2022年8月17日 星期三

The T List: Five things we recommend this week

An upstate lodge, a guide to body scrubs and serums — and more.

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

VISIT THIS

A Mountainside Lodge in Upstate New York

Left: the exterior of Little Cat Lodge. Right: vintage artwork and mushroom-wood-lined walls give the guest rooms a rustic, midcentury feel.Max Flatow

By Sydney Rende

T Contributor

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Situated on a seven-acre lot at the foot of Catamount Mountain and just west of the part of the New York-Massachusetts border where the Hudson Valley meets the Berkshires, the newly opened Little Cat Lodge is an ode to the region's historic ski culture and that of the Swiss and Italian Alps. Once a stagecoach station, the building, formerly known as the Swiss Hutte Inn and Restaurant and now under the purview of Matt Kliegman and Noah Bernamoff, has a rustic European-chalet aesthetic that was achieved using local materials — the walls of the 14 guest rooms are mushroom wood and the custom beds were handcrafted out of maples cleared from the mountain last year. The hotel dining program, which is helmed by the James Beard Award-nominated chef Jason Bond, boasts two distinct spaces: There's a bright and airy restaurant with an elevated menu inspired by classic Alpine dishes, and a cozy tavern with terra-cotta floors and a wood-burning fireplace that was designed for après-ski drinks and bites. Indeed, guests can expect easy access to nearby slopes, including those of Catamount Mountain Resort, which is right next door, and will also want to wander into the woods to check out the lodge's barrel saunas. In the warmer months, they have their pick of hiking and biking trails, and Little Cat has an outdoor swimming pool with plenty of lounge chairs. From $345, littlecatlodge.com.

TRY THIS

Scrubs and Serums for the Body, Not the Face

From left: ZitSticka Fizz Fountain, $25, zitsticka.com. Kate Somerville ExfoliKate Resurfacing Body Scrub, $56, katesomerville.com. Soft Services Smoothing Solution Calming Gel Exfoliant, $34, softservices.co. Topicals Slather Exfoliating Body Serum, $30, sephora.com. Follain Resurfacing Body Scrub, $24, follain.com.Courtesy of the brands

This has been the summer of the crop top and along with the trend toward showing more skin has come a slew of new skin-care products that encourage us to treat the rest of the body as carefully as we treat the face. Follain's Resurfacing Body Scrub was inspired by a clay mask from the brand's house line and in addition to clay the thick paste contains hydrated silica to smooth out rough patches and salicylic, glycolic and lactic acids to peel away the outer layer of the skin. This and Kate Somerville's ExfoliKate Resurfacing Body Scrub, also derived from a brand mainstay — the ExfoliKate Intensive face mask — and in which lactic and salicylic acids are combined with fruit acids and pumice to slough away dead cells, can each double as a mask if left on for a few minutes. You'll also find pumice, as well as pore-cleaning acids and calming niacinamide for reducing that post-scrub redness, in ZitSticka's Fizz Fountain. For an all-around gentler solution, look to Soft Services' Smoothing Solution Calming Gel Exfoliant, a serum meant to be applied before moisturizer that uses acids along with urea, an emollient, to soften skin over time. It works especially well on those with skin conditions like keratosis pilaris. Finally, Topicals' Slather Exfoliating Body Serum has that famed face product ingredient, retinol, for combating roughness and aging all over.

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SEE THIS

In Southampton, an Exhibition of Postwar Art and Furniture

Nuvolo's "Untitled" (1959), sewn canvas and fabric, and Pierre Chapo's R08A sideboard (circa 1964).Photo by Joe Kramm, courtesy Sélavy by Di Donna, Southampton, N.Y.

By Aileen Kwun

T Contributor

Emmanuel and Christina Di Donna, the husband-and-wife owners of Di Donna Galleries on Madison Avenue in Manhattan, have made names for themselves with important exhibitions showing the work of Surrealist giants such as René Magritte, Jean Arp and Leonora Carrington. In 2020, they opened an offshoot in Southampton called Sélavy, its name a nod to Marcel Duchamp's alter ego, Rrose Sélavy. In contrast to their heavily researched, museumlike shows in the city, the Long Island space offers a rotating salon-style platform where art, design and decorative arts commingle — and a chance for the pair "to do beautiful shows based purely on taste," says Emmanuel. This year's summer salon, which closes on Labor Day, presents postwar works by the Arte Povera painter Giorgio Ascani, better known as Nuvolo (Italian for "cloud"), whose framed patchwork compositions pieced from dyed salvage textiles and deerskin subvert the traditional canvas with their texture and sculptural qualities. These works are shown alongside handcrafted elm and leather furnishings, such as a pair of generously proportioned campaign-style armchairs and a hefty wooden slab sideboard, by Pierre Chapo, an architecturally minded French woodworker who was a contemporary of Charlotte Perriand and Serge Mouille. Though Nuvolo and Chapo, born just a year apart, never met during their lifetimes, "bringing them together was an easy choice," Emmanuel says. "Both were passionate about their creations and relied heavily on the beauty of their materials and the simplicity of forms." On view Thursdays to Sundays, or by appointment, through Sept. 5, selavy.com.

WATCH THIS

A Documentary Inspired by Family Ties and a German Lake

Sisters Norma (center left) and Anna (center right) Werner in a still from "Walchensee Forever" (2020), directed by Janna Ji Wonders.© Flare Film

By Gisela Williams

T Contributing Editor

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In the documentary "Walchensee Forever" (2020), the German filmmaker Janna Ji Wonders looks at four generations of women in her family and their relationship to the Walchensee, one of the largest alpine lakes in Germany, which in one way or another has shaped all of their lives. Wonders's grandmother Norma Werner, who was 104 when filming began, talks about inheriting the cafe her family opened at the lake from her mother, and Wonders's mother, Anna Werner, recalls the '50s- and '60s-era bohemian adventures she and her sister, Frauke, had everywhere from Mexico to San Francisco to a famed commune in Munich. The film, which is ultimately about the search for identity and the cycle of life, premiered at the Berlinale just before the pandemic and won several awards but continues to make waves. On Aug. 31, Schloss Elmau, a castle estate and resort in the Bavarian Alps that maintains its founder's legacy of hosting musicians and thinkers, will hold a screening of it in its concert hall, after which there will be a discussion with Wonders and Anna. Fittingly, Elmau is only a half-hour drive from Walchensee, so perhaps those moved by the documentary will opt to see it in person. To Wonders, who splits her time between Munich and the lake, it's a place to recharge and, as the film attests, "a silent witness to all the human drama." walchenseeforever.de.

COVET THIS

Tennis Bracelets Made With an Icon of the Sport

Bracelets from Monica Rich Kosann's The Tennis Bracelet — CE Collection, prices on request, monicarichkosann.com.Danielle Kosann

When the New York jewelry designer Monica Rich Kosann was approached by the tennis legend Chris Evert to collaborate on a collection of tennis bracelets, she felt humbled. "She's such a trailblazer in the worlds of tennis and women's sports," says Kosann — and, to an extent, in the jewelry world. Tennis bracelets, which consist of a continuous line of uniform precious stones, became known as such soon after Evert started wearing a diamond one on the court — famously, she lost it during a 1978 U.S. Open match, which was paused so she could look for it. For the 13-piece capsule, which marks the first time the 18-time Grand Slam winner has tried her hand at designing jewelry, Evert revisited her memories of that day. Many of the bracelets have an emerald representing the court's green base, and a pear-shaped diamond that references what Evert describes as "the sweat of competition." Kosann is thrilled, she says, to be bringing "a new voice to an iconic style." And, while it is typically also a pricey one, the offering includes versions featuring sterling silver instead of 18-karat gold, white sapphires instead of diamonds and a tsavorite instead of an emerald. Prices upon request, monicarichkosann.com.

FROM T'S INSTAGRAM

A Milanese Apartment Is Restored, Then Renewed

In the fashion executives Carlo Alberto Beretta and Jacopo Venturini's Milan apartment, an oak leaf toleware chandelier hangs above a dining room table laid with a Portuguese ceramic cauliflower and silver Buccellati candlesticks. The wall hangings are pages from an antique pharmacy herbarium, and a set of 1920s rattan-and-mohair-velvet furniture from a hotel in Palermo provides extra seating.Anthony Cotsifas

When Carlo Alberto Beretta and Jacopo Venturini, veteran fashion executives who have been romantic partners for over 20 years, went looking for a new Milan apartment six years ago, they were seeking some history and a bit of charm. Minimalism, often the lingua franca of contemporary Italian design, holds little appeal for them. Instead, the apartment is laden with beautiful objects, from the giddily rococo and Orientalist to the polished Art Deco and Modernist, all of it meticulously arrayed and moodily lit. The apartment's denlike warmth and cabinet de curiosité density is in keeping with what Venturini calls Milan's "hidden" character, a quality that makes the city difficult for an outsider to fully comprehend. "It can seem like just a cold place for business but, once you're inside, it's like a box, opening," he says. Read the full story at tmagazine.com, and follow us on Instagram.

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2022年8月12日 星期五

The Daily: One Last Time

A goodbye — and a playlist for the road.

Welcome to the weekend. This is a special edition of our newsletter, because it is our last.

This is the final time you will receive The Daily newsletter in your inbox. Thank you for all the time you've spent with us over the years — responding to our questions, following our recommendations and engaging with our team's ideas.

Don't worry — The Daily podcast isn't going anywhere, and New York Times Audio will continue to develop robust and wide-ranging audio programming that aims to help listeners understand the world.

In today's newsletter, we wanted to share a couple of parting gifts: a summer playlist, and a look back at our time together.

We hope you enjoy. And stay tuned for updates and new projects from us in the future.

— Team Daily

A playlist for the road

Included in this year's playlist is Gregory Porter's "1960 What?"Jacob Blickenstaff for The New York Times

Summer is in full swing, so we asked members of our Audio team to share the songs they've been jamming to — on their road trips, rooftops and extra sweaty commutes.

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We're excited to present the final edition of our annual summer playlist. Follow it on Spotify, and read on for back story behind some of the picks:

  • "Shake the Frost" by Tyler Childers: "For me, this song sounds like home. It's been lapping my Spotify nonstop for weeks now." — Lauren Jackson, audience editor
  • "Home" by Two Shell: "This song makes me feel like I am spinning around VERY fast, in a fun way. It's chaotic. And I think that's good summer energy." — Anna Martin, host of Modern Love podcast
  • "IKYK" by Ogi: "The warmth of the song's soulful sound and lyrics matches so perfectly with that 'windows down sun beaming on you' feeling of summer. Ogi says, 'Brother, I see your heavy load / It seems too hard to bear / But I'll walk with you down this road / This is a burden to share.' It's a love song where family and friendship take center stage in each bar. Such a sentiment to celebrate for the summer!" — Sydney Harper, a producer
  • "x10" by Koffee: "She's brave enough to drop lyrics, on top of 'Redemption Song' no less, and yet she does it with simplicity and elegance to create an entirely new and warm tale of thankfulness." — Mukul Devichand, programming editor of the NYT Audio app
  • "Back & Forth" by MK, Jonas Blue and Becky Hill: "The producer, the legend, the master stepped from Will Smith and Quincy Jones's shadow to emerge as a Billboard topper. A new song like all of his: deep, rhythmic, melodic." Shreeya Sinha, editorial director of the NYT Audio app
  • "1960 What?" by Gregory Porter: "If you fancy a bit of social consciousness with your dance tracks. A keystone of house dance parties for the last decade. Makes me think of packed, sweaty, humid, frenetic but friendly gatherings of dancers in Fort Greene Park each summer in Brooklyn." Tara Godvin, senior staff editor

A look back

Michael Barbaro, host of The Daily, prepares for a four-hour live election broadcast in a studio inside The New York Times's main headquarters.  Sara Krulwich/The New York Times

In our very first newsletter, which hit inboxes in February 2019, Michael Barbaro wrote about the names The Daily was almost called (contenders included The Brief, The Meaning and The Story.) He also laid out our goals: "This newsletter grew out of our sense that you might want to better understand how we make the decisions we do," Michael wrote. "How we think about stories. How we process the news. How we use sound."

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More than three years later, we have tried to make good on that mission. We've introduced you to the show's composers and their creative process; answered your F.A.Q.s about Michael's idiosyncratic way of speaking; followed up with beloved guests and explored ideas from our show with new voices. We've also gotten to hear from you — your original songs, feedback and even your good deeds.

So, for our last send, we've compiled some of our team's favorite newsletter moments.

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James Estrin/The New York Times

The Daily Newsletter

About Those Hmms

Plus, a reporter's diary and a summer playlist.

By Michael Barbaro

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The Impeachment Questions We Were Afraid to Ask

Luckily, an 8-year-old asked them.

By Bianca Giaever

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Bianca Giaever/The New York Times

The Daily Newsletter

'Why Can't We Go to Chuck E. Cheese?'

We asked kids to send us their questions about the coronavirus.

By Michael Barbaro

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Alexandra Leigh Young/The New York Times

The Daily Newsletter

Calling Dr. Fauci

Our interview with the nation's top infectious disease specialist.

By Michael Barbaro

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Julie Bloom/The New York Times

The Daily Newsletter

Our Big Live Experiment

Inside our Election Day broadcast.

By Lauren Jackson and Mahima Chablani

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Stephanie Keith for The New York Times

The Daily Newsletter

'A Postcard From Our Future'

We asked a big question: "Do you want children?" Over 11,000 people responded.

By Lauren Jackson

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Rada Akbar

The Daily Newsletter

Leaving a Life in Kabul

One woman documented her farewell as Afghanistan fell to the Taliban.

By Lauren Jackson

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Michael Barbaro

The Daily Newsletter

Interviewing the Interviewer, Again

We introduce you to Sabrina Tavernise, one of our guest hosts. Plus, our annual summer playlist.

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On The Daily this week

Monday: Will the trial of Alex Jones do anything to change the world of lies and misinformation?

Tuesday: How the Democrats salvaged a history-making climate and prescription drug law.

Wednesday: What we know about the F.B.I.'s unprecedented decision to search former President Donald J. Trump's Florida home.

Thursday: A conversation with two women in Louisiana whose unwanted pregnancies led them to very different positions in the fight over abortion access.

Friday: We revisit a story, first aired in 2017, about two 10-year-old siblings choosing between the Boy and the Girl Scouts.

That's it for the Daily newsletter. And thank you.

Have thoughts about the show? Tell us what you think at thedaily@nytimes.com.

Love podcasts? Join The New York Times Podcast Club on Facebook.

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