um im getting teen vogue for the first time.. is it a good magazine for 13 year old girls? it looks pretty sophisticated but i got this deal in the mail and it looks pretty cool.. i put the stuff im supposed to put in the envelope, but on the envelope, im confused.. how do they know where the mail came from? how do they know where to send it back to? it doesnt say my house number or anything.. i dont want to just mail it and not get anything back! so like.. is it supposed to be that way and theres some secret method how they know which thingy goes for your house or do i just write in a random spot my address? thanks.
and what types of styles are in teen vogue normally? and dont tell me to go on the site.. i did but... idk i just like peoples opinions better. is it true that they show really expensive clothes? cause im not that rich so i cant afford like 100 dollar pants all the time. and do they have things in there for black people too? like i dont want it to be those magazines that like.. no offense, but like when they show hairstyles they make it only for white people and i cant make my hair like that since im black, and my hair isnt permed.
IMPORTANT:
MY MAIN QUESTION IS THAT DO I HAVE TO WRITE MY ADDRESS ON THE ENVELOPE THEY GAVE ME? OR DOES IT HAVE SOME SPECIAL CODE ON THE LETTER SO THAT IT KNOWS IT CAME FROM MY HOUSE?
its the type of mail that says "business reply mail, first class.." and then like it says the location of teen vogue, and some thingy that says "no postage necessary if mailed in the united states". im also wondering if i need to put a stamp on it...................
Anyway, yes. Teen Vouge shows expensive things...but sadly I love looking at them and wishing I could have them...they had a pair of sunglass and they were $150 or up!! The the cheapest thing they had in one mag was a pair of $9 dollar sunglasses and they were so ugly. And there should be hair styles for black people...I don't normally buy the mag unless I have no other mags to look at.
Most of the time they ask for an address...hang on, I'm going to get one of the mailing things to look at it. Ok, on the thing that they haave in the mag, it does ask for you name, address, cit/state/zip, and all that. It has it on the back. And you don't need to put a stamp if you live in the USA
modelkate11 answered Wednesday June 27 2007, 10:35 am: it is a very sophisticated magazine. normally there are no little quizzes to see if you're in love or which guy you should date. its a high fashion magazine. they tell you how to make $1000 outfits into $150 outfits. they dont normally have hair tips unless its a prom issue. they do have make up tips and about 90% of the time they'll have tips for darker skinned girls. i'll admit when you said you were 13 i thought you were a little young for the magazine but if you like high fashion like gucci, luis vuiton and marc jacobs, and all the celebrity gossip then you'll like it. [ modelkate11's advice column | Ask modelkate11 A Question ]
ammo answered Wednesday June 27 2007, 9:56 am: Hi.
I can't really give you any details on the magazine itself since I don't read it (or know of it since I'm not in the USA) but you won't need a stamp on the envelope since it says no postage is necessary if it's being mailed within the USA. Also, the documents you had put into the envelope, doesn't any of them contain your name and address? As long as the paperwork on the inside has that information (at the least, your address) you should be okay and they'll know where to send the magazine out to. You can if you want, write your own address on the BACK of the envelope as well for safety (not sure it works the same there or not but if a letter is undelivered over here it generally gets sent back to 'if undelivered' address on the back. Personally I don't think you'll have this problem though so it should be okay. :] [ ammo's advice column | Ask ammo A Question ]
Attention: NOTHING on this site may be reproduced in any fashion whatsoever without explicit consent (in writing) of the owner of said material, unless otherwise stated on the page where the content originated. Search engines are free to index and cache our content. Users who post their account names or personal information in their questions have no expectation of privacy beyond that point for anything they disclose. Questions are otherwise considered anonymous to the general public.