
In the age of algorithms, what drives us now?
There’s a live music venue by our house, noted for hosting world-class musicians. They use a unique logo each time their ad appears in local magazines.
There’s something fitting about that. It’s been my tradition over the years to divorce myself from magazine templates and start anew every issue. Not for the sake of rebellion, but because creativity doesn’t thrive in formulas. It thrives in curiosity. No predetermined mood board. Just a willingness and excitement to see where the projects take me.
Reclaiming individuality
In design, it’s tempting to follow the well-worn path. If enough people walk it, it must be the right direction. But the most interesting spaces – the ones that feel alive with vibrant energy – aren’t made from borrowed steps; they’re made from personal ones. A room should carry your imprint. Your rhythm. Your quirks.
It’s the color punch of a bench and the sweet, quiet moment of a book nook. Ceramics that are derived from sound and underground living spaces that flip the traditional script. Intricate tile configurations and a throwback community in Mexico from architect Javier Senosiain. Product collaborations and imperfections of a curious 1840s summer home renovation in Sweden. A Delaware couple that is besotted with midcentury furnishings, and a nomadic designer smitten with fabrics and wallpaper. And lastly, a home in Sicily that epitomizes the Italian spirit of freewheeling design with objects they love.
All of which is to say, go off script now and then – it’s usually where the good stuff lives.
Read the spring issue cover story here.
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