Articles

  • 1 day ago | elledecor.com | Julia Cancilla

    George Plimpton's storied Upper East Side residence—where he once held court with Manhattan’s cultural elite—just hit the market for $5.25 million, the New York Post reports. For nearly six decades, this 4,700-square-foot duplex at 541 East 72nd Street was the home of Plimpton—the famed writer, editor, and co-founder of The Paris Review literary magazine—and his wife Sarah Dudley Plimpton.

  • 1 day ago | yahoo.com | Julia Cancilla

    George Plimpton's storied Upper East Side residence—where he once held court with Manhattan’s cultural elite—just hit the market for $5.25 million, the New York Post reports. For nearly six decades, this 4,700-square-foot duplex at 541 East 72nd Street was the home of Plimpton—the famed writer, editor, and co-founder of The Paris Review literary magazine—and his wife Sarah Dudley Plimpton.

  • 1 day ago | elledecor.com | Julia Cancilla

    After months of dust, decisions, and construction chaos, your home renovation is finally complete. The contractors have packed up their tools, the new paint is dry, and that gorgeous lighting fixture you agonized over is perfectly installed. The physical transformation is complete, but there’s one final—and often overlooked—step to truly making your refreshed space feel like home: an energetic cleansing.

  • 2 days ago | elledecor.com | Julia Cancilla

    "The residence in the Apostolic Palace is tastefully decorated and large, but not luxurious," Pope Francis once explained. “It is big and spacious, but the entrance is really tight. People can come only in dribs and drabs, and I cannot live without people. I need to live my life with others.” When Jorge Mario Bergoglio stepped onto the balcony of St. Peter's Basilica as Pope Francis on March 13, 2013, he ushered in a new kind of papacy.

  • 2 days ago | yahoo.com | Julia Cancilla

    "Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links.""The residence in the Apostolic Palace is tastefully decorated and large, but not luxurious," Pope Francis once “It is big and spacious, but the entrance is really tight. People can come only in dribs and drabs, and I cannot live without people.