vogue emphasises a great experience in print, whereas UK Bazaar somehow has preserved a better quality of immersion, where it's rewarding to sit down and take your time looking at an editorial. Vogue feels more superficial and disposable, like print is an afterthought to digital.
 

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