The fabric designer Raffaele Fabrizio found a way to mine the past — both his own and his country’s — by moving into a sprawling Italian villa and (for now, at least) refusing to renovate.
Category: tspringmensfashion25
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The Art World’s Next Big Thing: Tiny Paintings
Works the size of postcards and bathroom tiles are challenging the market’s appetite for grand scales.
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Fashion That Keeps Everything in Proportion
Thoughtful pairings of cool silks, crisp cottons and light wools bring balance to spring’s oversize silhouettes.
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Lace-Up Shoes That Feel Timeless
Inspired by classic designs, pared-down sneakers are spring’s most versatile accessories.
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PB&J Transcends the Lunchbox
Plus: a Nordic guesthouse, graphic prints on the runways and more from T’s cultural compendium.
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Can a Finnish Sauna Improve Society?
Contemporary sweat baths reflect the country’s architectural past — and propose a future in which simple, sustainable buildings can still be sublime.
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Classic Coats Get a Fresh Update
Pops of pink and yellow, and hints of mesh, give a playful edge to traditional tailored outerwear.
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Why Does Every Play Seem Political Now?
Theater about current events — both literally and abstractly — is changing the conversation between playwrights, directors and their audiences.
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What Do We Want From Political Theater?
Playwrights and directors wrestle with how a piece of art can galvanize its audience.
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How Bread Became the Star of Dessert
No longer just a pre-dinner offering, the staple is now showing up at the other end of the meal.
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On the Japanese Coast, a Carefully Restored Modernist Marvel
The revival of a midcentury home places the work of the unsung architect Junzo Yoshimura in a new context.
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Inside Jack Whitten’s Queens Studio
The space is a window into the mind of the pioneering artist, who saved nearly everything.
