This archive contains no nudity.

The collection focuses on the decades (60s and 70s) when there was strictly no nudity in the publication. All pages safe for all ages.

Text logo reading 'SCOPE THE ARCHIVE' in white on a black background.

Welcome to the SCOPE Archive

We believe we have the largest collection of original SCOPE Magazines in the world. (That we know of.)

The majority of the collection focuses on incredibly rare and hard to find editions from the 60’s and 70’s.

An important record of how power, race, gender, and privilege were normalised.

We have featured a small selection of the collection here and intend to digitise more as we have the resources.

Digitising fragile print culture is expensive, your support will help us keep it alive.

Access is free. Preservation isn’t. All donations go to fund scanning, colour correction, hosting and archival storage.
Your help means we can upload more articles and share more issues with you.

3% Cover the Fee
A magazine titled 'SCOPE' featuring a woman in a pink swimsuit on the cover, with an articel on Harry oppenheimer, Anton Rupert as well other prominent South African men of power from business and politics.

South African Oligarchs
Harry Oppenheimer and Anton Rupert

Featured Article

First published February 10 1967, Vol 2. No 3.

A double-page spread from a vintage magazine with multiple black-and-white photographs of men in suits and various articles about them, including one titled 'ANTON RUPERT SEES TIES AS WORKS OF ART.'

“No one remembers what kind of tie Mr. Anton Rupert wore when he was a school master but since he became the world’s top tobacco tycoon, as well as South Africa’s most distinguished patron of the arts, Mr Rupert has gone after neckties with the enthusiasm of a butterfly catcher”.

“ Some of his genius for packaging his products has gone into a study of the necktie as a work of art. He is very particular about design and is not afraid of colour - in the right combination and blends. He usually buys his ties in Italy from world-renowned cravateurs like Ibbas, Runci, Angelo and Brioni, but his favourite tie artist is said to be Emilie Pucci. And there is also the “Rupert tie”, characterised as “conservative but distinctive.” People who get “Rupert ties” as presents include eminent artists, writers and jurists and, of course, employees, in all his far flung enterprises. before he took off for his Christmas sojourn at Hermanus, Mr. Rupert made the rounds of his Headquarters at Stellenbosch with a box of ties from which his associates were invited to take their pick.”

A subscription form printed on a beige paper for 'SCOPE,' a publication, from February 10, 1967, offering regular mailing service with pricing details for different regions.