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Word: nast (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

Died. Condé Nast, 68; of a heart attack ; in his Park Avenue penthouse apartment in Manhattan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Sep. 28, 1942 | 9/28/1942 | See Source »

...exquisite 30-room penthouse on Park Avenue death came last week to Condé Nast. He was 68; an amiable host; as publisher of Vogue, House & Garden, et al., a superlative technician of the publishing world. For a generation he was the man from whom millions of American women got most of their ideas, directly or indirectly, about the desirable American standard of living...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Cond | 9/28/1942 | See Source »

...index to the variety of his taste. There he entertained the same people for whom he published Vogue. There to his elaborate dinners, dances, cocktail parties, came socialites, Hollywoodites, Broadwayites, statesmen, royalty. The star of a Broadway opening was as thrilled by an after-theater party at Condé Nast's as she was by the first-night applause. The apartment which he himself planned to the last detail was so arranged he could entertain 100 cocktail guests on the roof, a dinner party of 50, another couple of hundred in the ballroom, all at the same time. Amidst...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Cond | 9/28/1942 | See Source »

...Nast, society was only the work of evenings. The daylight was for publishing, and this was hard work. In the area he created, and in which he was lord, Nast became as expert as an assayer. His primary task as a publisher was to choose editors who best knew how to choose-out of the flooding hundreds of fashion ideas, from ruffles to shoes to dinner-table glassware-the fashions which had that indefinable "smartness" which he could sense, almost by smell. Then he-and they-went to work on the presentation-to "bait the editorial pages," as he once...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Cond | 9/28/1942 | See Source »

Vogue ran far ahead of this chill and modest ambition. Throughout the '20s and '30s, in its pages Nast decided what made fashion-sense in the welter of Parisian, New York and Hollywood ideas, about everything from decor to dogs. The Dest-dressed women in all U.S. towns were Vogue subscribers; stores fought to listed as outlets for goods advertised in Vogue, and thus the Nast judgments set patterns far beyond Vogue's own cirulation of a few hundred thousand. To his own women-readers Nast brought the excitement of modern art, from Seurat to Modigliani...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Cond | 9/28/1942 | See Source »

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