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T’s Dec. 4 Holiday Issue

Highlights

  1. The Enduring Allure of Isabelle Huppert

    The French actress consistently chooses roles that are morally complex and sometimes hard to watch. And yet we can’t bring ourselves to look away.

     By

    CreditPhotograph by Craig McDean. Styled by Marie-Amélie Sauvé
  2. Can a Corset Be Feminist?

    Corsetry has historically signified both beauty and oppression. Now that it has re-emerged again, a brief interlacing of fashion with social politics.

     By

    CreditPhotograph by Hart+Lëshkina. Styled by Jason Rider
  3. Baking Sweets From Childhood Tales

    For love of all the cakes and cookies and treacle and tarts in childhood stories, one mother brings books to life in the kitchen.

     By

    Sugarplums, inspired by “A Visit From St. Nicholas,” better known as “The Night Before Christmas.”
    CreditIllustration by Leanne Shapton
  1. In One Avid Collector’s Home, a World of Wonder

    Brian Sawyer's West Village aerie is layered with treasures fine and feathered.

     By

    A Carrara marble fireplace is the focal point of the dining room, which includes a cordovan leather table designed by Sawyer, Kaare Klint chairs and an 18th-century Dutch still life.
    CreditDavid Leventi
  2. Reflections on True Friendship

    Technology has made cultivating relationships easier, but also shallower.

     By

    Credit‘‘Lads at Railings, 1987’’ from ‘‘Photie Man’’ (Steidl) / ‘‘The Coolest North-West England Rock’n’Roll Band That Never Was,’’ Irvine Welsh
  3. Illustrated Interview | Mariah Carey

    The Grammy Award-winning, melismatic-voiced music icon, whose new reality series, “Mariah’s World,” airs on E!, sketched her answers with a Pilot fountain pen in her kitchen.

     By

    Credit
  4. In Southern Tasmania, Great Food and Rugged Appeal

    Where to eat, sleep and shop in the land down under the land down under.

     By

    A view from Satellite Island, which can be rented for short-or long-term stays.
    CreditBonnie Savage
    Wanderlust
  5. The Auteurs Changing Cinema

    It’s been a banner year for directors who write their own films. Here are seven.

     By

    Barry Jenkins
    CreditGregory Halpern

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