The National Design Awards Win the Prize for Nonconformity
By JULIE LASKY
There was plenty of high-tech eye candy, but the main activity before dinner was still checking out everyone else’s clothes.
Deals on Fine Linens, Textiles And Lamps
There was plenty of high-tech eye candy, but the main activity before dinner was still checking out everyone else’s clothes.
The British company that sells natural stone has opened it’s showroom at the Decoration and Design Building on East 59th Street.
An artist prepares her house in New Orleans for its next adventure: the end of the world.
Actually, Doris Duke did. But her Mughal Suite, now on view, has about 1,001 delights.
To save money, stick with the bathroom’s original layout.
Organization tools for a world that is still far from paperless.
A professionally installed home theatre is a high-end amenity that can win over buyers.
Bill Henderson, founder of Pushcart press, on building a small stone “cathedral” on his property near Bar Harbor, Me.
From Workstead, a Brooklyn studio, campaign furniture that is easily taken apart and carried.
Williams-Sonoma returns to the town that inspired its namesake and offers cooking classes and an edible garden.
A flea-market find of 340 photographs of the cross-dressing men of Casa Susanna is to be auctioned this month.
From Sony, the 4K Ultra Short Throw Projector transforms a blank wall into a high-definition theatrical experience.
Waterworks, known for its luxury in bathroom fixtures, is opening its first kitchen showroom on Thursday, offering more than 200 new products.
Deals from Gracious Home, Kartell, Missoni Home and Nanimarquina.
This week’s properties include a home with cedar shakes in Minneapolis, an adobe in Santa Fe and a brick house in Virginia.
This week’s properties include houses in Hastings-On-Hudson and Lloyd Neck.
Inventory remains high on the island of St. John, more than half of which is covered by a national park, even though prices have dropped.
The blueprint for rebuilding the house followed the post-Sandy building codes in clever and thrifty ways.
A couple mixes conceptual pieces with a water-saving garden and a 75-year-old pine.
Forget the ghosts: The 1750 house had plenty to exorcise just in the messy kitchen grease and the plumbing.
The pair of apartments could have been combined, but they worked even better as their own separate worlds.
A forgotten space in a former schoolhouse leads to an urban dweller’s dream come true.
In the Hamptons, a home set in an “acoustical shadow” is spared nearby traffic noise.
The Queen West Art and Design District of Toronto occupies the sweet spot between scared off and priced out.
An ambitious developer sees a future for the Miami Design District that includes high-fashion stores and high-end restaurants.
Design shops and galleries enliven Philadelphia’s Old City, whose Colonial roots are just one part of the story.
An insider’s guide to what to eat, drink and do in New York, including a category on our favorite home furnishing stores, compiled by the editors and reporters in the Home section and T Magazine.