Surrounded by his expansive library and exquisite objects, a collector whose aesthetic helped shape America’s idea of minimalism has built a maximalist nirvana.
Fringe-embellished sofas — often featuring over-the-top designs, plush cushions and decadent fabric — can cost up to $60,000.
Shoppers at Jason Saft’s annual sale mined a collection of 150,000 goods for discounted Eames chairs, vintage bookcases and tasteful trinkets.
The most thematically permissive fair in New York’s art schedule — where sofas compete with paintings and sculptures — brings up old questions about why we like objects.
Eleni Petaloti and Leonidas Trampoukis, the architects and founders of the design studio Objects of Common Interest, show T Magazine around their renovated 1899 townhouse in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.
When a couple found a classic Haussmannian apartment, they chose an architect who’d give it a pared-back feel.
The Utah-based interior designer looks for inspiration everywhere, including the side of the road in the desert.
Homeowners and designers have found ways to blend accessibility and aesthetics.
Plus: a new book from Chantal Joffe and Olivia Laing, satin flats for holiday parties and more recommendations from T Magazine.
In contrast to the Indian city’s scores of residential towers, its best buildings are lower to the ground — and a flamboyant reflection of its multiculturalism.
Looking for a place they could enjoy their passion for fishing, a couple found much more: two cabins on 14 acres of land.
Once a mainstay of the Gilded Age, the grand banquet hall lost its luster with high society. But you can still find one if you look in the right places.
The designer Vasilis Marmatakis has created posters for the director’s films that are often as enigmatic as the movies themselves.
These variegated, collaged-looking nests — fetching up to $250 each — are a recent fixation in interior design.
Visitors lined up for hours outside an architect’s Minetta Lane mansion to get an up-close look at a decade-long restoration.
Jamie Lenore McKillop turned her bathroom into a sanctuary with ceramic blue tiles, a refinished vanity and a tray table made for bathtub movie watching.
In London, an interior designer helps a director of Hollywood action films make his house a cheeky, ever-evolving statement on international authoritarianism.
Known for her roles in film, the actress built a second act off-screen, turning the homes she renovated into another stage.
Two Greek-born architects transformed an 1899 building into a light-filled home designed for play.
The architects and founders of the design studio Objects of Common Interest renovated an 1899 townhouse in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, even adding a modular slide for their two children.
The myriad styles and materials used for tile can make a space, not just bathrooms and kitchens, shine in unexpected ways.
Dirty pastel colors are seemingly everywhere, in the luxury homes of skin care gurus, designers and even Prada’s runway show.
D.I.Y. influencers indulge our most ambitious housing fantasies — and cash in on them.
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.