Skin Deep
Patricia Clarkson’s Beauty Routine
By BEE SHAPIRO
The actress takes her makeup cues from her mother, wearing red lipstick as her signature.
The season’s new topcoat isn’t beige in color or in spirit. It’s a longer, fuller boundary pusher.
A social media phenomenon tells the full story of instant web celebrity.
Mark Anthony Green, a writer and artist, on what he’s wearing now. Also, ankle boots in burgundy, stacked rings and more shopping news.
The actress takes her makeup cues from her mother, wearing red lipstick as her signature.
Nicole Kidman, Charlotte Gainsbourg and Chloë Sevigny were among the stars at a dinner at the Museum of Modern Art.
Kering, LVMH and Hermès have been in and out of court in recent years. It’s time for this fashion trend to end.
A gay TV character portrayed in a no-holds-barred way on “How to Get Away With Murder” is a draw at gay bars.
A number of scruff-chic stars are trying to revive this retro motif, but it carries serious baggage.
Blue in Green and the Real McCoy’s in SoHo pass the men’s wear tests.
Mr. Grande, an ex-captive on ‘Big Brother,’ returns to his Broadway roots.
Women (and some men) are going to bars to bring together two great American pastimes: crafts and drinking.
The luxury Italian men’s wear label Caruso will open its first store; a showroom marks down some of the coolest emerging brands and more shopping news.
At the magazine’s Women of the Year gala, the honorees come from fashion and policy, comedy and philanthropy.
Ms. von Furstenberg had an early fan in Chelsea Clinton.
A Finnish actress has a dazzling smile, thanks to a crystal on a tooth.
Play peekaboo with camisoles and bodysuits chic enough to want to show off.
Thieves lure older victims with charity solicitations or promises of merchandise and prizes, resulting in huge losses of money, trust and confidence.
In the era of laptops and Hulu, millennials’ viewing habits may signal the end of the communal living-room screen.
Jake Browne, the first pot critic for The Denver Post, is paid to smoke marijuana and then write about the high.
The brand’s second-largest store arrives on Fifth Avenue after a stop at Grand Central Terminal.
Dior sponsored the Guggenheim’s big fall gala, held in the museum’s landmark rotunda.
More and more millennials are shying away from physical encounters and supplanting them with virtual quasi relationships.
Love is not a product of waiting, of being patient, but is instead a rest stop, perhaps one of many, where we decide, for however long, to stay.
Questions about a girlfriend who keeps in touch, a deceased sibling, a father who tweaks his son, and a lent sweater that has gone missing.
On a night off, the actor Mr. Schwartzman finds himself in a familiar role.
Almost any action we take on social media is a time-stamped signpost that we were paying attention to at least some of our smartphone communication.
You think the “Homeland” character might be high maintenance? You have no idea.
Agostino Magni brings his elegant style to Carnegie Hill in Manhattan.
Dr. Gwen Korovin was known for being close to many of her celebrity clients. In the case of Joan Rivers, perhaps too close.
Ridgewood, Queens, is the new frontier for bohemians who are either priced out of Brooklyn or fed up with it.
Ms. Finley, whose “Written in Sand” pays tribute to those who died of AIDS, is taking a more solemn approach.
Smarter technology requires smarter humans to keep machines under control.
Jumpsuits you can wear to work; vintage corsetry finds its modern match; oh-so-comfortable, easy-to-pack shoes and aphoristic clutches.
Mr. Abloh’s line Off-White, a high-minded take on street wear, is gaining traction with a global collective of fans and retailers.
Compression tights are beginning to come into vogue among stylish women who sit on uncomfortably small airplane seats during long-haul travel.
Two reality shows prove that before you design clothes, you need to design a personality.
A lingerie exhibition, loungewear store opening and shopping opportunities around New York.
Tips for ladies who regret their sharply shorn pixie cuts as they endure the slow process back to longer hair.
At the annual CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund dinner, Paul Andrew, a shoemaker from Britain, is the big winner.
The Los Angeles County Museum of Art draws the A-listers, including Kim Kardashian and Amy Adams.
Every family seems to have one caregiver who has to look out for parents as they age; some also have out-of-state siblings who do not.
A growing contingent of urbanites have made Ubering (it’s as much a verb as “Googling”) an indispensable part of their day and especially their night life.
The parents’ visit to campus has become a hyper-organized extravaganza filled with big events and, often, big stress.
For the contemporary technocrat, the timepiece art-object has been replaced by an Everyman tool that sends a more politically palatable message: youth, fitness, fiscal prudence.
When it comes to dating, research shows, looks are all that matter, at least initially, something Tinder has taken full advantage of.
For the 148-year-old British company, known for its $1,700 oxfords, change has arrived in the form of the 32-year-old fashion designer Paula Gerbase.
As a new generation of men rises into positions of power — helping to relax standards for what constitutes executive style — beards and mustaches are becoming more common.
It seemed as if a kaleidoscope of colors had exploded on the runners participating in the five-borough New York City Marathon last Sunday.
A funeral mass for Oscar de la Renta, honors and costumes.
A handful of clothing companies were founded within the last year to cater to muscular athletes whose proportions fall outside the average body type.
Nicole Kidman in Roberto Cavalli, Faith Hill in Naeem Khan, and more at the Country Music Awards on Wednesday night.
The MSNBC host posted a photo of himself at a Connecticut polling place that quickly went viral on Twitter.
It’s in the bullet points: Shoes, bags, more mobile and social media, and a focus on the United States.
Explore keeping time with a device other than your smartphone.
The foundation for AIDS research recognized Mr. Ford on Wednesday in Los Angeles.
The designer lives and works in his building in Paris's Seventh Arrondissement.
The designer describes herself as "slowly invading" her office space.
There are few furnishings in the Lanvin designer’s office, but they all play a role in his work.
No desk, no computer, no art on the walls: For the designer Vera Wang, her minimalist office is her sanctuary.
The designer talks about what inspires him and what keeps him going.
The designer Diane von Furstenberg feels at her best behind her desk.
For the fashion designer Jason Wu, his office holds both inspiration and sentiment. And then there’s that cat.
The street fashion photographer Craig Arend of Altamira NYC took over our Instagram account for the spring 2015 fashion shows. Here are our highlights from Paris Fashion Week. Check out NYTimesFashion on Instagram for more.
Golden brogues with cutouts at Chanel, a cherry-shaped clutch at Undercover and more details from the spring 2015 shows.
Barbie-inspired bags at Moschino, ’70s style boots at Gucci and more details from the spring 2015 shows.
Fur slippers at Simone Rocha, ear-cuffs at Julien MacDonald and more details from the spring 2015 shows.
Military-inspired bags at Marc Jacobs, 3-D glasses at Rebecca Minkoff and more details from the spring 2015 shows.
The Jewish Museum’s new exhibition, “Beauty is Power,” explores the life and taste of the woman from a Polish shtetl who went on to radically alter the beauty industry.
During February and September 2013, the photographer Jennifer S. Altman followed a group of models as they walked the runway during New York Fashion Week. Here is where they are a year later.
In the West End of Glasgow, Blossom Mccuaig cites old movies and local vintage shops as her inspirations.