The designer Shawn Henderson leans into simple greens and vintage lights for his home in Hillsdale, N.Y.
From a wood-paneled seaside cottage in Massachusetts to a grand Venetian chamber, these spaces are a host’s dream.
Fine Objects Society, a members’ club, doesn’t want to be dusty.
A textile designer, a chef and an artist share their tablescapes and their tips.
Natasha Durham, founder of a handbag company, wanted her architect to focus more on light and shapes than on practical matters, like the number of bathrooms.
In a region of France known for both sports and more social pursuits, an Austrian designer brought her signature austere elegance to a classic chateau.
A century of American kitchen design, from the dawn of electricity to the kitchen island.
Somerset House, a five-year-old company that just opened a 10,000-square-foot showroom in Queens, is an example of what happens when fashion meets furniture.
The architect Morris Adjmi made a steel stove and a fountain key elements of his outdoor space at his Fort Greene, Brooklyn, townhouse.
Customized drink stations are appearing all over the home, from the kitchen to the bedroom.
The Oval Office study has become a room for Trump merchandise.
Decades after their founders connected, Apple and Issey Miyake released a collection of phone pouches that have some people baffled. They hope it will inspire creativity.
In renovating his Sullivan County, N.Y., retreat — once a dilapidated boardinghouse — a stylist’s goal was to reveal rather than remake.
Stefan Beckman unpacks the tools of his trade, including a staple gun, a 1970s-style tape dispenser and a Pantone-esque color fan.
Kevin and Leigh Misso, owners of a design and construction company, built a home in Alabama inspired by their travels.
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.
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.