“This is not millennial pink. The energy behind it is alive.”
The architect Winka Dubbeldam’s renovation of a nondescript 800-square-foot building resulted in a minimalist house with a maximalist sense of drama.
Plus: new French hotels, eel bento boxes in Long Island City and more recommendations from T Magazine.
The two designers never planned to leave Brooklyn. But upstate New York beckoned.
The costume designer of “Lady in the Lake” and a stylist of looks for Beyoncé’s “Cowboy Carter” understands the value of jewelry people wear every day.
A design duo transformed part of a historic building into a home that foregrounds the city’s splendor.
Plus: a Miami riverfront restaurant, cashmere blankets and more recommendations from T Magazine.
Krysta Rodriguez has found an avid audience for her new side business: creating dramatic interiors.
You don’t have to spend a lot to remake your kitchen. Instead, try these six D.I.Y. hacks.
A look behind the scenes at the illumination of the pieces on display. The so-called lampers strike a delicate balance between accentuating the art and protecting it from the effects of light.
Long overlooked as throwback novelties, spinning trays are making a comeback.
The designer Rolly Robínson gathered their close friends and collaborators to celebrate their new collection of jungle-themed pieces.
The fire-resistant house she built in Napa, Calif., with the insurance money was “so different — and I like different.”
It starts in your own backyard (or the tiny container garden on your balcony): “You can put a single bloom in a flower vase, and that is often enough.”
Some interior designers decorate their adult apartments to be reminded of the hometowns where they grew up.
As climate change brings hotter summers, AC manufacturers are positioning sleek window units as lifestyle accessories. Some of them are less effective than they are stylish.
Co-op rules meant they couldn’t add a second bedroom, so they came up with an elegant workaround.
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.