Inside our latest issue
There’s no one way to make a house feel like a home.
T Magazine
March 28, 2026
Henry Bourne; Luis Alberto Rodriguez

DESIGN & INTERIORS

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Henry Bourne

A Home That Became Lovelier the More It Fell Apart

The ravages of time have only increased the appeal of one family’s art-filled manor in the English countryside.

By Aimee Farrell and Henry Bourne

An open-plan room with rows of paintings against one wall and an orange sofa facing a green chair.

Inger Marie Grini

In Studio

In Oslo, a Brutalist Villa Where Artists Come to Play

Ida Ekblad has transformed a concrete fortress into an experimental space for herself, and for others.

By Aimee Farrell and Inger Marie Grini

An expansive living room with intricate molding, an arched window and a tapestry hanging from the wall.

Christopher Sturman

A New York Townhouse Filled With Big Ideas

The overhaul of this seven-story home provided a husband-and-wife design duo with plenty of space to express their old-meets-new aesthetic.

By Alexa Brazilian and Christopher Sturman

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Ricardo Labougle

On a Majorcan Estate, a Collage Made Over Hundreds of Summer Holidays

A descendant of one of the island’s oldest families safeguards the history of her 18th-century home — which includes a sprawling feat of decoupage.

By Zoey Poll and Ricardo Labougle

A living room with wooden floorboards and ceiling, skirted sofas and chairs and a long wooden table through the center.

Juliana Sohn

By Design

An Upstate Home Where Japanese Handicraft Meets ‘British Whimsy’

A film producer invited artists and friends to design his house with him, each adding ideas of their own.

By Jason Chen and Juliana Sohn

ART & CULTURE

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From left: Emma McIntyre/Getty Images; Jamie McCarthy

Steve Carell Takes the Mel Brooks Questionnaire

The comedy legend devised a personality test for us. Our latest respondent: the star and an executive producer of the new series “Rooster.”

Meg Webster sits on a chair in a brick-walled gallery space. Behind her, a sculpture made of branches arranged into a spiral.

Emiliano Granado

Life in Pictures

Why One Artist Routinely Destroys Her Sculptures

Meg Webster revels in impermanence. Here, her story in five works.

By Zoë Lescaze

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Jennifer Livingston

Portfolio

New Yorkers, Have You Found Your Microscene?

A sampling of the city’s creative cohorts and the places where they gather, from the Tompkins Square Park monkey bars to a hair salon that doubles as an art gallery.

By Kate Guadagnino, Nick Haramis and Jennifer Livingston

Megumi Yuasa sits on a stool in front of a pink background in a garden. Next to him are six sculptures.

Luisa Dörr

T Introduces

An Artist’s Six-Decade-Long Love Affair With Clay

At 87, the sculptor and ceramist Megumi Yuasa is having his first solo exhibition in the U.S.

By Rose Courteau and Luisa Dörr

FASHION

A model wearing a teal hat and elbow-length gloves, a lilac top and right tights, rests her chin on her hand, which is draped over the back of a chair.

Photograph by Luis Alberto Rodriguez. Styled by Raphael Hirsch

Color-Saturated Clothes for Spring

With bold and bright hues, this season’s styles are designed to make an impact.

By Luis Alberto Rodriguez and Raphael Hirsch

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Photograph by Olivier Kervern. Styled by Anatolli Smith

This Season, Preppy Fashion Takes a Trip to Paris

American classics — V-necks, rep ties, cable knits — get creative with undone styling and French flair.

By Olivier Kervern and Anatolli Smith

Five bags, in blue, green, lilac, yellow and orange, presented on a mound of sand.

Photograph by Mari Maeda-Oboshi and Yuji Oboshi. Set design by Theresa Rivera

Objects

For Spring, a Rainbow of Purses

From squishy to structured, a colorful bag is the season’s must-have accessory.

By Mari Maeda-Oboshi and Yuji Oboshi

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Enea Arienti

Rough Draft

When a Shoe Gets a Tattoo

A peek at the process of crafting a bespoke Berluti oxford.

By Laura Regensdorf

FOOD

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Natalie Black

People, Places, Things

How Jerk Became ‘a Culinary Language’

Plus: an extraterrestrial vase, Art Deco earrings and more from T’s cultural compendium.

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Photograph by Melody Melamed. Set design by Adrian Ababović

making it

It’s Not Quite Dinner or a Cocktail Party, but It’s All the Rage.

Why American chefs are embracing the French ritual of apéritif dînatoire.

By Alexa Brazilian

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Yuki Sugiura

The Kit

How Gin, Wax and Heat Guns Make Onscreen Meals Look Delicious

The ‘Hamnet’ food stylist Olivia Somary reveals the tools of her trade.

By Adrea Piazza and Yuki Sugiura

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