2020年9月2日 星期三

The T List: Five things we recommend this week

Elegant needlepoint, makeup inspired by the Met — and more.

Welcome to the T List, a newsletter from the editors of T Magazine. Each week, we’re sharing things we’re eating, wearing, listening to or coveting now. Sign up here to find us in your inbox every Wednesday. You can always reach us at tlist@nytimes.com.

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Eat This

Convivial Dining at Ollie’s Pizza in Upstate New York

Left: the facade of the restaurant, which is located in High Falls, N.Y. Right: a selection of dishes including (from top) the margherita pizza, garlic knots, an anchovy-topped red pie, a white pie with ricotta and caramelized onions, a summer salad, a Roman-style al taglio pizza slice and a seasonal pie topped with fresh ricotta and vegetables from the nearby Back Home Farm.Josh Goleman

By Alice Newell-Hanson

One hazy evening last month — as I was sitting on a wooden picnic bench at the new pizza place Ollie’s in High Falls, N.Y. — I felt a sudden wave of nostalgia for sleep-away camp, where I (now somewhat implausibly) spent weeks in proximity to hundreds of other children each summer as a kid. Ollie’s, which is a family-run operation, offers a similar kind of uncomplicated joy and camaraderie, with a focus on simple pleasures — in this case, sheets of Roman-style pizza and gooey-crusted Neapolitan pies you can order from the window of a 19th-century blackened wood barn and then eat on a lawn bordered by overgrown banks of wildflowers such as orange cosmos, zinnias and milkweed. Two of the restaurant’s three founders, Ilan Bachrach and Innis Lawrence, met as kids at a summer camp just nearby (Lawrence grew up and now lives in High Falls with the restaurant’s third co-founder, Sophie Peltzer-Rollo, and their 2-year-old daughter, Ollie, after whom the restaurant is named). Additionally, one of the trio’s close friends, Frank Pinello, of Best Pizza in Brooklyn, is a partner in the venture and helped develop the recipe for its proprietary dough, which is made using locally grown and milled flour. The crust, at once chewy and gently charred, is so good I drove back one afternoon through a thunderstorm for more. 4 Bruceville Road, High Falls, N.Y., ollies.pizza.

Make This

Affordable Needlepoint to Hang at Home

Loop, started by Amy and Sarah Blessing during the pandemic, offers more accessible kinds of needlepoint. 

By Crystal Meers

T Contributor

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With their new needlepoint company, Loop Canvas, the sisters Amy and Sarah Blessing are inviting everyone into their lifelong love affair with crafting. During a trip to London about 10 years ago, the pair marveled at the fine needlepoints at Liberty London. “They had the most elaborate and traditional canvases — beautiful hand-painted scenes of things like a cat in a basket,” says Sarah Blessing. “But you could be working on it for 12 years and not want it in your home when it’s finished.” Agreeing that the requisite price and time commitment stopped many people from starting to needlepoint, they plotted a new course for the craft. While co-quarantining with their families in Traverse City, Mich., they brought their business idea to life. Loop updates the centuries-old art with simple, two-color silhouettes that the novice can master and the enthusiast will still enjoy. Digitally printing their designs on canvas (instead of hand-painting them) has also allowed them to keep the price point under $100. “This is our form of meditation,” says Amy Blessing. The company’s initial offering of flora, fauna and insect designs are available on its website, with a children’s collection and collaborations with the fashion designer Clare Vivier and the home-goods designer Heather Taylor coming soon. $88 per set, loopcanvas.com.

Book This

A Reimagined Colonial Manor in Mexico City

Left: a glimpse of the original brick frame of the 19th-century townhome. Right: the exposed Catalan vault ceiling in one of the guest bedrooms.Fabian Martínez

By Michaela Trimble

T Contributor

Located in Mexico City’s historic downtown — where one of the oldest Spanish cathedrals in the Americas rests atop the ceremonial center of the Aztec world — the Círculo Mexicano is housed in a 19th-century townhome that’s been transformed into a Shaker-inspired boutique hotel by the hotel developer Grupo Habita and the architecture firm Ambrosi Etchegaray. As an ode to Manuel Álvarez Bravo, the building’s former resident and one of Mexico’s most celebrated 20th-century photographers, Círculo Mexicano features the artist’s works in its lobby, which is also home to several shops, including Atlawa, which carries resin kitchenware, and Templo, where you’ll find a collection of artisanal Oaxacan pottery. In the cobblestone courtyard, the chef Gabriela Cámara, of Contramar, helms a seafood restaurant and a cantina-style bar called Itacate del Mar, while the rooftop terrace is the setting for a contemporary French-inspired restaurant — as well as a swimming pool, sauna and soaking tub — where guests can enjoy views of the Metropolitan Cathedral, the National Palace and the Templo Mayor. The private patios attached to each of the 25 guest rooms and suites, which are furnished with custom oak pieces by the local design studio La Metropolitana, also make for good lookout spots. Starting at $150 a night, circulomexicano.com.

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See This

Black Joy Represented in William Scott’s Art

Left: William Scott’s “Untitled” (2013). Right: the artist’s “Untitled” (2018).Courtesy of the artist, Creative Growth and Ortuzar Projects

By Thessaly La Force

I had the occasion of meeting the San Leandro, Calif.-based artist William Scott last year when I visited Creative Growth, the Oakland nonprofit that provides a professional studio environment, gallery exhibitions and representation for artists with developmental disabilities. Scott is self-taught, and he frequently references figures in pop culture — from Frankenstein’s monster to Janet Jackson to Darth Vader — in a wholesome and sci-fi-inflected textual and visual vernacular that is distinctly his own. His new show, “It’s a Beautiful Day Outside,” featuring drawing, painting, sculpture and original video, will be on view this month at the TriBeCa gallery Ortuzar Projects; it’s the first exhibition of his work in New York City since he showed at White Columns 11 years ago. If 2020 is a year of reckoning, then Scott’s pieces — which convey unbridled optimism and Black beauty — are powerful reminders of what we need more of in this world. They also make me think of the smile that crossed the face of David Byrne — who is one of Creative Growth’s most devoted supporters and a fan of Scott’s work — after he greeted the artist at the nonprofit’s fund-raiser last year. ortuzarprojects.com.

Buy This

Estée Lauder Makeup Inspired by Fernand Léger

Left to right: a trio of lipsticks, a palette of eye shadow and a powder compact, all featuring a design inspired by Fernand Léger’s “The Village” (1914).Courtesy of Estée Lauder

By Caitie Kelly

The Metropolitan Museum of Art has finally (and cautiously) reopened, just in time to celebrate its 150th anniversary. To honor it, the Met Store has launched a multi-designer capsule collection of housewares, tech accessories, fashion and beauty items inspired by iconic works of art that belong to the museum. The beauty brand Estée Lauder looked to Fernand Léger’s “The Village” (1914). The abstract painting — believed to be one of the last Léger made before the outbreak of World War I — depicts in bright, primary colors a small village, playfully rendered in cylindrical shapes and spheres. Green trees run along the village’s perimeter, encircling a church and bell tower. Childlike but modern, the painting catches Europe on the brink of change. Its tones, along with the Met’s signature red hue, are reflected in the packaging and pigments of a limited-edition eye-shadow palette, lipstick set and powder compact. Considering that Léger was among the last century’s greatest painters, one whose experimentation with Cubism presaged the more playful Pop Art movement, it seems only fitting to have his work on a palette to enjoy ourselves. Estée Lauder is donating 100 percent of the proceeds to the Metropolitan Museum of Art through March 2021, or until sold out. From $52, store.metmuseum.org.

From T’s Instagram

A Magnificent English Garden in Bloom

A timeworn fence, left by one of the property’s previous occupants, marks the entrance to the meadow.David Fernandez

Inspired by the garden at the nearby estate of Great Dixter, the former home of the celebrated gardener and garden writer Christopher Lloyd, Caroline Kent — the founder of the British stationery company Scribble and Daub — and her husband, Tim Kent, have created their own magic with a meadow at their home in Robertsbridge, East Sussex. Here, a waist-high, half-acre expanse traces the eastern and southern walls of their early 20th-century farm cottage. The gently swaying sea of wild grasses is punctuated by the bobbing heads of a multitude of oxeye daisies, their faces turned toward the sun, as well as wild carrot plants with their constellations of delicate white flowers, purple thistles, pink mallow and acid-yellow lady’s bedstraw, so called because it was once used to stuff mattresses. Follow us on Instagram to explore the garden, details of which often find their way into Kent’s hand-drawn designs.

Correction: Last week’s newsletter misidentified the number of business partners Missy Robbins has. She has one, not two. It also gave an incorrect date for Gregory Halpern’s upcoming show at SFMOMA; it has been pushed to 2022.

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On Tech: Amazon’s biggest leap was boring

Forget about drones. Amazon delivered something just as innovative with nuts and bolts.

Amazon’s biggest leap was boring

Tim Peacock

Nearly seven years ago, Amazon’s Jeff Bezos predicted a major leap forward for his company: drone deliveries of lipstick and books to your door. That attention-grabbing technology has barely gotten off the ground and might never be widespread.

But over that same time period, Amazon did something else that has transformed home delivery without as much buzz. It effectively built from scratch its own network of package centers, trucks and delivery vans that now handle a majority of Amazon customer orders that used to be dropped off by the Postal Service, UPS or other parcel companies.

While we were eager for innovation from the skies, Amazon delivered something just as innovative with nuts and bolts.

The divergence between the imagined and the real Amazon delivery transformation shows that we are terrible at predicting what will become innovative revolutions. And, as I have said in this newsletter before, it proves that banal stuff can be the biggest marvels.

So what happened? Bezos said in the 2013 interview that it would take four or five years to have those drone deliveries. It turns out that using remote-controlled aerial gizmos to drop stuff at our homes is incredibly difficult, prone to risk and potentially more trouble than it’s worth.

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Like driverless cars, drone technology in populated areas is more complicated than most people expected, and it has been — mostly for good reason — tightly controlled in the United States by government agencies worried about drones straying into the path of airplanes, dropping out of the sky onto our heads or unwittingly spying through people’s windows. It wasn’t until this week that the F.A.A. gave Amazon permission to do drone deliveries.

And drones might never be practical for deliveries when someone in a vehicle could do the same thing in a fraction of the time and cost. Drones are a great public relations jolt for Amazon, but let’s not put too much stock in them for awhile — maybe ever.

What Amazon did instead was build its own delivery network, essentially creating something not far off the 113-year-old UPS in well under a decade. It was a remarkable remaking of Amazon, and in my mind it’s the biggest, least flashy change in e-commerce in years.

Amazon did this by spending tons of money. It expanded from a handful of merchandise warehouse clusters to increasingly specialized distribution centers in nearly every state. It enlisted an army of contractors to drive delivery vans for the company, and helped fund some of the delivery companies. Amazon bought its own airplanes, and in some places the company’s parcel flights are now responsible for a big chunk of traffic in the skies.

Most of this is way too dull to make a good YouTube video.

I don’t want to exaggerate Amazon’s delivery operation. The company still needs the Postal Service and other delivery partners. But arguably without this D.I.Y. delivery operation, it would have been harder for Amazon to speed up delivery times and keep pace with people’s growing desire to shop from their sofas.

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It’s debatable whether we want Amazon warehouses in more of our neighborhoods, couriers pressed to meet tough delivery demands and armies of contract workers that can be ditched on a whim. By comparison, drones seem like a less messy alternative to Amazon’s human army of overworked contractors.

That’s the reality of technological changes. The fanciful stuff that we imagine will be pure and clean may never come to pass. And the biggest innovations are duller and potentially messier.

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(Semi-) good news about social media

Look, it’s unnerving that a group backed by Russia’s government tricked Americans into writing for a website intended to divide left-wing voters.

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The silver lining is that this episode shows that the U.S. government and big social media companies seem to have learned from mistakes they made around the 2016 U.S. presidential election.

This time, U.S. intelligence agencies spotted what seemed like a foreign influence operation online, my colleagues Sheera Frenkel and Julian E. Barnes reported. The F.B.I. tipped off Facebook. And Facebook collaborated with Twitter and other companies to sleuth out where the Russian group was setting up online to take it down before it got a big audience.

This is exactly how we want law enforcement and social media companies to act. They were proactive and collaborative and stopped this Russian meddling campaign relatively early. That didn’t happen four years ago.

There remain dark and difficult threats online, including misleading political and health misinformation originating from Americans and spread by powerful people, including President Trump. We don’t need Russians to divide us; we’re doing it to ourselves.

But I’m going to take comfort in the fact that these trolls were spotted because tech companies and law enforcement did the right things.

Before we go …

  • Here comes easier virus alert tech. Will we trust it? Apple and Google are making it easier for public health officials to use smartphone technology that can notify people who may have been exposed to the coronavirus. My colleagues Jack Nicas and Natasha Singer write that people won’t need to download a specific health app to track possible virus exposure.The big question is whether people will trust virus-tracking technology and public health agencies at all. (I’ll have more about this in Thursday’s newsletter.)
  • More context is good. But should this feature exist? Twitter’s “trending topics” feature is supposed to highlight popular news events, but it can be gamed by people to get attention for distorted or partisan information.Twitter said on Tuesday that it would add more context to these trending topics, but my colleagues Kate Conger and Nicole Perlroth write that some people at the company are urging Twitter to turn off the feature entirely.
  • There is no escape from political campaigns: People can now get virtual Joe Biden yard signs in Animal Crossing: New Horizons, the elaborate virtual world video game. This has a vibe of the 2000s, when political candidates set up campaign headquarters and rallies in Second Life, a pioneering virtual world. Second Life is still around and recently banned some political displays after a campaign sign war.

Hugs to this

All of these sea lions are adorable AND EXTREMELY LOUD at barking.

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