Yet another women’s magazine is moving away from print.

Condé Nast, the legacy publisher of glossy and aesthetically rich magazines like Vogue, Vanity Fair and The New Yorker, announced on Tuesday that it was ending regular print publication of Glamour.

Two moves foreshadowed the change. Last year, Condé Nast reduced Glamour’s frequency to 11 issues a year, from 12. And in January, the company installed a digital journalist, Samantha Barry, as the magazine’s new top editor.

Although the number of Glamour’s paid subscribers has remained stable over the last three years, at around 2.2 million, Ms. Barry said it was time for the publication to break away from the printed page.

“This is my plan, because it makes sense,” Ms. Barry, a former executive producer for social and emerging media at CNN Worldwide, said in an interview. “It’s where the audiences are, and it’s where our growth is. That monthly schedule, for a Glamour audience, doesn’t make sense anymore.”