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The New York Times Style Magazine

Highlights

  1. From a Celebrated Chef, a New Line of Home Goods

    Clare de Boer and her husband, Luke Sherwin, have launched Roseland, a company selling furniture inspired by early American design.

     By

    Luke Sherwin and Clare de Boer, the co-founders of the furniture company Roseland, with their newly launched fire tools at Stissing House, the restaurant de Boer runs in Pine Plains, N.Y.
    CreditJutharat Pinyodoonyachet
    On the Verge
  2. Philippe Starck on Five Things He Wishes He’d Made

    The designer and architect wants us to consume less and find inspiration in products that actually change lives.

     

    Credit
  3. A New Farm-to-Table Restaurant in Upstate New York

    Plus: an Australian surf hotel, rubber sculptures and more recommendations from T Magazine.

     By

    Left: the bar at Restaurant Manor Rock is made of red oak trees from the owners’ farm. Right: carnaroli rice, mushrooms and egg yolks.
    CreditLucia Bell-Epstein
    The T List
  4. How to Hand-Wash All Your Clothes

    Even the most delicate fabrics can often be treated at home, rather than dry-cleaned, and it doesn’t have to be a hassle.

     By

    CreditIllustration by Richard Pedaline. Animation by Jonathan Eden
  5. Unique Engagement Gift Ideas to Celebrate Your Friends

    Painterly blankets, bespoke jewelry and more gift recommendations from T Magazine.

     By

    Clockwise from left: Prunted Beaker II, $160, prounisjewelry.com; Maison Balzac Every Cocktail Set, currently on sale for $380, comingsoonnewyork.com; Pièce No.634, $375, verredonge.com; Astrological Lowball Glasses, $25 per glass, sprezznyc.com.
    CreditCourtesy of the brands
    The T List

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T's Oct. 20 Greats Issue

More in T's Oct. 20 Greats Issue ›
  1. The Greats

    T celebrates four talents across music, art and fashion who, through patience and perseverance, have transformed the culture.

     

    Credit
  2. Why So Many Chefs Don’t Want Restaurants Anymore

    Some of America’s most lauded cooks have stepped away from the lunch-and-dinner grind.

     By Frank Bruni and

    Here and below, classic restaurant dishes — a cheeseburger and fries — branded with words representing the challenges that American chefs consider when deciding whether to open their own spots today.
    CreditPhotograph by Mari Maeda and Yuji Oboshi. Set design by Victoria Petro-Conroy
  3. A Midcentury Turin Home Gets a Careful Update

    What do you do to an apartment in a building designed by Ada Bursi, one of Italy’s first female architects? Add color and texture, but not so much as to distract from its history.

     By Laura May Todd and

    In the living room of a Turin apartment renovated by the Italian firm Marcante-Testa, custom lighting hangs over a B&B Italia Naviglio sofa covered in Sahco fabric and coffee tables by &Tradition.
    CreditDanilo Scarpati. Artwork on wall: © Mauro Reggiani
  4. Who Gets to Be a Daddy?

    The best compliment a man — gay or straight, old or … not so old — can receive is to enter the pantheon of daddies.

     By

    To accompany this essay, the queer New York-based artist Billy Sullivan created a trio of pastel works exclusively for T based on images of Oscar Isaac, Colman Domingo and Morgan Spector, three actors who’ve recently defined and challenged the daddy discourse. “There’s something sexual and vulnerable in these men that I see and wanted to translate,” Sullivan says. “The mark making for me is about energy.” Above: “Oscar” (2024).
    CreditCourtesy of Billy Sullivan. Photo: Olivia DiVecchia. Source photo: Erik Tanner
  5. Some of America’s Best Art Is in the Yard

    For people who have historically been excluded by museums and galleries, their own properties have became a source of inspiration.

     By Rachel Corbett and

    A sculpture by Tyree Guyton on Heidelberg Street in Detroit, where the artist grew up.
    CreditPhoto by Nicholas Calcott. Photo assistant: Ece Yavuz. Artwork: Tyree Guyton, “Noah’s Ark,” 1993/2017

T 25

More in T 25 ›
  1. The 25 Men’s Fashion Collections That Changed the Way We Dress

    A group of experts — designers, editors and a street-style photographer — debate which clothes truly changed men’s wear.

     By Nick HaramisRose CourteauJameson MontgomeryEmilia PetrarcaJessica Testa and

    CreditFrom left: Firstview; Richard Young/Shutterstock; Firstview
  2. The 25 Photos That Defined the Modern Age

    A group of experts met to discuss the images that have best captured — and changed — the world since 1955.

     By M.H. MillerBrendan EmbserEmmanuel Iduma and

    Credit© The Gordon Parks Foundation
  3. The 25 Essential Pasta Dishes to Eat in Italy

    Two chefs, one cookbook author, a culinary historian and a food writer made a list of the country’s most delicious meals, from carbonara in Rome to ravioli in Campania.

     By Deborah DunnVicky BennisonMarianna CeriniRobyn EckhardtLaurel EvansKristina GillAndrew Sean GreerLee MarshallElizabeth MinchilliMarina O’LoughlinKatie ParlaRachel RoddyEric SylversLaura May Todd and

    CreditEnea Arienti
    1. The 25 Most Defining Pieces of Furniture From the Last 100 Years

      Three designers, a museum curator, an artist and a design-savvy actress convened at The New York Times to make a list of the most enduring and significant objects for living.

       By Nick HaramisMax BerlingerRose CourteauKate GuadagninoMax Lakin and

      CreditClockwise, from top left: Valentin Jeck; courtesy of Bukowskis; courtesy of Zanotta SpA - Italy; Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh/Art Resource, NY © ARS, NY; Ellen McDermott © Smithsonian Institution; Herman Miller Archives; Vitra
    2. The 25 Essential Dishes to Eat in Mexico City

      We asked five chefs and other food-obsessed locals to debate the most memorable plates (and snacks and beverages) in the capital.

       By Deborah DunnCristina AlonsoDudley AlthausMariana CamachoLydia CareyLiliana López SorzanoMichael SnyderLaura TillmanJorge Valencia and

      CreditMariano Fernandez

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  8. On the Verge

    The French Singer Who Won Over Iggy Pop

    Zaho de Sagazan went viral for her performances at the Cannes Film Festival and the Paris Olympics. Next, she’s coming to America.

    By Lindsey Tramuta

     
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