Lifestyle
Rob Kardashian This Week Given Khloé Kardashian Some Sibling Affection
Following Khloé Kardashian’s Instagram put up launching her clothes line, Good American, Rob Kardashian just lately praised his older sister on the transfer.
On the picture of Khloé posing on the bottom whereas encircled by denim, Rob, 35, wrote, “My beautiful princess glittering girl.”
On condition that the 38-year-old was donning an all-black outfit devoid of any sparkles, a number of followers had been slightly perplexed by the remark. “What is going on on?” an individual inquired. One individual mentioned, “Solely brothers,” whereas one other mentioned, “
The “Dancing with the Stars” star was lauded by a few of Khloé’s followers for being a “supporting” brother, although Khloé did not reply to his candy phrases. Throughout their turbulent defamation case in opposition to his ex-fiancée, Blac Chyna, Rob these days served as a help system for his famend household.
Chyna, whose actual title is Angela Renée White, filed a lawsuit in opposition to Kris Jenner, Kim Kardashian, Khloé, and Kylie Jenner for $40 million in misplaced earnings and greater than $60 million in future revenues, alleging that they exploited their affect to wreck her repute.
After they “conspired” to cancel the second season of “Rob & Chyna,” she additional claimed they tried to cease her from pursuing different profession choices. They refuted this declare. In the long run, the jury concluded that the mannequin wouldn’t obtain any compensation. Nonetheless, they did uncover that Kim, Kris, and Kylie labored to safeguard their very own monetary pursuits.
Chyna, 34, misplaced her case in opposition to the Kardashian-Jenner sisters, however she did settle along with her ex-fiance when she filed a declare in opposition to him in July 2017 for sharing bare footage and movies of her on-line.
The ex-couples reached an understanding previous to the lawsuit going to trial, albeit the contents of the deal are nonetheless ambiguous. Dream, a 5-year-old daughter of the ex-couple, is their youngster.
Lifestyle
It All Started With a Ouija Board
Laura Marie Acker was visiting her mother in Lewes, Del., in June 2023, when she joined a group of her mom’s friends for a Ouija board night. “During the session, my father came through via letters and numbers with a surprising message,” Ms. Acker said. “I would be engaged in 2024.”
When she tried Ouija again five months later, she said another message from her father, who had died in 2016, advised her to keep going to church. “I thought the whole thing was crazy.”
It was the end of 2023, and Ms. Acker continued to experience an “unsatisfactory dating life” after years of living in Miami and New York before moving to Charleston, S.C., in 2020. “I didn’t hold out much hope because I’ve always dated men with no interest in marriage or family,” she said. “My career was a priority.”
Things changed in April when Ms. Acker, 39, met Evan Alexander Menscher, 41, through a friend from her Bible study group in Charleston. Her friend knew Mr. Menscher, a divorced father, through their daughters’ ballet class and quizzed him about his interest in marrying again. The friend felt he and Ms. Acker were a match and introduced them via group text.
After a short phone chat, Ms. Acker and Mr. Menscher met at Bar167 in Charleston later that month. “When I saw Evan sitting on a bar stool, he took my breath away,” she said.
Mr. Menscher, 41, said Ms. Acker was 20 minutes late and wearing a bright yellow dress with her hair pulled back. “I thought she was the most beautiful woman I’d ever seen,” he said. “I was taken aback as we locked eyes.”
[Click here to binge read this week’s featured couples.]
They closed down the bar talking about their life journeys, values, careers, different religions (she is Roman Catholic; he is Jewish) and dreams. “Time stood still,” she said. “I felt my father’s spirit had a role in guiding Evan to me.”
After a parting kiss, she quickly texted her best friend from college to say, “I might have met my husband.”
Mr. Menscher called his sister to tell her, “I’m going to marry that girl.”
Their second date was a few days later at a pizza party. Ms. Acker met Mr. Menscher’s 5-year-old daughter and watched as he engaged her in a game of Mr. Napkin Head as everyone roared with laughter. “I thought of the scene in the movie, ‘The Holiday,’” Ms. Acker said, referring to a scene in the 2006 Nancy Meyers film in which Jude Law plays the same game with his two daughters.
She later called Mr. Menscher to say it was as if she ordered the perfect boyfriend and his adorable daughter on Amazon and they arrived at her doorstep. “You better not return us,” he replied.
Mr. Menscher, who was born in New York City and raised in South Brunswick, N.J., has a bachelor’s degree in kinesiology and exercise science from High Point University, and a master’s degree in cellular and molecular biology from East Carolina State University. He works as a remote enterprise account executive at Zoom.
Ms. Acker was born in Raleigh, N.C., and raised in Clifton, Va., and holds a bachelor’s degree in marketing and hospitality from Florida State University. She is an executive vice president of Kreps PR & Marketing, based in Coral Gables, Fla., overseeing the firm’s southeast office in Charleston.
While they enjoyed dinners, movies and boating picnics, there was one early source of tension: different dog-parenting styles. Ms. Acker’s 1-year-old dog Sawyer, a spirited rescue Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, had the run of the house, including a seat at the dinner table begging for food. Mr. Menscher, who grew up with dogs and had two during his previous marriage, is more of a disciplinarian.
“Evan uttered a negative comment about Sawyer’s behavior under his breath, and I got angry, rushing to Sawyer’s defense,” she said. They talked about it and their first fight was resolved.
On Sept. 22, while the couple and Sawyer were enjoying a sunset beach walk on nearby Sullivan’s Island, Mr. Menscher got down on one knee and proposed. “I was so surprised I jumped in his arms before saying yes,” Ms. Acker said.
They were married on Jan. 2, in front of a roaring fire at the Farm at Old Edwards Inn in Highlands, N.C. The Rev. Carl Southerland, a priest at St. John’s Episcopal Church in Franklin, N.C., officiated before 10 guests. (Five minutes into the ceremony, his daughter yelled, “Kiss her already!”)
Of their nine-month romance, Mr. Menscher said, “We moved fast because there was never a moment of doubt for either of us.”
Ms. Acker said Mr. Menscher made her feel confident, safe and at peace. “Evan encouraged me to always be honest and transparent,” she added.
Lifestyle
The Bunny Museum, destroyed by Eaton fire, vows to return
Among the losses in the devastating Eaton fire was the Bunny Museum, husband-and-wife Candace Frazee and Steve Lubanski’s grand ode to the world’s hoppiest animal, the rabbit. The Altadena museum, located on Lake Avenue, was one of L.A.’s quintessentially quirky institutions, a place that transported guests to a strange and magical world where the bunny permeates all aspects of life.
There were stuffed bunnies (including the first bunny that Lubanski gave to Frazee, the one that he gave to her because they used to call each other “bunny” as an endearment), hundreds of miniature porcelain bunnies, a bunny T-shirt collection, bunny cookie jars, bunny movie posters (including “Who Framed Roger Rabbit” and “Peter Rabbit”), a bunny song room (Jefferson Airplane’s “White Rabbit” for one), bunny costumes, bunny books, bunny items from Rose Parade floats, and on and on.
The couple ended up collecting more than 46,000 bunny objects and memorabilia in all — a certified Guinness World Record for largest bunny collection in the world.
Most of it burned in the fire on Wednesday. “We lost our wedding albums, my wedding dress, and 46,000 bunny objects,” Frazee wrote in an email from a motel, as her phone was also lost in the fire.
It was a life’s work, and Lubanski stood outside the building hosing it down until the building next door caught fire. It was then that the couple grabbed a few select bunny items, their real bunnies Doris and Nicky and their cats, and left.
“We saved the first bunny and the second bunny of the collection,” Frazee said. “Gifts to each other. We saved the antiquity items, three framed Guinness World Record certificates and the Elvis Parsley water pitcher. We lost our wedding albums, my wedding dress and 46,000 bunny objects.”
She added, “It’s not a hoppy day.”
But on Thursday, Frazee vowed to fans on social media that the Bunny Museum will rebuild, hopefully in the same space. She said the museum has yet to set up a GoFundMe, though they plan to, and that any current fundraising efforts floating around are not sanctioned by the Bunny Museum.
The Bunny Museum began as a humble endeavor back in 1998. Frazee and Lubanski had been collecting bunnies since that first one, and they had enough in their arsenal to open the first location, in their Pasadena home, to the public on appointment. It was an oddity back then, but people came. They told their friends about this strange collection of bunny items, and the collection grew, and finally, in 2017, the Bunny Museum expanded to Altadena, to the 7,000-square foot midcentury building that they proceeded to stuff to the brim with bunnies.
As Frazee used to tell nearly everyone that entered, it was the “hoppiest place on Earth.”
Lifestyle
Swan Gossip, Small Talk Studio, and the Slow Growth of Hand-Painted Clothes
One night in December 2019, Emma Louthan realized in a mild panic that she needed a gift for a child’s birthday party the next day. She grabbed acrylic paint and some of her daughter’s old clothes and began creating an aquatic scene: pink koi swimming beneath white and green water lilies.
The birthday boy wasn’t much impressed by the artful present, but it planted a seed in Ms. Louthan’s mind.
A few months later, she tried her hand at a collection of about a dozen hand-painted adult sweatshirts and found a more appreciative audience. It was the beginning of Covid lockdowns, and Ms. Louthan, an artist in Philadelphia who graduated from Temple University’s Tyler School of Art and Architecture, was working as a freelance textile designer while at home with her husband and 1-year-old daughter.
The sweatshirts, which she had painted in the kitchen of her brick duplex in Germantown, sold out online almost immediately.
“I feel like I just kind of accidentally hit it at the right time,” said Ms. Louthan, 35. Though divisive and terrifying, the pandemic also brought out people’s softer sides. Suddenly, comfort was king. Everyone was baking or crafting. Small-batch ceramics and upcycled quilted coats soared in popularity. There was a compulsory return to the home — and a wholehearted embrace of the homemade.
Noticing that people were drawn to “anything that could replicate a tie-dye look,” Ms. Louthan learned different dyeing techniques: botanical, ice, brush-applied. She traded her stiff acrylic paints for fabric versions, which she used to produce more sweatshirts and loungewear under her brand, Swan Gossip Shop.
As life slowed down during the pandemic, many other artists and independent designers also found success in the niche world of clothes with hand-drawn motifs — a trend spurred in part by Emily Adams Bode Aujla, who repopularized the senior cord tradition, which dates back to the 1900s, with her namesake brand.
Located across the country, these makers use a variety of methods, mediums and styles. In Los Angeles, Juliet Johnstone paints oversize, sherbet-colored flowers, butterflies and peace signs onto T-shirts and fitted work pants; in St. Louis, Lauren dela Roche and Curtis Campanelli of 69 Tearz use 19th-century farmer feed sacks as canvases for gothic hand lettering and rubber-hose-style cartoon characters; and in New York, Nick Williams and Phil Ayers of Small Talk Studio juxtapose imagery like American brand logos and botanical drawings on Japanese cotton.
In an era of mass-produced fast-fashion, these designers and others say they have experienced a growing demand for their meticulously rendered, one-of-a-kind garments.
Today, Ms. Louthan has a monthslong wait-list for her custom hand-painted clothes, which range in price from $250 (for T-shirts and sweatshirts) to $800 (for some pants). She’s partnered with local boutiques; the streetwear brand, Teddy Fresh; and national retailers including Anthropologie, Urban Outfitters and Free People on small batches of shirts, socks, bags and dresses.
“People say they can sense a certain energy in the hand-painted stuff,” Ms. Louthan said one afternoon this summer, while carefully adding green to a tendril on a pair of bluejeans.
Although her brand now has national reach, Ms. Louthan still paints her clothing at home, mostly on her kitchen table. Her process usually takes multiple days and consists of three stages: outlining forms, painting them and then heat-setting everything with an iron.
“I feel like with the rise of A.I., people are swinging the other way pretty intensely,” she said. “I think when everything feels so impersonal, people do gravitate toward art.”
Ms. Louthan’s work is fantastical, depicting off-kilter, edenic scenes of cherubs, rabbits, butterflies, devils, swans, moons and streams. She creates storybook worlds, where the sun smiles and jesters run wild.
She draws inspiration from illustrators of vintage children’s books (like Beatrix Potter and Roald Dahl); the Impressionist artist Mary Cassatt (known for her reverent paintings of domestic life); and ancient art.
Her daily walks to Awbury Arboretum, half a mile from her house, are also creative fodder. “There’s no roadblock,” she said, between what she sees blooming there and what she paints.
Before she had her first daughter, Rosie, in 2018, Ms. Louthan designed prints for mass market brands. Back then, she also painted by hand, but her designs would later be scanned, photoshopped and printed onto fabrics that would then be sold to companies like Gap, Old Navy and Alfred Dunner.
Ms. Louthan said her work today is “kind of the exact opposite of trying to design for thousands of people who want the same thing.”
Though Ms. Louthan occasionally orders plain white shirts or finds light-colored clothes in thrift stores, customers more frequently provide their own garments for her to paint (they have ranged from $800 Acne jeans to favorite old tees). It’s a way of giving clothes a second life, Ms. Louthan said, and making precious garments even more special.
The popularity of hand-drawn designs like hers can pose challenges. Producing a single garment is time consuming for artists and can also be physically taxing.
Ms. dela Roche of 69 Tearz used to joke that she was a “doodle machine.” But now, because of arthritis and bone spurs in her hand, she said, “I literally can’t hand-draw anything anymore.”
Last year, she and Mr. Campanelli, her business partner, began screen-printing outlines of her designs onto garments. Only about 25 items are screen-printed before Ms. dela Roche, 42, switches up the imagery. Mr. Campanelli, 33, still hand sews each garment and hand-paints certain portions, ensuring that each piece is distinct.
“Even if I try my absolute best, I cannot do the same thing twice,” he said.
In 2023, Mr. Williams and Mr. Ayers, the Small Talk Studio designers, expanded their then-three-year-old business to include seasonal, ready-to-wear collections.
“We had all these ideas we wanted to put into motion and we wanted the operation to support more than just these specific hand-drawn garments,” said Mr. Williams, 33. “The other part of it was also that there’s a ceiling to how much you can charge and how much you can put out if that’s all you’re doing.”
Of the current interest in such pieces, Mr. Ayers, 34, added, “We don’t know whether this is like a trend or not — you know, that people are into hand-drawn clothing.”
Ms. Louthan has had to make some adjustments, too. When she works with brands like Anthropologie and Free People, she is often tasked with fulfilling bulk orders of the same garment — 60 pairs of natural-dyed socks, for example, or 40 T-shirts emblazoned with kittens.
“They know that it won’t be all the same, but it’s as similar as possible,” she said. “I just work in batches, you know, kind of assembly-line style.”
Recently, Ms. Louthan has re-embraced the idea of licensing artwork to be scanned and printed on clothes. “I kind of hope to shift more into that in the future,” she said. “Honestly, just because hand-painting everything is physically — it’s just a lot.”
She’s striving to find a balance.
“There’s always at least one moment of, I would say, growth in every single thing I paint,” she said, pointing to a small area on a T-shirt where the red paint of a tomato bled into the blue paint of a stream. “I always make sure to have a few moments where I tell myself, even if no one else notices or no one else appreciates, I just think it’s really cool.”
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