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What Does It Mean to Dress Rich?

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What Does It Mean to Dress Rich?

Tory Burch, onetime muse of the Pierre-Park Avenue set, captured the second completely in a present actually predicated on imbalance: purposefully “damaged” heels, logos sliding off purses, slithery satin attire buttoned wrong-side ’spherical. The acquainted rendered, subtly, flawed — which made it appear very proper, one of many ironies of vogue. It’s not an accident that numerous solid members of “The White Lotus,” the present concerning the alienation and soullessness of the extraordinarily wealthy, have been the movie star will get of the season.

Meghann Fahy, who performed the not-so-dumb-blond trophy spouse within the present, sat entrance row at Khaite, the place the designer Catherine Holstein took a web page from the Row’s model of hidden luxe. As a substitute of her normal sharp-shouldered cool-girl jackets and fringed cocktail frocks got here floor-brushing pleated silks and tunic tops in monochrome shades with a monk-like mien, in addition to some deep-pile shearlings.

Beatrice Grannò and Simona Tabasco, the actors who performed the “White Lotus” prostitutes on the make, popped up at Michael Kors (together with Gloria Steinem and Gov. Kathy Hochul of New York), which turned out to be a celebration of Nineteen Seventies energy girls and the last decade when he bought his begin in flares and fringe, with an entire lotta leg and a tailor-made coat thrown on high. Mr. Kors has at all times imbued sportswear with the ineffable scent of expense, however that private-plane-to-Aspen method is beginning to tackle a sepia tinge. And never simply because he has a keenness for taupe.

“What does it imply to look wealthy?” Mr. Kors mused backstage. “It’s completely different than it was once. Once we had been doing the night issues this season, I mentioned: ‘You understand what? Individuals at evening need to really feel glamorous, completely. However are you carrying boots? Are you carrying a jumpsuit?’ It’s not the normal look-at-me corseted robe with the practice.” He paused. “I believe it’s form of the within wink-wink membership. You simply understand it once you see it.”

Heron Preston supplied a unique concept. “I believe it’s an perspective,” Mr. Preston mentioned, after a present of his namesake model that took the stuff of streetwear — beat-up leathers and pale denim, basketball shorts, moto jerseys and chain mail — and reduce it into the shapes of Champagne society: corsets, trapeze jackets, slip attire, all grounded by the quirkiness of huge pretend fur boots and footwear. (Furry footwear had been a pattern.)

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Hold on to your wishes — there's a 'Spider in the Well'

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Hold on to your wishes — there's a 'Spider in the Well'

Illustrations © 2024 Jess Hannigan

Spider in the Well, written and illustrated by Jess Hannigan

Illustrations © 2024 Jess Hannigan

Once upon a time, in the folkloric town of Bad Göodsburg, which is probably in Germany, there was an overworked newsboy.

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Not only did he bring the people their daily news, he also swept their chimneys, shined their shoes, and brought them their milk.

He was overworked, and underappreciated.

So, when the townspeople discover that their wishing well is broken, the newsboy sets off to fix it — and get some revenge. Thus begins this children’s tale of extortion, labor rights, and justice.

Author and illustrator Jess Hannigan spoke about her debut picture book, Spider in the Well, with NPR’s Tamara Keith. Here are excerpts from that conversation, edited in parts for clarity and length.

Spider in the Well

Illustrations © 2024 Jess Hannigan

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Illustrations © 2024 Jess Hannigan


Spider in the Well

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Illustrations © 2024 Jess Hannigan

Interview highlights

Tamara Keith: How did you come to write a book about a spider, when I understand that you are afraid of spiders?

Jess Hannigan: I am. I don’t care for them. But do I love the webs they spin? Yes. Do I love the spooky aesthetic? Of course. Basically, the whole story came about because I really just had the image of looking down a well with the web, with the spider in it, and I thought that would look cool. And then I kind of asked myself, like, ‘Is there a story here? Why is he in there? What’s he catching in the web?’ And it kind of just wrote itself from there.

Keith: Is everyone in Bad Göodsburg a little bit bad and a little bit good? Or are all people a little bit bad and a little bit good?

Hannigan: Well it’s supposed to be, you know, real life. I really like when a character is in a gray area with some good and some bad because it’s realistic and relatable. And we have heroes and we have “villains,” but they’re just like us. And that way they’re humanized. And you just get to kind of discuss who you side with, who you agree with.

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Keith: How would you describe what this book looks like?

Hannigan: I did the whole thing completely digitally. I kind of was going for a sort of imperfect printmaking effect because I love the look of block printing, but I don’t have the patience. So this was kind of a happy medium of me achieving that kind of folkloric, old-timey printing look without any of the labor.

Spider in the Well, written and illustrated by Jess Hannigan

Illustrations © 2024 Jess Hannigan

Spider in the Well, written and illustrated by Jess Hannigan

Illustrations © 2024 Jess Hannigan

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Keith: Where did you draw your inspiration for the art? The colors are not colors that you traditionally see in a children’s book. It’s like black and hot orange and purple.

Hannigan: A lot of my inspiration for the kind of shapes that I use comes from like, Polish posters. They’re from the 1960s and ’70s — Polish poster design was crazy and they had the wackiest shapes and colors, and I was introduced to those back in college.

These were just the colors that I had been obsessed with at the time that I happened to be making the book. They are like these kind of sickly, weird tones. And I used all those purples and greens for the “bad guys” because I guess it suited their vibe. But I’m actually colorblind, very slightly. So everyone’s been telling me this book is such a lovely shade of orange and I’ve been telling everyone it’s red.

Keith: What lesson do you want the kids who are reading this book — or who are reading it with their parents — what do you want them to take away from it?

Hannigan: I didn’t go into making this story with a lesson in mind. I know books with morals are important and they have a place for sure. But really I just wanted to make people laugh. And to go back and read it again and think, ‘What the heck was this guy even doing? Where did they learn how to do blackmail? Who taught them about extortion and labor rights and things?’

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I love stories like that, that just make you wonder more about them.

Spider in the Well, written and illustrated by Jess Hannigan

Illustrations © 2024 Jess Hannigan

Spider in the Well, written and illustrated by Jess Hannigan

Illustrations © 2024 Jess Hannigan

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Diddy Posts Apology Video for Cassie Beating

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Diddy Posts Apology Video for Cassie Beating

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Wait Wait… Don't Tell Me!

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Wait Wait… Don't Tell Me!
NPR’s weekly news quiz hosted by Peter Sagal. Have a laugh and test your knowledge with today’s funniest comedians and a celebrity guest.Hate free content? Try a subscription to Wait Wait… Don’t Tell Me!+. Your subscription supports public radio and unlocks fun bonus episodes along with sponsor-free listening. Learn more at https://plus.npr.org/waitwait
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