
Isabel & Ruben Toledo
To enter the loft of Isabel and Ruben Toledo is to ascend into a Borgesian sense of infinitude.
To enter the loft of Isabel and Ruben Toledo is to ascend into a Borgesian sense of infinitude.
Kinfolk’s contributing editor Michael Anastassiades is a leading light on the global design scene.
For Simone Farresin and Andrea Trimarchi of Formafantasma, design is a purely scientific inquiry.
Charlie Hedin—founder and creative director of bedding company Tekla—on his rituals of sleep.
For the sisters behind Beirut-based T SAKHI, Lebanese traditions inspire a modern view of architecture.
After studying and working in Paris, brothers Elias and Yousef Anastas, both designers and architects, returned home to Palestine in 2012.
In an industry distracted by just-so austerity and asceticism, Dimore Studio's Britt Moran and Emiliano Salci are waving a flag for indulgence.
Dieter Rams discusses the people and principles that have made him a design legend.
When we trace back the origins of the hourglass, we can’t find conclusive evidence of its existence before the 14th century.
In a world filled to the brim with complex coffee-making machinery, the classic Moka Express remains a much-loved staple.
Wrestling with ideas about a rapidly urbanizing future, an emerging architect makes an optimistic case for doing more with less.
Neuroscientist Paul Dudchenko speaks on why we get lost, the distress and thrill of disorientation and how getting lost can improve your skills.
Dutch architect Anne Holtrop is known for designs that incorporate abstract, unexpected references to engage the visitor's imagination.
Danielle Arps is the interior designer of choice for New York City's thriving start-ups.
We speak with Jason Beckley on how working for big brands has fine-tuned his eye for products.
Gesamtkunstwerk—the concept that a total work of art is greater than its parts—influenced contemporary art and architecture through the 20th century.
Serving as an homage to Le Corbusier's belief in the skillful play of volumes, a new book depicts the Indian city of Chandigarh.
Kenesha Sneed makes ceramics in her home studio that celebrate all things good about the Southern California life.
Spanish designer Tomás Alonso makes time for both the big and the smaller projects, fascinated by different design constraints.
Andreas Murkudis, vendor of fine wares, reflects on objects of beauty that resisted capture.
Kalle Gustafsson’s collection of Pierre Jeanneret’s furniture brings the designer out of the shadow of his famous collaborator, Le Corbusier.
Having fallen out of favor by the end of the last century, brutalist architecture is back with a vengeance.
“I dwell in the city and the city dwells in me,” Juhani Pallasmaa writes.
Architect Sophie Hicks discusses how she keeps her competitive impulses in balance.
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