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A shopping experience bringing rare design, art and fashion — with a little bit of intimidation

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A shopping experience bringing rare design, art and fashion — with a little bit of intimidation

It was clear while ascending to the Pacific Design Center that Design.Space — the inaugural retail experience blending rare design, art and fashion — was for the heads. In the parking lot, I spotted a woman wearing a coat from the Row, another in a pair of Miu Miu thong-boots. The signaling was subtle but clear: We come to this place for flexing. I followed them and other stylish people to the top floor of the center, where rooms holding rare works of art, housewares, furniture and fashion awaited.

The point for Jesse Lee — founder of the online design marketplace, Basic.Space, which organized Design.Space last weekend — was less see and be seen, and more: see, be seen, and most importantly: buy. Buy. Buy. Buy. Everything was for sale, from the niche perfumes of Troye Sivan’s Tsu Lange Yor, to the red Chirac Sofa by Paulin Paulin Paulin X Christo & Jeanne-Claude X Parley for the Oceans, shown in an all-red room. Outside, French architect and designer Jean Prouvé’s iconic gas station from 1969 made its debut on American soil.

Sadie wears Prada on the Chirac Sofa made in collaboration with Paulin Paulin, Christo and Jeanne-Claude and Parley.

Sadie wears Prada on the Chirac Sofa made in collaboration with Paulin Paulin, Christo and Jeanne-Claude and Parley.

Other participants included fashion brands and vintage dealers, from 424 to Justin Reed; cornerstones of Italian design, like Memphis Milano and Edizioni del Pesce by Gaetano Pesce. One-of-one art objects, like the silver and crystal-encrusted can openers and martini glasses from the Future Perfect’s Perfect Nothing Catalog. While many, if not most, of the pieces shown at the fair were museum worthy, Design.Space was never intended to be a museum, says Lee. It’s not a passive experience, but an interactive, high-stakes marketplace.

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Walking through Design.Space felt like being in the fanciest department store in an upscale mall 30 years ago — before malls were mere skeletons, before we spent all our time scrolling on the Real Real or 1stDibs. Design.Space was filled with the sexiness and tension of the shopping experiences of yore. There was crispy white carpet in rooms featuring iconic design pieces from the Italian design house Gufram, including the Pratone lounge chair in the vibrant shape and color of oversized blades of grass. There were performance art elements from other vendors. Enorme was selling its original 1985 phone designed by Jean Pigozzi, Ettore Sottsass and David Kelley in a set made to look and feel like an ‘80s office, including a model in period-perfect styling, hair and makeup, speaking on said phone. It felt like watching a movie. There were also moving moments of discovery. I was stunned to find that the beautiful, silver bean bag chair I was immediately drawn to (and almost plopped down on) was actually a 2007 sculpture made of rock-hard aluminum by Cheryl Ekstrom, presented by JF Chen.

Image April 2025 Design.Space
Isabel, left, wears JNCO pants, Gucci polo, Nike T90’s sneakers, Vintage puka necklace. Sadie wears Courreges set, Chloe shoe

Isabel, left, wears JNCO pants, Gucci polo, Nike T90’s sneakers, vintage puka necklace. Sadie wears Courrèges set, Chloé shoes. Module tables and porthole mirrors by Willo Perron for NO GA.

Lee was inspired by his own experiences of shopping at Barney’s in Beverly Hills (RIP) as a design-obsessed youth, before he had the means to be shopping at Barney’s. “What we want this to be is obsessively curated and unapologetically commercial,” Lee says. “What I miss is what Barney’s was for me 10 years ago. It wasn’t about the prices or what I bought, but it was more about the fact that I could easily spend six, seven hours really immersing myself in the experience of this luxury store.”

Design.Space also feels like a subtle protest of this new L.A. aesthetic that has emerged in the last 15 years — blond wood, airy, minimalist design, a plant in the corner — that Lee (and I, and many others) have grown fatigued over. These spaces scream: “We’re casual, we’re accessible.”

With Design.Space, Lee says: “I want this experience to have a little bit of intimidation.”

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As we were scouring the racks from Archived, a rare designer fashion and furniture showroom, one of my Design.Space companions, an editor, noted: “Alex Israel just took his glasses off.” We collectively realized we’d never actually seen the artist without his sunglasses, but in this context it made the most sense. These pieces we were all poring over demanded a closer look: From an Autumn/Winter 2002 Gucci shearling fur coat, to a pair of perfectly worn-in Helmut Lang leather pants from the late ‘90s that made me salivate. In the same exhibiting room was Hommemade, A$AP Rocky’s interior design studio. It featured the Hommemade Cafe, which was serving a meticulous espresso martini, and the Hommemade entertainment console and professional studio on wheels — complete with a projector, microphones, snack dispenser and rolling tray. Rocky’s first collection with Ray-Ban as its newly appointed creative director was also on display. Later that evening, Rocky himself made an appearance, effectively consecrating his own corner of the fair and Design.Space as a whole.

Sadie wears John Galliano top, Lado Bokuchava skirt, Windsor Smith shoes inside “Gas Station 1969” by Jean Prouvé.

Sadie wears John Galliano top, Lado Bokuchava skirt, Windsor Smith shoes inside “Gas Station 1969” by Jean Prouvé.

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Design.Space was invite-only. And its invitees felt like a rare group, for whom niche furniture designers and archival fashion pieces existed in tabs that lived side by side in their brains. It was different from the crowd of patrons you might see at a traditional art fair (not enough rizz), different from those, even, whom you may see at a fashion party (performative rizz). These people, it was clear, were intentional about the capital D-design of everything in their lives, from their jackets to their salt and pepper shakers.

Photography Em Monforte
Styling Keyla Marquez
Models Sadie Kim, Isabel Jennings
Makeup Selena Ruiz
Hair Adrian Arredondo
Video editor Mark Potts
Production Cecilia Alvarez Blackwell
Photo assistants Phoebe Tohl, Atlas Acopian
Styling assistant Julianna Aguirre
Location Pacific Design Center

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Rob Reiner and Wife Michele Had Throats Slit By Family Member

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Rob Reiner and Wife Michele Had Throats Slit By Family Member

Rob Reiner And Wife Michele
Throats Slit By Family Member

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Sunday Puzzle: Major U.S. cities

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Sunday Puzzle: Major U.S. cities

Sunday Puzzle

NPR


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NPR

On-air challenge

I’m going to read you some sentences. Each sentence conceals the name of a major U.S. city in consecutive letters. As a hint, the answer’s state also appears in the sentence. Every answer has at least six letters. (Ex. The Kentucky bodybuilders will be flexing tonight. –> LEXINGTON)

1. Space enthusiasts in Oregon support landing on Mars.

2. Contact your insurance branch or agent in Alaska.

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3. The Ohio company has a sale from today to next Sunday.

4. The Colorado trial ended in a sudden verdict.

5. Fans voted the Virginia tennis matches a peak experience.

6. I bought a shamrock for decorating my house in Illinois.

7. All the Connecticut things they knew have now changed.

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8. Can you help a software developer in Texas?

Last week’s challenge

Last week’s challenge came from Mike Reiss, who’s a showrunner, writer, and producer for “The Simpsons.” Think of a famous living singer. The last two letters of his first name and the first two letters of his last name spell a bird. Change the first letter of the singer’s first name. Then the first three letters of that first name and the last five letters of his last name together spell another bird. What singer is this?

Challenge answer

Placido Domingo

Winner

Brock Hammill of Corvallis, Montana.

This week’s challenge

This week’s challenge comes from Robert Flood, of Allen, Texas. Name a famous female singer of the past (five letters in the first name, seven letters in the last name). Remove the last letter of her first name and you can rearrange all the remaining letters to name the capital of a country (six letters) and a food product that its nation is famous for (five letters).

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If you know the answer to the challenge, submit it below by Thursday, December 18 at 3 p.m. ET. Listeners whose answers are selected win a chance to play the on-air puzzle.

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The Frayed Edge: Are Fashion’s Sustainability Efforts Misplaced?

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The Frayed Edge: Are Fashion’s Sustainability Efforts Misplaced?
A disappointing COP30 deal was reached in Brazil, while floods across South and Southeast Asia showed exactly why quicker action is required. Meanwhile the EU watered down sustainability legislation yet again, this time targeting deforestation. In some positive news, bans on fur and misleading ‘green’ ads made headway.
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