Saturday, March 29, 2025

Inside T Magazine’s latest issue

Six very different family residences, from Sweden to Brazil.
T Magazine

March 29, 2025

The cover of T Magazine's March 30, 2025 issue, showing a room with painted walls and ceilings, a mint green dresser and a daybed with a blue checkered fabric. Text reads, "A Place to Call Home: Three very different family residences in Sweden, Italy and Brazil."
Mikael Olsson

INTERIORS

Article Image

Mikael Olsson

The Hand-Embellished Countryside Homes That Helped Define Scandinavian Style

The houses of two of Sweden's most influential artists and designers, Carl and Karin Larsson, came to shape the country's national identity — and now represent an aesthetic ideal.

By Nancy Hass and Mikael Olsson

A hall with a wooden ceiling, two wooden double doors, paintings on the wall and a sofa upholstered with a lime-green fabric.

Allegra Martin

He Fell in Love With a Venetian Palazzo. But Why Did It Seem So Familiar?

On the eve of leaving the city for good, an English art dealer found himself captivated by a 17th-century apartment.

By Nick Haramis

A view of a building, partly obscured by trees, with a pool in the foreground and two deck chairs beside it.

Anu Kumar

Home and Work

In the Rural Philippines, a House Unlike Anything Else on the Islands

An international dealer of objects and jewelry wanted to refurbish his family's faraway beach home — but only if he could do it his own way.

By Kurt Soller and Anu Kumar

A dining room space with a mismatching chairs, a table with teal legs and a yellow top, a vase and a candlestick. On the wall, an artwork showing a mirrored reclining figure.

Angela Hau

By Design

An Actor Wanted a Maximalist Home. He Got Something Else Entirely.

In Brandon Flynn and the writer Jordan Tannahill's 750-square-foot East Village apartment, a bold palette is filtered through a minimalist lens.

By Carly Olson and Angela Hau

A wood-walled room, with built-in shelves in the background, and an indoor stone fire pit with a large black vent above. In the foreground, a white sofa with a rolled cushion, a boat-shaped table with a rectangular slab on top, and two low armchairs with black leather seats.

Fabian Martinez

In Brazil, a Family Found a Way to Live Together — and Apart

A furniture designer and her adult children share a modern mountainside compound outside of São Paulo.

By Michael Snyder and Fabian Martinez

A room with tall windows, a brown leather chaise lounge with metal ball legs, a chair with an embroidered back and metal side tables with candles and flowers.

Yvan Moreau

On Architecture

The Designers Who Turned Their Apartment Into a Stage for Their Neighbors

Agathe Labaye and Florian Sumi's Paris home is a "big diorama."

By Kurt Soller and Yvan Moreau

PEOPLE, PLACES, THINGS

An oval plate with a pie, a heaping of mashed potatoes and greens on gravy.

David Chow

Food Matters

Is British Food Still a Joke?

In London, restaurants serving classic English cuisine are having a resurgence. (Yes, that means a lot of beige.)

By Alice Newell-Hanson

Five clowns sit on a stage with a tinsel background.

Will Sanders

notes on the culture

There's Always Room in the Clown Car

For centuries, clowns have mostly been men. A new group of talent is changing that.

By Michael Snyder

Larry Bell sits in a room surrounded by hundreds of guitars, in rows on the walls and on stands on the ground.

Tony Floyd

My Obsession

1 Man. 12 Strings. 300 Guitars.

The artist Larry Bell has amassed a vast collection of acoustic instruments, carefully stored in a climate-controlled room.

By Zoë Lescaze

A collage of Ziwe, Donald Glover and Richard Pryor against a blue background.

From left: Gary Gerard Hamilton/AP; Caitlin Ochs/Reuters; NBC/Photofest

Social Studies

Why Black Satire Is the Art Form for Our Absurd Age

Black American novelists, filmmakers and other writers are using comedy to reveal — and combat — our era's disturbing political realities.

By Adam Bradley

An ochre bag with paintings of flowers surrounded by plastic tubing.

Still life by Lewis Mirrett. Set design by Leilin Lopez-Toledo

First of Its Kind, Last of Its Kind

It's Not a Bag, It's a Baguette. (This Time With Extra Room.)

A taller version of Fendi's iconic accessory celebrates the Italian fashion house's 100-year anniversary.

By Lindsay Talbot

Qualeasha Wood sits on a stool in front of two tapestries.

Daniel Terna

T Introduces

Qualeasha Wood Is Making Digital Art IRL

The artist's tapestries, which incorporate distorted self-portraits and screenshots from the internet, feel both ephemeral and nostalgic.

By Nicole Acheampong

Three models, wearing black hats, white T-shirts, jeans and black formal shoes, stand in a living room space.

Photograph by Adama Jalloh. Styled by Patrick Welde

In Fashion

Jeans and a T-Shirt, But High Fashion

Casual hanging-out-at-home staples get a boost from bold accessories and pops of red.

By Adama Jalloh and Patrick Welde

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