CATEGORIES
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Living National Treasure
Cricket-bat maker
My Favourite Painting Xavier Bray
Le Petit Parc
In Fine Feather
Although most of us now swear by sleeping under a Continental duvet, a duck-feather-filled eiderdown is the height of bedtime luxury.
The Future's Bright
Period houses are being treated to a jauntier palette of colours
Angel Of Mercy
Caroline Bugler is intrigued by an exhibition that reveals the shadier side of women’s lives in Georgian England
The Price Of Perfection
Pippa Cuckson reveals the massive investment often required to match a musician with the stringed instrument they deserve.
No Rival For Maastricht?
The TEFAF New York Fall fair reports strong sales and Dutch flower power blooms anew
They're All Greek To Me
IN June 1969—I was at university and most of you were still unborn—I bought a bag of cyclamen corms in Woolworths.
Living National Treasure
Trombone maker
Old-Fashioned Modernist
Modigliani was a mass of contradictions
Fun On The Floor
The interiors visionary Kit Kemp has launched a collection of carpets.
Birds Of An Unusual Feather
The pelicans of St James’s Park might not be as famous as the ravens at the Tower but, as former diplomat Alistair Kerr reports, their tale is no less curious
To The Manor Born
What does the future hold for the English country squire? Adrian Leak finds out and gets to know some of history and literature’s most affable examples.
When a holiday isn't a holiday
IT is strongly rumoured in the neighbourhood that we have now entered a new year, and I need a holiday. A Highland Hogmanay calls for grit and grim determination. Toe to toe, you slug it out with the season until, inevitably, you keel over. Hogmanay always wins. You totter back to your corner with no idea whether it’s Christmas or Easter.
The Future Is Georgian
The chairman of the Georgian Group on why the 18th century was best.
In Praise Of The Revolving Revolution
A NATION of gardeners is bound to be eternally on the search for something more exciting in the view from the kitchen window.
Made In Britain
Janus Cooper, upholstered furniture maker
Where The Land Meets The Sea
North Norfolk’s skies and empty beaches blend seamlessly with bustle and crying seabirds
How To Make An Impression
The impressionist on Jeremy Corbyn, Michael Gove and why current politics are beyond satire.
Thinking Outside The Box
The actor on avoiding Shakespeare, being Siegfried’s brother and keeping working
Design Dilemmas
An interior design project presents a maze of head-scratching conundrums, from choices between plain and patterned fabrics to whether you really need a club fender. Arabella Youens tackles the 10 most challenging dilemmas
A Licence To Snoop
Two forthcoming events offer an opportunity to explore rooms designed by some of Europe’s most inspiring interior designers
Paradise Regained
Palácio Tangará, São Paulo
Upping His Game
The Holkham owner on learning to love shooting and hopes for the countryside post-Brexit
Hit Me With Your Best Shot
When it comes to bagging birds–whether it be grouse, pheasant, partridge, woodcock, snipe or duck–your choice of cartridge and load is key.
Still Lives with A Soul
Alison Cole previews the first major exhibition devoted entirely to portraits by the father of Modern art.
A Glorious Legacy Of Plants
Reinvigorated planting and a continuation of the spirit of the great age of the planthunters inspires George Plumptre on a visit to a famous Sussex garden
What Light Through Yonder Window Breaks?
Eleanor Doughty examines the tangible value of a room (or, indeed, house) with a view and how our love of open space taps into a need for privacy
My Favourite Painting George Carter
Lamer House, Hertfordshire by Humphry Repton
Guardians Of The Establishment
Handing a tarantula to The Duke of Cambridge or winching Macbeth into costume is all in a day’s work for people working at 10 of this country’s best-loved institutions. Emma Hughes meets them