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7 sustainably made items for your closet that are also highly fashionable

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7 sustainably made items for your closet that are also highly fashionable

If you buy a product linked on our site, The Times may earn a commission. See all our Coveted lists of mandatory items here.

(Jessica de Jesus / Los Angeles Times; Photos courtesy of A.P.C. Lyle McGraw x Older Brother SC103 Chopova Lowena Loewe Simon Miller and Brunello Cucinelli)

A.P.C. Boxy Tab T-Shirt, $190

Image November 2024 Coveted

Made of the finest 100% organic cotton, this boxy pocket tee is ultra-flattering and comfortable. French label A.P.C. is the master of wardrobe building blocks, and a great place to turn for luxurious basics. Purchase 👉🏽 here.

Lyle McGraw x Olderbrother Stone Pocket Zip Jacket, $400

Image November 2024 Coveted

(Lyle McGraw x Older Brother)

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L.A.-based Olderbrother is leading by example when it comes to sustainable fashion. Forward-thinking tailoring and experimental dye techniques shine in this indigo-dyed Japanese denim jacket from the Fall/Winter ’24 collection, a collaboration with local designer Lyle McGraw. Reconstructed from excess items and materials from past seasons, the jacket features functional stone-shaped pockets outlined with broken twill. Purchase 👉🏽 here.

Image November 2024 Coveted

New York-based SC103 was born from friendship. Founders Sophie Andes-Gascon and Claire McKinney share a rare bond, working in tandem to create an ever-evolving but always soulful world, brought to life with a focus on upcycling and made-by-hand techniques. Their Links tote features reclaimed leather “links,” cut out, woven together and dyed in a kaleidoscope of colors. Purchase 👉🏽 here.

Chopova Lowena Carol Knee Carabiner Skirt, $996

Image November 2024 Coveted
Image November 2024 Coveted

This is the skirt that took fashion by storm two years ago, and by now it’s more than official: A Chopova Lowena carabiner skirt never goes out of style. This fall’s iteration features juxtaposed camo-print taffeta, pleated to perfection. Purchase 👉🏽 here.

Loewe Campo Loafer, $1,200

Image November 2024 Coveted
Image November 2024 Coveted

Leave it to Loewe’s Jonathan Anderson to take a staid loafer and make it surreal. The Campo Loafer is the ultimate in cool with its curved kitten heel and bulky asymmetrical silhouette. Purchase 👉🏽 here.

Simon Miller Jetz Coat, $695

Image November 2024 Coveted

L.A.-based Simon Miller knows how to craft stylish and cozy, as demonstrated in the Jetz coat, a dramatic faux-fur shearling coat with an oversized collar, side pockets and double-breasted front closure. Purchase 👉🏽 here.

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Brunello Cucinelli Pinstripe Corduroy Trousers, $950

Image November 2024 Coveted

These pleated pinstripe corduroy trousers are a contemporary classic. Navy blue shines in the fall and will wear beautifully over time. Make sure to pair with an equally stylish sock. Purchase 👉🏽 here.

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Lifestyle

Sunday Puzzle: Cyber Monday categories!

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Sunday Puzzle: Cyber Monday categories!

Sunday Puzzle

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On-air challenge: Tomorrow is Cyber Monday. I’ve brought a game of Categories based on the word CYBER. For each category I give, name something in it starting with each of the letters C-Y-B-E-R.

For example, if the category were “Two-Syllable Girls’ Names,” you might say Connie, Yvette, Betty, Ellen, and Rachel. Any answer that works is OK, and you can give the answers in any order.

  1. Colors
  2. Garden Vegetables
  3. Mammals with Three-Letter Names
  4. Popular Websites

Last week’s challenge: Last week’s challenge comes from listener Greg VanMechelen, of  Berkeley, Calif. Name a state capital. Inside it in consecutive letters is the first name of a popular TV character of the past. Remove that name, and the remaining letters in order will spell the first name of a popular TV game show host of the past. What is the capital and what are the names?

Challenge answer: Montgomery (Ala.) –> Gomer (Pyle), Monty (Hall)

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Winner: Greg Felton of Stateline, Nev.

This week’s challenge:  This week’s challenge comes from the crossword constructor and editor Peter Gordon. Think of a classic television actor — first and last names. Add a long-E sound at the end of each name and you’ll get two things that are worn while sleeping. What are they?

Submit Your Answer

If you know the answer to the challenge, submit it here by Thursday, December 5th, 2024 at 3 p.m. ET. Listeners whose answers are selected win a chance to play the on-air puzzle. Important: include a phone number where we can reach you.

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Downsizing, decluttering, Swedish death cleaning — why we're obsessed with clearing out our stuff

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Downsizing, decluttering, Swedish death cleaning — why we're obsessed with clearing out our stuff

When I asked my mother what she might like for her birthday this year, she quickly texted back: Nothing. We are downsizing.

My parents already live in a small house — a former fishing cabin on the edge of a lake. Our family moved a few times when my brothers and I were growing up, our childhood belongings pared down at each step. My parents relocated after we graduated from college, stripping their belongings down further and shipping what furniture was left to each of us kids. I got the Sellers Hoosier, a wooden hutch with a built-in tin flour bin and a metal bread kneading shelf, now more than 100 years old, that my great-grandmother used to bake on.

I wondered what was left for them to downsize. And then it hit me: Were they doing the Swedish death clean? “Döstädning: The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning” is the bestselling book that sparked a TV show and popularized a decluttering technique that has people clean up their belongings before they die, so their friends and family won’t have to. My mother will be 80 this year, my father 82 — was there something they weren’t telling me?

It turned out that my parents hadn’t seen the show or read the book. The real problem was that they had just inherited a bunch of “stuff” from my aunt, who has dementia and was moving into assisted living. My mom told me about all the things my aunt had treasured and saved that now sat in cardboard boxes: plates and linen dish towels commemorating the British Royals; Hummel figurines (and some fakes); newspaper clippings. There were also letters, photos, notes and journals. Birthday cards. Those personal items we save, private and special only to us. Our “stuff.” My aunt had never intended for anyone else to see it or have to deal with it.

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My mother didn’t think it was appropriate to throw any of it away, not while my aunt was still alive. “She asked that some of the Princess Diana things be sent to you,” Mom confessed. “But,” she whispered, “I don’t think you’d want it.” She’s right, I don’t, but the larger question is: Who does?

The idea of döstädning (and the fact that my aunt clearly didn’t get around to it) made me think about all the stuff I’ve collected over the years. When I moved from New York to Los Angeles more than 20 years ago, I couldn’t afford to ship most of my books, so I sent only the most precious, signed editions I had. I also sent the journals I’d written in for years, stuffed with the small details of my life in New York City. What I wore on a first date. A promotion. An unrequited crush. I was moving to Los Angeles for love, but I couldn’t part with these chronicles of all my previous relationships.

Now those journals live in the garage of my family’s Los Feliz house. I know exactly which plastic bin they’re in, even though I haven’t read them since I left New York. If I were to die tomorrow, how would I feel about someone else reading them — my parents, my son, my husband? And if I don’t want anyone reading them after I’m gone, why have I kept them?

This led me to ask my friends and family: Is there anything that you would want automatically destroyed after your death, before your loved ones found it? Most of the answers revolved around sex: naked photos, sex toys, pornography, dirty notes and sexts. Other answers were more comical: A pot stash they didn’t want kids to find; specifically, weed butter in the freezer. The secret family in New Jersey (I think he was joking).

Some people revealed that they had pacts with a friend or relative to destroy certain items after their death. I loved the idea of a trusted friend tossing all my buried secrets, until I remembered what happened to Franz Kafka. His friend and literary executor, Max Brod, had been entrusted to burn all of Kafka’s letters and manuscripts after his death — a wish Kafka put in writing, even though Brod told him he wouldn’t do it. Indeed, Brod published the material, and we would not have “The Trial,” “The Castle” or other great works had he followed Kafka’s instructions.

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Did Brod have the right to overrule his friend? Perhaps it’s better to ask if Kafka had the right to ask that the manuscripts be destroyed. As an artist, do you owe the world your work, even after death?

My friend Cecil, a novelist, says: “As artists, it’s our gig to keep the embarrassing things that inspire us around. We are complex, and hopefully everyone gets that.” She says her journals would make a “boring read” — but if she asked me to destroy all her works after her death and I found some beautiful piece of writing among them, I would be torn about how to proceed.

Even though I’ve published a memoir and works of fiction that allow readers a glimpse into my life, I still have parts of myself that I don’t want anyone to see. In this age of over-sharing, talking about what I would want wiped out after my death has given me a better understanding of döstädning and its appeal. It’s less about saving our families from having to do the cleaning-up work, and more about applying some small measure of control over how we are remembered by those we loved. Perhaps it’s also a nudge to live a life worthy of remembering — sex toys and all — while we still can.

Cylin Busby is an author and screenwriter. Her latest book is “The Bookstore Cat.”

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'Wait Wait' for November 30, 2024: A Cornucopia of Guests!

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'Wait Wait' for November 30, 2024: A Cornucopia of Guests!

Mary Theisen Lappen of Team United States competes during the Women’s +81kg, Gold Medal Event on day sixteen of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at South Paris Arena on August 11, 2024 in Paris, France. (Photo by Lars Baron/Getty Images)

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This week, Wait Wait celebrates Thanksgiving with a cornucopia of incredible guests, including Maya Hawke, blind mountaineer Erik Weihenmayer, and Olympic weightlifter Mary Theissen Lappen.

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