Lamps in all shapes and sizes can be used to recast the feel of a room, brighten dark corners and illuminate your treasures.
We’re revisiting the best baths and washrooms T’s covered, from a stained-glass soaking “cathedral” to a birdcage shower topped with feathers.
Textile weavers, tassel-makers, lighting restorers, cabinet makers and muralists forged new traditions at the sumptuous Beaux-Arts museum.
Her L.A. Eyeworks boutique, which she opened with a friend and fellow optician, was a pioneer in turning ordinary frames into bold, artistic accessories.
Schooled in art history, she brought authority and a human perspective to her writing and editing for Architectural Digest, HG, The Times and other publications.
What Ricardo Scofidio really wanted to do in designing a park that transformed its Manhattan neighborhood.
Kristin Shockley, an event designer who specializes in maximalist décor, is determined to make the absolute most of your nuptials.
With limited resources and an uncertain future, a couple built a tiny home that can go wherever life takes them.
A furniture designer and her adult children share a modern mountainside compound outside of São Paulo.
It’s never just a place.
An international dealer of objects and jewelry wanted to refurbish his family’s faraway beach home — but only if he could do it his own way.
In Brandon Flynn and the writer Jordan Tannahill’s 750-square-foot East Village apartment, a bold palette is filtered through a minimalist lens.
Agathe Labaye and Florian Sumi’s Paris home is a “big diorama.”
On the eve of leaving the city for good, an English art dealer found himself captivated by a 17th-century apartment.
The houses of two of Sweden’s most influential artists and designers, Carl and Karin Larsson, came to shape the country’s national identity — and now represent an aesthetic ideal.
A great-great-great-granddaughter of the Swedish painter Carl Larsson leads a tour of the country house where the artist lived with his wife, Karin.
The jewelry designer Bea Bongiasca’s Milan studio is a celebration of color and creativity.
The jewelry designer shows off her Milan apartment, which she shares with her cats, Fat Momo and Ichigo.
A roundup of the best modular couches, starting at $1,650.
A family from California embraced the slopes of Park City, and built a house in tune with nature.
With its radical buildings by Eliel Saarinen and Alvar Aalto, the Finnish capital is one of Europe’s most fascinating, if lesser-sung, design capitals.
The interior designer searched close to home, in Paris and at an auction. Look for an easy upgrade, splurge on something unexpected, and bid on a one-of-a-kind object.
The actor reflected on what means most to her, as she gets ready to release an album of Willie Nelson covers.
Designed by the architect Carl Graffunder, a house built in 1964 is getting the love and respect it deserves.
A look at design-world events, products and people.
The fabric designer Raffaele Fabrizio found a way to mine the past — both his own and his country’s — by moving into a sprawling Italian villa and (for now, at least) refusing to renovate.
Brinda Dudhat, the founder of Morii Design in India, creates modern motifs supported by age-old techniques.
Plus: brightly patterned outdoor furniture, a hotel in the tropical forest of Costa Rica and more recommendations from T Magazine.
Joseph Walsh, an Irish designer, tries something new for the World Expo in Japan.
Sometimes, the art of making mirrors has little to do with reflection.
Women are giving the field a new dimension with narrative content, visually daring forms and social commentary, while also building community.
How artisans in a corner of the Pacific Northwest turned a rocky retreat into a permanent residence.
Designers can tuck storage into the furniture, behind the walls, along hallways and into awkward spaces.
A couple restored an abandoned farmstead as a rural haven where curious visitors can immerse themselves in the treasures of the island.
A Pennsylvania couple left tech jobs to devote their time to renovating and selling homes. This dream project, however, won’t be put back on the market.
A sampling of recent home goods from veteran craftspeople.
Once derided as symbols of a commodified work force, cubicles are making a comeback, and workers are personalizing them and posting photos on social media.
If your feed makes the corporate life look stylish, it’s just another evolution in the long history of the American workplace.
Before the pandemic, turning a house into a hub for big gatherings seemed like a good idea.
After struggling to respond to a crushing Covid caseload, many hospitals are remodeling so that when the next crisis comes, they’ll be better able to meet it.
Ben Watson is overseeing the merger of Herman Miller and Knoll, with the belief that good design means good business.