American Designers, Dreaming in Ice
A Manhattan send-off was held for Dennis Rolland and Andre Landeros Michel, who will be creating rooms for a seasonal hotel in Swedish Lapland in which everything is constructed of ice.
A Manhattan send-off was held for Dennis Rolland and Andre Landeros Michel, who will be creating rooms for a seasonal hotel in Swedish Lapland in which everything is constructed of ice.
Konstantin Grcic wants you to think about the “products of our times.”
The designer makes high-spirited fashion — but that’s nothing compared to her exuberant family life.
Design for all ages.
For Faye Toogood, September’s London Design Festival was a coming-out party of sorts. After spending nearly a decade styling for the British magazine The World of Interiors and developing her signature raw-meets-refined look, she started quietly building her own full-service creative studio in 2008, remaining under the radar despite redesigning Dover Street Market’s shoe department and creating fanciful window displays for Liberty. But following two buzzed-about installations that she curated a…
There isn’t much demand for minimalist design at my house. My 7-year-old twins have never seen a white surface they didn’t think could use a little color. (Sol LeWitt, because he got to draw on walls, is already the boys’ favorite artist.) As for furniture, none of those spare, Modernist chairs, like Karim Rashid’s Oh or even Gerrit Rietveld’s Zig-Zag, will do. Their favorite place to sit is anywhere on Daddy, and that they have explained just a bit too enthusiastically is because Daddy is sq…
The furniture designer Jason Miller rented and renovated a Brooklyn one-bedroom on a $5,000 budget, drawing inspiration from the polyester and plastic of 1970s design.
Two lines of attractive young white-jacketed waiters stood MGM-ready at the 10th annual National Design Awards gala, held in New York last week.
Most New York City apartment buildings are a stack of identical boxes, but three apartments in a Brooklyn high-rise show how radically different places can be inside.
A client and her designer trade ideas (and barbs) en route to a happy ending on a tight budget.
The cinematographer Claudio Miranda’s dark, awkward hillside home in Los Angeles was transformed into an open space filled with light.
From Mayr & More health spa, deep in Austria, the British interior designer extraordinaire and irrepressible party giver and -goer Nicholas Haslam explained his whereabouts: “Well, my dear, I needed to shape up!” Haslam, 70, was there to prepare for the November release of his memoir, “Redeeming Features” (Knopf). The book is set on a planet akin to earth but peopled only with the famous and the fabulous. And so he paints watercolors for Princess Michael of Kent, gives a party for the Rol…