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A top-notch resource for those in the design field, created by the team at Architectural Digest.

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  • 1 day ago | architecturaldigest.com | Katie Schultz

    One year after his death, the longtime Los Angeles estate of Richard Simmons has landed on the market for $7 million, Realtor.com reports. The fitness icon and media personality bought the 1937 Neoclassical Revival Colonial–style home in the 1980s and maintained it as his primary residence until his July 2024 death at the age of 76.

  • 1 day ago | architecturaldigest.com | Hannah Martin |Amy Lombard

    “I’m a proud pack rat,” says artist Sophie Stone glancing around her Long Island City, Queens, studio, which brims with stacks of fabric. There’s everything from 19th-century crazy quilts to vintage napkins, even a bag of stretchy strings. All are fodder for her intricate textile works, a parallel practice to her floral-design studio.

  • 2 days ago | architecturaldigest.com | Hannah Martin

    All products featured on Architectural Digest are independently selected by our editors. However, we may receive compensation from retailers and/or from purchases of products through these links. Mention the Shakers—a radical sect of celibate Christians who emigrated from England to America in 1774—and their furniture likely comes to mind. The group was ahead of its time in many respects: gender equality, environmental stewardship, intentional community building.

  • 3 days ago | architecturaldigest.com | Danine Alati

    All products featured on Architectural Digest are independently selected by our editors. However, we may receive compensation from retailers and/or from purchases of products through these links. In the United States, the current administration’s import tariffs are hitting the design industry hard—and this impact is only growing.

  • 3 days ago | architecturaldigest.com | Lila Allen |William Jess Laird |Colin King

    All products featured on Architectural Digest are independently selected by our editors. However, we may receive compensation from retailers and/or from purchases of products through these links. When visiting homes for sale in New York’s Hudson Valley, Rachel and Nick Cope, the married founders of the hit brand Calico Wallpaper, developed a code word to indicate, discreetly, that a house was the one—blueberry.

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