Lifestyle
This spring, have a tea ceremony inside of an art installation and shop the latest Givenchy
Givenchy by Sarah Burton introduces the Snatch
Givenchy’s “The Snatch” handbag.
(Marc Piasecki / Getty Images)
Echoing the designer’s ready-to-wear sculptural designs, the Snatch from Givenchy by Sarah Burton is sensually shaped by the contours of the person who carries it. Its supple leather, fluid silhouette and three sizes allow it to slip effortlessly and intimately into the hand, over the shoulder or across the body. Now available. givenchy.com
Guess Jeans opens new L.A. store
Guess Jeans store interior.
(Josh Cho)
In a move familiar to many millennials these days, Guess Jeans has returned home in its 45th year. The new flagship store in West Hollywood is both a return to its California roots and an envisioning of its future still ahead. While the brand may be an established icon, the store boldly reimagines the retail space as a living laboratory for design, craftsmanship and collaboration, with dedicated workshop and customization spaces. 8700 Melrose Ave., Los Angeles. guess.com
Louis Vuitton’s new Color Blossom collection
Louis Vuitton’s new Color Blossom collection highlights sodalite.
(Louis Vuitton)
Taylor Swift’s sky may be opalite, but the starry blue hues in the new jewels of Louis Vuitton’s Color Blossom collection belong to sodalite. Rarely used in jewelry, the dark navy of sodalite adds an unexpected layer of depth to Color Blossom’s existing luminous gemstone lineup. Sun and star motifs rendered in gold enhance the gem’s night sky coloring, while the classic flower designs celebrate the 130th anniversary of the Louis Vuitton Monogram. Sodalite pieces available March 6, entire collection available April 4. louisvuitton.com
Loro Piana debuts Library of Knits
Loro Piana’s Library of Knits comes in over 20 shades.
(Lora Piana)
L.A.’s (many) winter showers bring spring wildflowers, and a bouquet of Loro Piana’s new Library of Knits fits right into the vibrant spectacle. The exquisitely soft cashmere pieces in classic styles now come in over 20 shades inspired by Sergio Loro Piana’s personal wardrobe. With a spectrum ranging from blues and greens to corals and creams, it’s hard to choose just one for a frolic in the fields. Now available. loropiana.com
Margesherwood X Peanuts
The Margesherwood X Peanuts collaboration features instantly recognizable motifs.
(Marge Sherwood)
Love is famously in the air this time of year, apparently even for cartoon characters. This enduring love is illustrated (literally) in the Margesherwood X Peanuts collaboration. Inspired by the heart-fluttering love letters Sally writes to Linus, the designs feature instantly recognizable motifs that marry the Peanuts’ charm with Margesherwood’s refined silhouettes. The zig-zag of that famous yellow shirt winkingly graces a crescent baguette, while the black stripes of Linus’s red red shirt wrap around a slouchy shoulder bag. For the true heads and lovers, there’s even a petite hobo emblazoned with Sally’s pet name for Linus: “FOR MY SWEET BABBOO.” Now available. margesherwood.com
Ryan Preciado at Hollyhock House
Ryan Preciado’s site-responsive “Diary of a Fly” at Hollyhock House features Oaxacan-woven textiles.
(Roman Koval)
Ryan Preciado’s new site-responsive installation at Hollyhock House, “Diary of a Fly,” is titled after a late-1930s musical composition by Béla Bartók that imitates the frenzied pace of a fly — a fitting name since his show reconceptualizes the experience of the springtime pest flitting around a house. Instead of hovering around overripe fruit or stalking a trash can long neglected, however, viewers are invited to take in Preciado’s Oaxacan-woven textiles and brightly colored sculptures situated throughout the city’s only UNESCO World Heritage Site. Open through April 25. 4800 Hollywood Blvd., Los Angeles. hollyhockhouse.org
Veronica Fernandez at Anat Ebgi
Veronica Fernanadez’s “Prey” filters childhood memories through experience and emotion.
(Veronica Fernandez)
In the figurative paintings of Veronica Fernandez’s first solo exhibition, “Prey,” the artist’s childhood is recalled through dreamlike and fantastical scenes, with memories filtered through experience and emotion. Many of her works place a child at the center of the scene among family, friends and caretakers, who usually appear shadow-like at the edges of the paintings. As a kid, Fernandez endured periods of homelessness. But rather than depict a childhood of adversity, her paintings empower the kids within them to claim their own space, imbuing her memories with strength and light. Open through April 4. 6150 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles. anatebgi.com
Dior launches J’Adore Intense
Dior’s J’Adore Intense captures the scent of solar flowers with Rihanna as its muse.
(J’Adore)
Florals for spring can be groundbreaking, especially when they’re created with none other than Rihanna as their muse. Dior’s J’Adore Intense captures the scent of solar flowers — jasmine, ylang-ylang, rose, violet — right before they burst into fruit. The result is a warm, bold, addictive fragrance that drips with sensuality and femininity, down to the curves of its signature gold and glass figure-eight amphora. In other words, it’s Rihanna in a bottle. Available now. dior.com
Rocky’s Matcha X Oscar Tuazon at Morán Morán
Rocky’s Matcha hosts Japanese tea ceremonies in an ensō-inspired tea house from Oscar Tuazon at Morán Morán.
(Stade New York)
The single, uninhibited brushstroke of the ensō, the circular form in Zen art, serves as a record of a moment. Commissioned by Rocky’s Matcha, Oscar Tuazon’s “Circle House” at Morán Morán shares both the ensō’s form and its call to mindfulness. In the artist’s tea house, constructed from cardboard, wood and tatami mats, architecture is inseparable from ritual: visitors will soon be able to partake in a Japanese tea ceremony inside the installation, thereby participating in a choreography of attention not unlike the act of gliding an ink brush across a sheet of washi. Open through December 31. 641 N. Western Ave. Los Angeles. Subscribe to rocky’s newsletter for tea ceremony information. rockysmatcha.com and moranmorangallery.com
Celebrate Mr. Wash’s new book, “Artists in Space”
Celebrate the launch of Mr. Wash’s new book of studio visits and interviews with other L.A. artists.
(Mr Wash)
Make your first BBQ of the season a meaningful one at the Art By Wash Studio & Community Center, where Compton artist and criminal justice advocate, Mr. Wash, will celebrate the release of his book “Artists in Space.” Proceeds from the book, which features interviews and studio visits with 20 Angeleno residents, go toward establishing the new community center where individuals returning home from incarceration will have access to art classes, creative residencies and housing. Mr. Wash will be in conversation with Patrisse Culllors and Evan Pricco (co-publisher and founder of the Unibrow) as well as displaying new works. The event is on March 7 from 2-6 p.m. 15 W. Rosecrans Ave., Compton. artbywash.com
Lifestyle
Having Trouble Choosing the Right White for Your Wedding? This Color Analyst Can Help.
Megan Bentley, a color analyst, knows that picking a wedding dress is more than choosing a white dress you love; it’s also about the right white.
The hue you choose will either complement or work against your complexion and the silhouette of your dress, said Bentley, the founder of The Color Countess, based in Columbus, Ohio. “White is one of the most difficult colors to get right,” she said. “While it is universally bridal, you need the right hue to honor your features. The differences are subtle, but the impact is significant.”
Using color analysis, a method grounded in color theory that looks at how hues interact with people and teaches them how to identify their most flattering color palette, or season, Bentley helps brides find their ideal white for their wedding dress. And as more brides are wearing multiple looks on their wedding day, as well as for their wedding-related celebrations, Bentley is also being asked to help them build their wedding wardrobe around their color palette.
Bentley became interested in color analysis in 1992 when she was 12 years old, through her mother’s best friend, who was a certified color analyst. “I was told I was a True Spring — a palette of warm, light and bright hues including coral, lime green and aqua. I loved it,” she said. As color analysis started gaining traction again in 2024 on social media, it felt familiar to her, Bentley said, and she started formal education in the method through the Association of Image Consultants International.
Bentley began color analysis as a side business while working as a client director at Gartner, a corporate consulting firm based in Stamford, Conn., where she worked with Fortune 10 executives. In 2024, she started incorporating color analysis into her work before making The Color Countess her full-time career in 2025. “Color became a strategic tool I would use to help leaders walk into a room with more authority and confidence,” Bentley said. “Then it took off on my social media in a way I did not expect.”
She offers color analysis through in-person, 75-minute sessions, for $449, and virtual sessions, starting at $99, where she identifies her clients’ undertone (whether their skin reads warm, cool or neutral) and color season and teaches them how to dress within it. “A virtual analysis can be a great option for brides when timing matters,” Bentley said, adding that these consultations are best before trying on gowns at a bridal salon.
Here, Bentley gives a quick lesson in color analysis and how to lean into your best hues to find the right white and elevate your bridal wardrobe.
The interview was edited and condensed for clarity.
What do you think attracts brides to color analysis?
When you are preparing for one of the most photographed and important days of your life, you want to look your absolute best. Once a bride realizes there is a way to find her perfect hue of white for her dress and the right color for the groom’s suit, color analysis becomes an obvious step in their wedding planning process.
Color is one of the biggest visual decisions for a wedding. A color analysis removes the guesswork out of what hues complement you and what works together. The couple will look more refined and the photos more cohesive. It also brings confidence. When you know you are in the right colors and tones, you feel present.
What are you looking at when matching a bride or groom with their color palette?
I am always looking at the individual first. I look at their undertone, value — how light or dark their features are — and intensity — bright and reflective features versus soft and opaque. These are what determine their most harmonious colors. If the couple already has wedding colors in mind, we evaluate whether those colors are in harmony with each other. If they are not, we find the closest, most complementary versions, so that everything feels cohesive.
Time of year and décor can absolutely influence the color direction. If a wedding is in the fall or winter, we can lean into richer, deeper tones within their palettes. If the event is in the spring or summer, we may choose lighter, brighter options.
What are brides specifically asking for in a color analysis?
The number one focus is the white dress. From there, they want guidance on how everything works together — what the groom should wear, how the colors photograph and how to create a cohesive look across the entire day.
There is also a lot of interest in the full wedding wardrobe — the rehearsal dinner, welcome party, honeymoon. Once they understand their colors, they want to make confident decisions across all of their wedding-related events.
What is the science behind finding the right hue of white to complement the bride and the style of her dress?
The key is identifying your undertone, then you can determine whether you need a cooler, warmer, or more neutral white. The right hue is what makes your skin look clear and luminous, so that you stand out, rather than the dress wearing you.
It is not about matching your complexion; it is about your undertone. It can be fair, tan, rosy, golden or olive. Your undertone is the temperature beneath the skin and that is what determines which whites will be most harmonious. For example, the actress Mindy Kaling often appears very warm on the surface, but she has a cool undertone. If she leans too warm in her clothing, it can compete with her rather than support her.
On the flip side, someone like actress Emma Stone is very fair, but she has a warm undertone. Fair skin does not automatically mean cool, just like deeper or more golden skin does not automatically mean warm, such as with model Naomi Campbell, who has a cool undertone.
Does the hue of white affect the look of the silhouette and fit of a wedding dress?
Yes, color is what brings the entire look into balance first. It can completely change how a silhouette is perceived.
The right white sharpens the entire look of a gown. The right hue will enhance the structure of the garment, highlight proportions and direct where the eye goes.
When the hue is off, it creates shadows, pulls focus from your face and breaks the line of the silhouette, making the dress look heavier or less refined.
What are your tips for putting together the rest of a wedding wardrobe?
I like to anchor everything around four colors: your best white, your strongest neutral, an eye-enhancing hue that brings out your features and a pop color, which is your favorite shade within your palette. This combination gives you structure, variety and cohesion. Everything mixes and matches, everything photographs well and most importantly, everything keeps you in harmony, so that you look polished and intentional across every event leading up to and after the wedding.
Lifestyle
An Altadena glassblower lost his home to flames. In his studio, he’s forging something new
Just north of Los Angeles, Evan Chambers’ glassblowing studio springs out from a small warehouse district like a scene from “Alice in Wonderland.”
In this series, we highlight independent makers and artists, from glassblowers to fiber artists, who are creating original products in and around Los Angeles.
Under the skylight of a 10-foot industrial ceiling is a cold, foreboding blacksmith’s forge — which, on an active day, would heat up to 2,500 degrees — surrounded by uncut, conical metal templates awaiting manipulation. On a workbench nearby, sea mine-shaped lamps stand on metal casts of hawk feet alongside caged bubble glass lanterns that appear as if they might burst from internal pressure. Outside is a serene garden under a canopy of branches weighed down by iridescent copper bells, all handmade.
Sitting on a worn wooden chair in the garden on a cool Tuesday afternoon, Chambers, 43, a professional glass and metalsmith, reflected on his antiquated strain of craftsmanship. He said his medium may have seen its peak during the turn-of-the-century Art Nouveau movement, which saw an embrace of organic forms and a rejection of Industrial Age mass-produced monotony.
Evan Chambers walks through his studio.
“Now all those artists are gone, and all that art is gone,” Chambers said, peering toward his studio, which houses Louis Comfort Tiffany lamps in disrepair. “I feel like I’m trying to recreate this time that I never could quite understand.”
There have been many other times Chambers could not quite grasp: The time his parents sold his childhood home, where he first grew to love art; the time his sister moved away from Altadena, which he called the “perfect place,” to pursue glassblowing; and the time when, as his hometown was consumed by the Eaton fire, he felt authorities did little to help.
But if there is one thing Chambers does understand, it lies somewhere deep in the dark, steel “glory hole” of a forge.
“You see a piece of glass from 120 years ago, when there was real craftsmanship, and you think, ‘You know, this is badass,’” Chambers said. “To be able to hit that and then take it in your own creative direction, I like that challenge. … It’s like a game.”
Growing up in working-class Altadena as the second child of a silversmith mother and metalworker father, both of whom have a master’s degree in art and an aversion to television, Chambers spent much of his life immersed in the robust arts-and-crafts scene of Pasadena in the early 2000s.
Evan Chambers in the garden of his studio.
“[In Pasadena,] there were Craftsman homes, there’s green homes. … Seeing those homes and all the exterior lanterns with all this beautiful, iridescent glass and copper work, I think that kind of informed my art,” Chambers said. “Altadena more informed the person I wanted to be.”
Unlike some of his artistic peers, who idealized studios and showcases in New York or Europe, Chambers never wanted to leave Altadena. “Altadena has always been a creative place, pretty full of and accepting of eccentrics,” he said. “When my sister went to college, I was sobbing, like, ‘How could you move away?’”
As defiant teenagers tend to do, Chambers departed from the family profession, admitted to Cal Poly San Luis Obispo as an agricultural business major. Self-admittedly, Chambers only got through three years before he switched to English and began working out of an unconventional glassblowing studio.
“Going there, it was like the prettiest place ever; very pastoral, it blew my mind,” Chambers said. “There’s all these glassblowers up there, and they’re doing all this nature-inspired work, and then I ended up five years in.”
Evan Chambers holds a template for his “snail boy” piece.
Many of Chambers’ projects center on the interaction between the natural and the practical. On one lamp in the studio, tentacles hold up cylindrical copper spires with submarine-style looking glasses to reveal a small bulb inside. Glass vases with metallic finishes of unnatural blue, green and gold are drowned in palm leaf motifs, ready to be flowered.
Theodora Coleman, owner of the Gold Bug independent gallery in Pasadena — which has represented Chambers for nearly two decades — said she feels that Chambers’ metalwork harkens back to epic journeys in literature, fitting appropriately into a world crafted by the likes of French writer Jules Verne. His glasswork, she said, is understood as preeminent by Tiffany historians, who don’t often come by artists who can authentically reproduce the luster of age-worn glass.
“There’s a whimsy to it, but I think there’s also something that can be brought into a more contemporary environment,” Coleman said.
Near the end of college, working out of a glass studio without pay or financial support from his parents, Chambers used his handiwork skills to build a tree house near his campus that he lived in for two years to avoid rising rent costs.
“I wanted to spend more time in nature and I wanted to be able to spend whatever money I was making on renting time at a glass studio,” Chambers said.
He would eventually meet his wife, Caitlin, then an English student at Cal Poly. Not long after, he was able to ditch the cold, insular tree house for a beachside home her family owned in the area.
Evan Chambers’ glass vases are on display at his studio.
“I think he was about 24 and I had never met anyone that talked about beauty the way he did,” said Caitlin Chambers, now an English professor at Pasadena’s ArtCenter College of Design. “I don’t think it’s really typical for young men to be like, ‘This is beautiful.’ I remember thinking, ‘Wow, it’s so nice to hear from someone who has that kind of attunement with the world.’”
Around that time, Chambers fully delved into pursuing mastery of an art form buried under a century. As he recounted the odyssey, more than 20 years of practice could be charted through various blotches and burn scars on his arms.
“Everything else fades away,” Chambers said. “All my rage fades away, and I’m just focused on the thing.”
But that dormant rage would eventually return, to the point where his art became secondary. Years after resettling in west Altadena with Caitlin and having two children — Edie, 9, and John, 5 — tragedy struck the quaint family home: the Eaton fire.
The handling of the Eaton fire is the subject of an ongoing civil rights investigation by the California Department of Justice. Fire victims from the historically Black west Altadena community have alleged discrimination by emergency responders that resulted in 14,021 burned acres, 19 deaths and 9,000 destroyed buildings — one being Chambers’ — over the course of the 25-day fire.
Throughout the next year, Chambers hardly worked. He coordinated with neighbors to assist with fundraising projects; searched for art and jewelry for neighbors in charred, empty lots, desperately attempting to restore those pieces; and protested on the lawn of the fire department and sheriff, calling for a thorough autopsy of what went wrong in west Altadena during the fire.
“Accountability is really big with me,” Chambers said. “West Altadenans were literally burning in their homes. … It’s not OK.”
A close-up of an art piece by Evan Chambers.
Metal appendages that Chambers will use for future works.
This stubborn defiance is also present in Chambers’ commitment to the “golden age” of decorative art. The turn-of-the-century molds in his studio — which use botanic motifs, blossoming forms with metallic winged and floral attachments — look like desk toppers fit for an early 1900s eccentric obsessed with Darwinism and industrialization.
“The [Art Nouveau] movement was a reaction against the Industrial Revolution and automation,” Caitlin said. “We might be in that kind of time, which, because of AI, is a revival of the handmade. … He’s a part of that.”
On his website, Chambers’ pieces range from $1,550 for the “baby opium gazer” lamp to $12,500 for the “sterling opium gazer.” His organic forms, including a glowing cicada and whale lamp, fall between $2,000 and $4,000.
Evan Chambers surrounded by lamps he created.
When Altadena began the slog of a fire recovery effort, Chambers and his wife stumbled upon an opportunity reminiscent of the rent-free tree house he built in college: a 2,400-square-foot Craftsman-style home in Hollywood that was to be demolished. The house was purchased for $1 from the developer, sectioned and transported on flatbed trucks to Altadena. It was cheaper than purchasing a new home, Chambers said.
“It was a time in Altadena where if anybody needed anything, it was very open,” Chambers said. “I never wanted to leave.”
As he sat under a ray of natural light in his studio, his creations staring at his back through a hundred radiant eyes and looking glasses, Chambers sat slouching. He said he didn’t know how close he would come to fully comprehending the era he pursued in his art, but behind him, the decade-old soot on the rim of the inactive forge indicated that another age of artisanship may have passed unnoticed.
Lifestyle
Street Style Look of the Week: A Brand Loyalist Steps Out in Blue
“I’m a Ralph Lauren fool,” Louis Johnson Jr. said of the boundless inventory of polo shirts and denim in his closet. He has so many pieces that some people in his life call it a dry cleaner. “I will never wear the same outfit,” he said. “Never in my life twice.”
Blue was the theme of the day when we met on a Saturday afternoon in April: a denim work jacket that overlaid a multicolored polo with stripes of blue and green and pink, which was finished off with a silk scarf featuring touches of colors found throughout the outfit. He also wore a Seattle Mariners baseball cap, paying homage to his Pacific Northwest hometown. When I asked what inspired the day’s look, he said that he usually starts coming up with an outfit by looking up and asking, “What does the sky look like?”
Johnson, 58, is the owner of Harlem Haberdashery, a clothing boutique known for styling notable Black celebrities and athletes. Mostly though, he considers himself an image consultant, continually finding inspiration in the people who walk by his shop each day. “I just look at everybody and see what they’re wearing, see creative stories,” he said.
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