Petticoat (magazine)
Petticoat was a British weekly magazine for young women which was published from 1966 until 1975, in London by Fleetway/IPC, printed in 40-page issues by Eric Bemrose in Long Lane, Liverpool. Publication historyLaunched by Honey magazine founder Audrey Slaughter[1] at the height of the Swinging Sixties and subtitled "For the young and fancy free" on its original masthead, Petticoat responded to the emergence of a more liberal teenager and young woman.[2] From 9 September 1967, it absorbed the City Magazines publication Trend, renaming itself Petticoat/Trend until it dropped the latter name about a year later. By this time, its slogan had changed to 'The New Young Woman’. ContentThe magazine offered fiction, popular culture, fashion news featuring labels like Biba, Mary Quant, Foale & Tuffin[3] and Bus Stop, and advice on love, sex, healthy eating, hair, and make-up, with plenty of full-colour photographs and Pop style monochrome line illustrations and typography. Petticoat promoted the Mod fashion of 'Swinging London'.[4] ControversyFrom the early seventies, Petticoat's "agony aunt"[5] was Claire Rayner, whose advice on masturbation and promiscuity caused controversy,[6] and who responded:
Significant contributorsOther Petticoat contributors included Annie Nightingale, Maggie Goodman, Lynne Franks (supposedly the model for Edina, played by Jennifer Saunders, in the TV series Absolutely Fabulous),[8][9][10] Jane Ennis, Chris Ward (later editor of the Daily Express), Eve Pollard (who later edited the Sunday Mirror and the Sunday Express before launching Aura) and Janet Street-Porter[11][12] who was appointed editor in 1967 and who had close links to the designer Zandra Rhodes amongst others. DemiseWith the format of a cheaper supermarket tabloid, and as television continued making inroads into the magazine market, Petticoat's lifespan mirrored that of more stylish competitors of the time, including Biba and Nova magazines (which both folded in 1975): Petticoat was absorbed by Hi! on 17 May 1975, which in turn was merged with O.K. magazine on 10 July 1976.[13] References
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