If Florence is the Renaissance jewel of Tuscany, Siena is its medieval soul. A city of terracotta brick and Gothic spires, winding alleys and sudden piazzas, Siena seems suspended in time, as if the 14th century never ended. Its streets breathe with ritual and rivalry, its architecture glows with harmony, and its traditions — mostContinue reading “Siena: A Medieval Masterpiece in the Heart of Tuscany”
Author Archives: My World of Interiors
Valentino Garavani (1932–2026)
Italian Couturier and Founder of the House of Valentino Valentino Clemente Ludovico Garavani, the Italian fashion designer known globally as Valentino, died on 19 January 2026 in Rome at the age of 93. He passed away peacefully at his home, surrounded by those close to him. Born on 11 May 1932 in Voghera, Italy, ValentinoContinue reading “Valentino Garavani (1932–2026)”
Affordable Style: Masserias and Guesthouses of Puglia
At the heel of Italy’s boot, Puglia is a region of whitewashed towns, olive groves that stretch to the horizon, and seas the color of sapphire. Known for its dramatic coastline and baroque cities, it has in recent years become a design-forward destination — yet much of its charm remains in rustic guesthouses and masserie:Continue reading “Affordable Style: Masserias and Guesthouses of Puglia”
Sister Parish: The First Lady of American Interior Design
In the story of American interiors, Sister Parish (1910–1994) holds a singular place. She was the decorator who brought comfort and informality back into the home, championing chintz and patchwork at a time when grand houses risked becoming stiff museums. As co-founder of Parish-Hadley Associates, she helped shape the look of the Kennedy White HouseContinue reading “Sister Parish: The First Lady of American Interior Design”
Man Ray: The Alchemist of the Lens
No artist embodied the restless experimentation of the twentieth century quite like Man Ray (1890–1976). Painter, photographer, filmmaker, and Surrealist provocateur, he refused categories, moving fluidly between avant-garde circles in New York, Paris, and Hollywood. His work transformed the camera from a tool of documentation into an instrument of imagination — a device capable ofContinue reading “Man Ray: The Alchemist of the Lens”
Post Ranch Inn: Where Earth Meets Sky in Big Sur
Perched on the cliffs of Big Sur, Post Ranch Inn is less a hotel than a meditation on landscape. Glass, redwood, and stone rise from the bluff as if grown from the earth itself, dissolving into the vast horizon of the Pacific. Here, luxury is defined not by opulence but by stillness, by the elementalContinue reading “Post Ranch Inn: Where Earth Meets Sky in Big Sur”
Marcello & Sophia: The Cinema of Chemistry
Few cinematic partnerships radiate as much charm, wit, and sensual electricity as Marcello Mastroianni and Sophia Loren. For more than three decades, they embodied the vitality of Italian cinema, appearing together in 14 films that spanned neorealism, romantic comedy, and social satire. Their on-screen chemistry was as natural as it was carefully crafted, turning themContinue reading “Marcello & Sophia: The Cinema of Chemistry”
Patek Philippe: Time, Inheritance, Eternity
If there is a single name that embodies the art of watchmaking as both precision and poetry, it is Patek Philippe. Founded in Geneva in 1839, the maison has become more than a watchmaker: it is a custodian of time itself, a family-owned institution that defines what it means to pass on not merely anContinue reading “Patek Philippe: Time, Inheritance, Eternity”
Roxy Music: Glamour, Experiment, and the Art of Seduction
When Roxy Music appeared in 1972, they seemed less like a band than a cultural apparition. Emerging from Britain’s art school ferment, they fused glam rock’s theatricality with avant-garde experimentation, crafting a vision of music as both spectacle and intellectual provocation. Bryan Ferry, the band’s frontman, did not simply sing—he crooned with a studied detachment,Continue reading “Roxy Music: Glamour, Experiment, and the Art of Seduction”
Editor’s Letter – January 2026
I began the year on an unusually peaceful note, and without any discernible New Year’s resolutions. For once, I didn’t feel the need to reinvent myself in any way. I was already on the right path: I gave up smoking in 2024, wrote a novel and lost weight in 2025 , and it felt wiserContinue reading “Editor’s Letter – January 2026”
