The swimming pool is more than a reservoir of water: it is an architectural statement, a cultural symbol, and a mirror of shifting ideals of leisure, health, and luxury. Its evolution—from ancient communal baths to mid-century suburban icons, from Riviera resorts to infinity-edge marvels—charts the trajectory of modern life itself. To trace the history ofContinue reading “The Evolution of the Private Swimming Pool”
Author Archives: My World of Interiors
Roman Ristretto: The Ultimate Coffee Tour of the Eternal City
Rome is a city steeped in centuries-old rituals, and coffee is one of its most cherished. Whether you’re drawn to the heritage of storied cafés or the clarity of third-wave single origins, the capital offers a caffeinated journey unlike anywhere else. Icons of Tradition Caffè Sant’EustachioA Roman institution since 1938, famous for its wood-roasted beansContinue reading “Roman Ristretto: The Ultimate Coffee Tour of the Eternal City”
A History of Hôtel du Cap-Eden-Roc
Origins & Literary LegacyIn 1869, Villa Soleil was built by Hippolyte de Villemessant, founder of Le Figaro, as a haven for writers seeking peace and inspiration. By 1870, it opened, Napoleon III–style, as a retreat for figures like Jules Verne and Anatole France. By 1889, under Italian hotelier Antoine Sella, it became the Grand HôtelContinue reading “A History of Hôtel du Cap-Eden-Roc”
Grey Gardens House Tour
On the fiftieth anniversary of the Grey Gardens documentary (released September 27, 1975), we return to one of America’s most mythologized houses — not in ruin, but in radiant renewal. Immortalized by Albert and David Maysles, the storied halls of Grey Gardens once echoed with the eccentric lives of Big and Little Edie Beale, relativesContinue reading “Grey Gardens House Tour”
Grey Gardens at 50: The Eccentric American Dream
Today marks fifty years since the premiere of Grey Gardens on September 27, 1975 — the Maysles brothers’ documentary that unveiled the eccentric, crumbling world of Edith Bouvier Beale and her daughter “Little Edie.” Half a century later, the film remains as haunting and magnetic as ever: a portrait of decline and resilience that hasContinue reading “Grey Gardens at 50: The Eccentric American Dream”
Monthly Picks: Grey Gardens
Immortalized in the 1975 documentary and later restored to new glory, Grey Gardens remains one of America’s most iconic homes. To celebrate its enduring mystique, I’ve curated a special selection of books, films, and objects that capture the eccentric charm, style, and cultural significance of the Beales’ legendary estate. From evocative photo volumes to collectibleContinue reading “Monthly Picks: Grey Gardens”
Monthly Picks: Our Favourite Coffee Table Books
I’m excited to share a carefully curated collection of coffee table books that feel like art themselves—each one chosen for its beauty, narrative strength, and capacity to spark inspiration in your home. Whether you’re drawn to architecture, design history, travel memoirs, or visual storytelling, these titles are meant to turn heads, invite touch, and rewardContinue reading “Monthly Picks: Our Favourite Coffee Table Books”
Scott & Zelda: Legacy, Love, and the Geography of a Jazz Age
Few couples loom as mythically over the 20th century as F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald. They were beautiful, brilliant, and reckless — the gilded children of the Jazz Age, as dazzling as the parties they haunted, and as doomed as the decade they defined. To speak of them is to speak of literature, glamour, andContinue reading “Scott & Zelda: Legacy, Love, and the Geography of a Jazz Age”
Villa d’Este, Lake Como: Renaissance Origins to Modern Grandeur
Perched on the shores of Lake Como, Villa d’Este is more than a hotel—it is a living testament to Renaissance architecture interlaced with 19th-century luxury, sustained by impeccable interiors and a storied cultural legacy. It has also just been confirmed that it’s the best hotel in Italy, possibly the world. No small feat. Architectural HeritageContinue reading “Villa d’Este, Lake Como: Renaissance Origins to Modern Grandeur”
Villa Borghese: Rome’s Most Cultivated Escape
There are few places in Rome where history, art, and nature fuse with such elegance as the Villa Borghese and its surrounding park. More than a green lung in the heart of the city, this is a cultivated landscape — a place where cardinals once entertained, where artists found inspiration, and where today, Romans andContinue reading “Villa Borghese: Rome’s Most Cultivated Escape”
