Campaign India Team
Aug 19, 2010

Spenta Multimedia launches Adorn magazine

Spenta Multimedia has launched Adorn, a luxury jewellery magazine. The bi-monthly magazine will feature product research and lifestyle reporting. 

Spenta Multimedia launches Adorn magazine

Spenta Multimedia has launched Adorn, a luxury jewellery magazine. The bi-monthly magazine will feature product research and lifestyle reporting. 

Commenting on the launch of Adorn, Maneck Davar, proprietor, Spenta Media, said, “India has a hoary tradition of jewellery and gemstones, being the home of the famed Kohinoor. It's maharajas and royalty were renowned for their collection of jewellery, and international jewellers made pilgrimages to the courts of Indian royalty. It is a travesty that with such a history of the finest in craftsmanship, India did not have a publication to continuously chronicle and record its jewellery design capabilities. Adorn seeks to rectify this lacuna.” 

Adorn will be edited, designed and produced by the same team that brings out Solitaire International, a magazine made for the Gem & Jewellery Export Promotion Council.

 

Source:
Campaign India

Related Articles

Just Published

4 hours ago

Apple dominates Brand Finance’s 2025 report

The report shows NVIDIA’s surge, and how Indian IT firms are shaping the AI-first future.

4 hours ago

Hitting INR 2,500 crores in FY23, Indian PR ...

90% of corporate communicators see the value shifting to business impact over media exposures, leading to PR budgets growing to 15.7% of marketing spends.

5 hours ago

Augmented reality: Merging imagination with retail ...

Great Lakes Institute of Management's research chairperson explains how the tech is revolutionising marketing with immersive experiences, blending sensory thrills and efficiency to reshape consumer behaviour and brand loyalty.

5 hours ago

The great corporate pretence is finally over

From Meta's masculinity pivot to the mass corporate retreat from DEI, flexibility, and parity commitments, 2025 is exposing the friction between corporate values and valuations, revealing what happens when trust is deemed to have outlived its market worth.