
Guy Trebay
Culture and Style Reporter and Menswear Critic at The New York Times
New York Times reporter/critic, Culture and Style: https://t.co/IN4g8JpDRZ IG GuyTrebay
Articles
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6 days ago |
straitstimes.com | Guy Trebay
In past eras, the wealthy tended to attire themselves in the richest of colours: indigo, crimson, the purple of nobilities and kings. We are no longer in that era. These days, the hue preferred by the richest people on earth is that most bland and mousy of non-colours – beige. For luxury travel consultant Lindsey Woodcock, the beige onslaught first revealed itself on the terraces and streets of St Moritz, Switzerland, the exclusive Alpine resort town where she lives part-time.
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1 week ago |
nytimes.com | Guy Trebay
The global superstar is going "a little bit rapper" for his first gala appearance. He may never come back, but he's here now. "I've never been nervous like this,'' Shah Rukh Khan said on the afternoon before the Met Gala, where on Monday evening the Indian superstar will make his first-ever red carpet appearance at what is generally considered the party of the year.
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2 weeks ago |
sun-sentinel.com | Guy Trebay
At the upper levels of capital-S society, or what remains of it, the name Vladimir Kanevsky is quietly dropped in conversation as a tell for arrival, a foolproof marker of taste. “People who know, know,” said interior designer and philanthropist Charlotte Moss, referring to Kanevsky, an artist who works in porcelain. Fashion designer Tory Burch once commissioned a 30-person dinner service from him.
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2 weeks ago |
nytimes.com | Guy Trebay
Years ago, Vladimir Kanevsky's floral sculptures started turning up in Manhattan's most elegant living rooms. Now his work is on display alongside masterpieces. Vladimir Kanevsky looks over his porcelain sculpture of lilacs at the Frick Collection in Manhattan. Credit... Vincent Tullo for The New York Times Years ago, Vladimir Kanevsky's floral sculptures started turning up in Manhattan's most elegant living rooms. Now his work is on display alongside masterpieces.
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1 month ago |
ekathimerini.com | Guy Trebay
It may surprise some to learn that New York is the most forgetful city when it comes to ride shares. So says Uber, which has released its ninth annual Lost & Found Index – a hilarious, surprising and occasionally gross list of stuff riders left behind in cars last year.
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