Posts tagged nytimes

My Publisher (Nectar & Pulse) Featured in The New York Times!

So very exciting! The NYTimes Travel section featured Nectar & Pulse 3 days ago for their local soulmate guide to Stockholm, Sweden. 

My local soulmate guide to NYC can be purchased and found here.

Wishlist: A weekend at Mohonk Mountain House. 

Wishlist: A weekend at Mohonk Mountain House

Ahhhhh, finally. The weekend has arrived. I’m so elated to sit back, even for just an hour or two, and devour T magazine’s Travel issue and this Sunday’s issue.

Ahhhhh, finally. The weekend has arrived. I’m so elated to sit back, even for just an hour or two, and devour T magazine’s Travel issue and this Sunday’s issue.

The NY Times Style Magazine's Best in Travel for 2011

I love that the writer used the words “utopian” and “urban” in the short and inviting description.
And make sure you do not skip over the Pantone inspired hotel in Brussels (called of course, the Pantone Hotel).
The new Aesop store in Nolita is made of 400,000 strips of The New York Times newspaper. Now, that’s recycle, reduce, reuse by true definition.
Photograph by Juliana Sohn for Aesop

The new Aesop store in Nolita is made of 400,000 strips of The New York Times newspaper. Now, that’s recycle, reduce, reuse by true definition.

Photograph by Juliana Sohn for Aesop

Useless Stereotypes. Brilliant. Courtesy of the NY Times.

Useless Stereotypes. Brilliant. Courtesy of the NY Times.

Bill Cunningham — You never cease to amaze me. What a great spread today in the Sunday New York Times. Bill Cunningham doesn’t always find the latest and greatest NYC trends, he creates them.

Bill Cunningham — You never cease to amaze me. What a great spread today in the Sunday New York Times. Bill Cunningham doesn’t always find the latest and greatest NYC trends, he creates them.

He who seeks beauty will find it.” - Bill Cunningham
People always say, “get your head out of the clouds.” I disagree… here’s why.

People always say, “get your head out of the clouds.” I disagree… here’s why.

Two New York refugees open “Hartwood” on the Mexican coast.

Mya Henry & Eric Werner escape to Mexico & set up what T magazine refers to as a “rustic cocina”. A highly visually stimulating feature can be found here.