futureplc
Jan 12, 02:36 PM UTC
Sunday Reads
Seven stories you may have missed this week Feb 2025 issue of Wallpaper* is on sale now Sunday Reads Seven stories you may have missed CES home tech CES 2025: the best new
Sunday Reads
Seven stories you may have missed this week
| Sunday Reads Seven stories you may have missed |
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| CES 2025: the best new tech for home and work
Ten new devices that’ll help define the domestic realm and the world of work, should you wish to immerse yourself still further in the algorithmic mire
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| Distracting decadence: how Silvio Berlusconi’s legacy shaped Italian TV
Stefano De Luigi's monograph Televisiva examines how Berlusconi’s empire reshaped Italian TV, and subsequently infiltrated the premiership
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| Why Hodakova is the fashion label everyone's talking aboutPart of a new monthly series, ‘Uprising’ – highlighting fashion’s new vanguard of designers – Orla Brennan meets LVMH Prize winner Ellen Hodakova Larsson, whose intriguing Stockholm-based label will be 2025’s one to watch
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| Inside Louis Vuitton’s Murakami London pop-up, a colourful cartoon wonderland with one-of-a-kind café
Wallpaper* takes a tour of the Louis Vuitton x Murakami pop-up in London’s Soho, which celebrates the launch of a new ‘re-edition’ accessories collection spanning the greatest hits from the Japanese artist’s long-running collaboration with the house
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| Rotterdam’s urban rethink makes it the city of 2025
We travel to Rotterdam, honoured in the Wallpaper* Design Awards 2025, and look at the urban action the Dutch city is taking to future-proof its environment for people and nature
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| This Canadian guest house is ‘silent but with more to say’
El Aleph is a new Canadian guest house by MacKay-Lyons Sweatapple, designed for seclusion and connection with nature, and a Wallpaper* Design Awards 2025 winner
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| Architecture and the new world: The Brutalist reframes the American dream
It's already won the Golden Globe for Best Picture and is tipped for Oscar success. Brady Corbet’s third feature film, The Brutalist, demonstrates how violence is a building block for ideology
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