
Anthony Cotsifas
Articles
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Nov 26, 2024 |
nytimes.com | Anthony Cotsifas |Martin Bourne
From top: Tiffany & Co. bracelet, price on request, (800) 843-3269; David Webb earrings, $36,500, davidwebb.com; Lugano necklace, price on request, (475) 304-4132; and David Yurman bracelet, $12,000, davidyurman.com. Credit... Photograph by Anthony Cotsifas. Styled by Martin Bourne. Jewelry editor: Angela Koh The season's most precious accessories come in bright colors, with plenty of sparkle and an abundance of gold.
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May 13, 2024 |
nytimes.com | Ligaya Mishan |Anthony Cotsifas
T's May 19 Travel issue is dedicated to pasta in Italy, diving deep into the culinary traditions, regional variations and complicated history of the country's national symbol. ON THE COUNTER sits a bucket of tomatoes just picked from a tumble of fields halfway up a mountain in southern Italy. Concetta D'Aniello hands me an apron and we begin. I follow her lead, breaking into each tomato with my thumb, the flesh giving way. The smell of minerals fills the kitchen.
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Sep 20, 2023 |
nytimes.com | Anthony Cotsifas
Gucci bag, $4,890, gucci.com; Chloé bag, $6,450, chloe.com; Chanel bag, $5,100, (800) 550-0005; and Balenciaga shoes, $875, balenciaga.com. Credit... Photograph by Anthony Cotsifas. Set design by Jocelyn Cabral Design ObjectsBags and shoes in cushy shearling, plush and faux fur. From top: Gucci bag, $4,890, gucci.com; Chloé bag, $6,450, chloe.com; Chanel bag, $5,100, (800) 550-0005; and Balenciaga shoes, $875, balenciaga.com. Credit... Photograph by Anthony Cotsifas.
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Sep 6, 2023 |
nytimes.com | Gisela Williams |Anthony Cotsifas
kershef, a traditional building material made of mud and salt. Credit... Anthony Cotsifas A designer and an environmentalist have created a retreat that surrenders to the desert. The entrance to Tamazid, the environmentalist Mounir Neamatalla's home in Egypt's Siwa Oasis, like the rest of the building, was constructed from kershef, a traditional building material made of mud and salt. Credit...
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May 10, 2023 |
nytimes.com | Anthony Cotsifas |Maggie Shipstead Photographs |Maggie Shipstead
WHEN I RETURNED my rental car at the airport in Calama, I’d driven 1,499 miles through the Atacama Desert, drawing a zigzag through Chile’s far north. The driest place on earth — vying with parts of Antarctica — the Atacama covers an area of 40,000 to 49,000 square miles, depending on how inclusive your definition is, and stretches along 700 to 1,000 miles of Pacific coastline. It’s a place defined by absence, or at least extreme sparseness. Of water, of life.
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