Rhyme Kids Featured in Magie des Enfants — A Multi-Page Print Editorial
There is something different about print. A digital feature can be bookmarked, screenshotted, shared — but a print editorial exists in physical space. It is held. It is turned to. It sits on a coffee table or a studio shelf and waits to be discovered again.
Rhyme Kids appears across multiple pages of Magie des Enfants, Volume VII — a Dutch print and digital publication dedicated to children's fashion, photography, and editorial freedom.
The Feature
The editorial within Magie des Enfants Vol. VII is shot with the kind of quiet confidence that comes from a team who understands children's clothing at a deep level. Rhyme Kids appears across several spreads, credited as both dress and accessories, alongside brands including Sanne Hop, BeneBene, Repose AMS, and Beck.
The standout image is one that is difficult to forget: a girl in a yellow tulle Rhyme dress, a gold-embellished printed headscarf draped over her head and shoulders, standing against a white studio backdrop. The silhouette is both structured and dreamlike. It is the image of a child who understands exactly the power of what she is wearing.
About Magie des Enfants
Magie des Enfants — which translates from French as Children's Magic — is a Dutch publication dedicated to Kids, Photography, Editorial, Fashion, and Freedom. It publishes across both print and digital formats, and its editorial team brings the same rigour and aesthetic vision to children's fashion that the finest European adult publications bring to theirs.
A multi-page feature in a print publication is a different kind of recognition from a digital editorial. It is a commitment. Pages are limited. Space is considered. Being given multiple spreads within a single volume is a meaningful statement about how the editorial team sees the value of what Rhyme Kids offers.
Part of a Larger Story
The Magie des Enfants feature is one of more than eleven features Rhyme Kids has received across five international publications in the past year — from Milk Magazine Paris to Scimparello Magazine to Junior Style. Together, they tell a story about a brand that the world's most discerning children's fashion editors are paying close attention to.