
On The Verge
A New Line Inspired by Dancehall and Handicraft
The designer Rachel Scott has honed her skills at brands in Milan and New York, but when it came to creating her own label, Diotima, she looked homeward to Jamaica.
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The designer Rachel Scott has honed her skills at brands in Milan and New York, but when it came to creating her own label, Diotima, she looked homeward to Jamaica.
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In T's 2021 Culture issue, we honor the relationships that helped us endure an impossible year.
A behind-the-scenes look at T’s 2021 Culture issue, an ode to friendship and a logistical feat, for which we followed ever-changing protocols in countries worldwide.
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Yayoi Kusama at the New York Botanical Garden, ethically sourced housewares from Mali — and more.
As the city’s sense of optimism grows, one author stops by her favorite Manhattan institutions, and orders a dish or two at each.
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The vegan, floral dish was among those that the chef, who’s been tinkering with the recipe for years, made for his quarantine pod.
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Calida Rawles talks about creating this portrait, which is by turns photo-realistic and impressionistic, and for her evokes a sense of peace.
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The author’s oeuvre has long been the subject of cinematic preoccupation, inspiring over 20 screen adaptations and counting. Here, a close read of four of the best and worst of them.
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With a little know-how, aspects of shinrin-yoku, the calming Japanese practice of spending time among trees, can be approximated indoors.
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On the grounds of his colorful Los Angeles home, Flamingo Estate, Richard Christiansen found both guidance and ingredients for his latest venture.
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Brioni’s Norbert Stumpfl has approached his family’s home with characteristic patience and attention to detail.
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Having long found inspiration in the kitchen, the designer shares a recipe for uni spaghetti that he perfected after a trip to Sardinia.
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Join the editors and writers of T Magazine as we read works of classic American literature.
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Set against the lush English countryside, the designer’s 17th-century home and its riotous plantings of magnificent blooms both defy and inspire his restrained elegance.
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Jojutla, Mexico, now home to an array of inventively reimagined public spaces, has become a paradigm for rural revitalization.
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Designed in the 1960s by the underrecognized talent Ward Bennett, this Modernist home remains a paragon of minimalism and grace.
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Marie-Louise Sciò bounces among her family’s three hotels — including the legendary Il Pellicano in Tuscany — but her own flat is a different sort of retreat.
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For Loren Daye, stripping a space back to its most essential elements is an aesthetic practice to live by.
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