Kelly Wearstler: The Queen of Californian Cool

For more than two decades, Kelly Wearstler has been rewriting the language of American interiors. Her aesthetic — maximal yet disciplined, glamorous yet grounded — has defined a generation of design. From boutique hotels to celebrity homes, furniture lines to Instagram feeds, Wearstler has built a career that is at once wildly eclectic and meticulouslyContinue reading “Kelly Wearstler: The Queen of Californian Cool”

Singles and the Soundtrack of the 1990s

Before Reality Bites defined Generation X in cinema, Cameron Crowe’s Singles (1992) caught the mood of a subculture just as it was cresting into the mainstream: grunge. Set in Seattle at the dawn of the decade, the film is less a tight narrative than an ensemble sketch, drifting between the apartments, cafés, and concert hallsContinue reading “Singles and the Soundtrack of the 1990s”

Reality Bites and the Birth of Generation X on Screen

When Reality Bites premiered in 1994, it was marketed as a romantic comedy about recent college graduates stumbling into adulthood. But in hindsight, it was more than that: it was the first Hollywood film to hold a mirror to Generation X, capturing both its cynicism and its yearning, its distrust of institutions and its cravingContinue reading “Reality Bites and the Birth of Generation X on Screen”

Light in Color: The History of Stained Glass

For over a thousand years, stained glass has transformed light into story. From the vast rose windows of Gothic cathedrals to the jewel-like panels of Art Nouveau townhouses, it is a medium that is both art and architecture, both sacred and secular. Its history is a chronicle of craftsmanship, theology, and design — a historyContinue reading “Light in Color: The History of Stained Glass”

Antal Szerb and the Melancholy of Central Europe

There are writers who seem to belong to their time, and then there are writers who hover above it, too cosmopolitan to be contained, too ironic to be enlisted, too subtle to be safe. Antal Szerb was one of the latter. Born in Budapest in 1901, he lived through the dislocations of the twentieth century’sContinue reading “Antal Szerb and the Melancholy of Central Europe”

Studio Peregalli Sartori: Weaving Memory into Modern Design

In a world where interiors are often reduced to sleek surfaces and fleeting trends, Studio Peregalli Sartori stands apart. Founded in Milan by Laura Sartori Rimini and Roberto Peregalli, the studio has become synonymous with rooms that feel timeless — layered, atmospheric, and charged with memory. Their work is not simply decoration but storytelling, whereContinue reading “Studio Peregalli Sartori: Weaving Memory into Modern Design”

Gaudí’s Barcelona: A City Shaped by Imagination

From the curves of Casa Batlló to the soaring spires of the Sagrada Família, Antoni Gaudí transformed Barcelona into a living laboratory of form, faith, and fantasy. His legacy is more than architecture: it is the very identity of a city, where Modernisme blooms like stone made fluid. A Visionary in Context Born in 1852Continue reading “Gaudí’s Barcelona: A City Shaped by Imagination”

Ralph Lauren: The Man Who Dressed the American Dream

From Bronx beginnings to Madison Avenue mansions, Ralph Lauren built more than a fashion house — he created a universe. His vision of America, stitched from prep schools, ranches, and penthouses, became a global language of aspiration. Decades on, his legacy continues to shape not just what we wear, but how we dream. Origins ofContinue reading “Ralph Lauren: The Man Who Dressed the American Dream”

Diane Arbus: The Mirror and the Mask

Few photographers have unsettled the boundaries of art, beauty, and truth as profoundly as Diane Arbus. Born in New York in 1923 into the Russek fur dynasty, she seemed destined for a life of privilege, yet she turned her lens away from society’s glittering surfaces. Instead, she sought out what others averted their gaze from:Continue reading “Diane Arbus: The Mirror and the Mask”

Daphne Guinness: Fashion’s Eternal Performance

There are fashion icons, and then there is Daphne Guinness: heiress, collector, singer, and self-styled chameleon who has turned her own life into a one-woman show. She exists at the intersection of haute couture and rock opera, at once muse and maker, wearing her legacy as easily as her Alexander McQueen armadillo boots. A LifeContinue reading “Daphne Guinness: Fashion’s Eternal Performance”