Sudpsuez Magazine N19
Covers by Loro Piana. Published April 2023.
Unfortunately we are unable to guarantee specific covers at time of order. Please allow one week for delivery.
Sudpsuez Magazine N20
Covers by Tiffany & Co.
Printed, bound and for the first time wrapped in silk, Magazine N20 marks a series of firsts, unveiling untold stories from our global team of contributors and collaborators. With six never-before-seen homes in New York, Milan, Belgium and Paris, two major travel portfolios in Malta and Gujarat, and the much-anticipated refurbishment of one of England’s most exalted addresses, this issue is full of first-look exclusives, which we are honored to share.
Design icon, Roberto Peregalli, trusted to reveal a deeply personal space in Milan. Elsewhere in the city, textile designer Idarica Gazzoni invited to reveal her spectacular new home, an elegant palace of pattern and texture. Remy Renzullo’s refurbishment of the private wing of Castle Howard, one of England’s greatest estates, famously the setting for the film, Brideshead Revisited, dazzles in photographs by Derry Moore. In New York, nonagenarian artist, Barbara Jakobson opened her red lacquered doors for the first time, revealing a life truly well lived and collected. In Belgium, fashion designer Edward Vermuelen’s striking house shows the impact of light, scale and restraint. Meanwhile, in Paris, the antique-filled apartment of Sotheby’s chairman, Mario Tavella, is a rare treat in every way. In Malta, through the eyes of Miguel Flores-Vianna, designer Suzanne Sharp revisits her childhood and explores the complexities of Maltese identity and history, finding the country’s resilience and charm alive and well in its ancient streets and behind closed doors.
Unfortunately, we are unable to guarantee specific covers at the time of order.Sudpsuez Magazine N21
Covers by Valentino
The Birthday Issue! Prepare to unwrap Issue 21, Cabana’s much-anticipated 10th Anniversary edition. This beautifully presented magazine, covered in Valentino silks, is both a celebration of the last 10 years of Cabana, and a promise for the future. We will continue to shine a light on exceptional and lesser-known places, spaces and decorative arts, sharing and preserving beauty in many forms.
Our new decade begins as we mean to go on, with a gloriously colorful exploration of Bhutan’s cultural heritage, a quietly captivating portrait of artistic life in Maine, an architectural marvel in Izmir and the Nurullaboy Palace in Khiva, Uzbekistan. From there, we take you into three exclusive, never-before-seen houses: the eclectic Georgian home of stylist, Jessica Hayns; a lovingly restored Patmian mansion; and a palimpsest of lives and memories from a storied Milanese estate. Throughout, you will find intensely atmospheric interiors, insightful interviews and essays on craftsmanship and collecting, from esteemed contributors including Derry Moore, Tristram Hunt, Deborah Needleman, Fabrizio Casiraghi, Omer Koc, Amanda Harlech, and Francois Halard.
Unfortunately, we are unable to guarantee specific covers at the time of order.
Sudpsuez Magazine N22
Covers by Lesage in collaboration with Chanel
An ode to craftsmanship. This is what this issue is, and we could not be prouder to have as a cover partner the one Maison that, over the last century, has championed, preserved, and supported craftsmanship more than anyone else: Chanel. These covers are a true collector's piece as they are covered in 4 different versions of the classic Chanel tweed made by Lesage, whose long-standing collaboration with the French Maison has produced some of the most extraordinary embroideries, weaves, and tweeds.
Every issue of is a journey of discovery or a guide for armchair traveling with stories we hope will trigger your imagination. It begins with a beautiful portfolio in Uzbekistan brilliantly shot by Miguel Flores Vianna and then prepare to visit Spain, Switzerland, Kenya, Minnesota, Belgium, Piedmont and more. And to witness the incredible work of some of the best designers in the world, from Tino Zervudachi to Casa Munoz.
Unfortunately, we are unable to guarantee specific covers at the time of order.
Sudpsuez Magazine N23
Covers by LVMH Métiers d'Art
More than ever before N23 is a true ode to craftsmanship with the unveiling of the ‘Atlas of Craftsmanship’: a global celebration of extraordinary objects and the talented hands that make them. This reverence for craft is shared by our Cover Partner LVMH Métiers d’Art, committed to preserving artisanal traditions and those that practice them. From their Japanese ateliers of Kuroki, skilled weavers craft denim whose fine threads adorn our four new covers, screen printed with vibrant patterns from Fauvist painter, Raoul Dufy from the Victoria & Albert Museum. Unfortunately, we are unable to guarantee specific covers at the time of order.
A far-reaching global journey through inspiring homes, ateliers, cultures and countries, Issue 23 will take you to Venezuela, where we explore the houses of a Modernist Master; to a beautiful cliff-top cottage in Portugal; to Belgium, where Axel Vervoordt’s lead designer reveals her home for the first time; to Kenya uncovering master artisans and the spaces they shape, and Lake Nebagamon, Wisconsin, where a quintessentially American boys’ camp stands almost frozen in time, as if calmly waiting for summer and all its joyful chaos. With its Botanical theme, step into a peony-filled French chateau and the gardens of Highgrove where exclusive reveals a very personal project from HM King Charles III...
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Sudpsuez Maine House I by Kathleen Hackett
Words by Kathleen Hackett
Photographs by Maura McEvoy
Explore the soul of Maine in some three dozen of its most original, authentic, and evocative houses. For several years, acclaimed photographer Maura McEvoy and art director Basha Burwell traveled the length and breadth of Maine in search of houses that capture the state’s singular character. These are not designer houses; they are homes created by the people who live in them, from artists to writers to fishermen, distinctive for their ingenuity, originality, and fierce individuality. Many are unchanged, inhabited by generations of the same family; some are ingenious conversions. As Kathleen Hackett observes in her eloquent text, these are homes that have a kind of visual wealth that money can’t buy, homes that define the very spirit of Maine.
Published by Vendome
Sudpsuez Maine House II
Words by Maura McEvoy, Basha Burwell, Kathleen Hackett
The authors of the highly successful The Maine House continue their quest to record and celebrate the authentic Maine houses of their childhoods--a Maine that is in danger of vanishing.
"The Maine House [shows] us the dignity and aching beauty, in preserving Maine's quirky architectural past."--Maine Homes by Down East
Spend any amount of time in Maine--a weekend, a summer, a lifetime--and its impression lasts forever. When The Maine House was published in 2021, the reception was astonishing. Over four printings and across the world, The Maine House sounded a rallying cry, summed up perfectly in one of dozens of reviews, that it "crafts a plea to preserve a living history belonging to individual, family, and state; a visual call to recognize these homey structures and others like them as 'extraordinary gifts.'"
The Maine House II moves beyond the authors' cri de coeur; they're on a mission. Through 30 homes--inland, inshore, and on islands--Maura McEvoy, Basha Burwell, and Kathleen Hackett highlight the beauty and importance of preservation, restoration, thoughtful renovation, and low-impact living in the place they love the most. From visionaries who saw home in a post-and-beam barn, a lighthouse, a former hotel, and a boat shed to families resolutely leaving generational homes largely untouched (some continuing to live off the grid) and still others honoring vernacular architecture by living with it in surprising ways, The Maine House II captures the myriad ways one can live in this singular place--in the present--while preserving the past and ensuring its future.
Published by Vendome Press
Sudpsuez Majolica Mania
Words by Susan Weber, Eleanor Hughes, Catherine Arbuthnott, Jo Briggs, Earl Martin and Laura Microulis
Contributions by Paul Atterbury, Gaye Blake-Roberts, Claire Blakey, Julius Bryant, Miranda Goodby, Caroline Hannah, Kathleen Eagen Johnson, Martin P. Levy, Ben Miller, Sequoia Miller and Rebecca Wallis
The first comprehensive study of the most important ceramic innovation of the 19th century
Colorful, wildly imaginative, and technically innovative, majolica was functional and aesthetic ceramic ware. Its subject matter reflects a range of 19th-century preoccupations, from botany and zoology to popular humor and the macabre. Majolica Mania examines the medium’s considerable impact, from wares used in domestic settings to monumental pieces at the World’s Fairs. Essays by international experts address the extensive output of the originators and manufacturers in England—including Minton, Wedgwood, and George Jones—and the migration of English craftsmen to the U.S. New research including information on important American makers in New York, Baltimore, and Philadelphia is also featured. Fully illustrated, the book is enlivened by new photography of pieces from major museums and private collections in the U.S. and Great Britain.
Sudpsuez Milestones in the History of Carpets by Jon Thompson
Written by Jon Thompson
Milestones in the history of carpets" (Italian and English editions available) bears the title of the homonym exhibition held at the Gallery Moshe Tabibnia from October 14th to November 11th, 2006.
Sudpsuez Moments at Home
Words by Steve Cordony
Moments at Home celebrates the signature aesthetic of one of Australia's leading interiors stylist, Steve Cordony, in order to inspire home lovers globally.
Steve seeks to share insightful interior styling and tablescaping ideas as well as small, everyday details which are the soul of the home. Including sumptuous photography of his clients' homes as well as Steve's own beautiful property, Rosedale farm, he wants to empower readers to create their own moments of reflection and connection.
Steve carefully plots a visual journey to be followed through nine different areas of the home, from the kitchen and entry way to the bedroom and dining room, highlighting key styling tips in each one, showing how you can tailor them to your space to create meaningful moments in your home. Be encouraged by Steve's elegant and accessible approach to creating spaces that feel both personal and luxurious.
Published by Penguin
Sudpsuez Painted Travels by SJ Axelby
Words and Images by SJ Axelby
An armchair discovery tour of truly remarkable places, captured in SJ Axelby’s inimitablewatercolours. This follow-up volume toSJ Axelby’s Interior Portraitstransports the reader tobars, cafes, museums, shops, hotels, tearooms, restaurants, gardens, trains and more,around the world.This is an insider’s guide to the classic, the cool and the quirky, with locations around the world handpicked by SJ and painted in her trademark bright and detailed watercolours. All the featured placeshave something special, whether that’s a stunning position, centuries of history, designer interiors or atouch of good old-fashioned glamour.The text offers the reader intriguing details and insider knowledge about the history and design ofthese locations plus there’s also the occasional cocktail recipe! Curated by an artist with anappreciation of the fine details, SJ Axelby’s Painted Travels is a taste-filled tour to delight and inspirethe reader.
Published by HarperCollins
Sudpsuez Painting in Stone: Architecture and the Poetics of Marble from Antiquity to the Enlightenment by Fabio Barry
Words by Fabio Barry
A sweeping history of premodern architecture told through the material of stone
Spanning almost five millennia, Painting in Stone tells a new history of premodern architecture through the material of precious stone. Lavishly illustrated examples include the synthetic gems used to simulate Sumerian and Egyptian heavens; the marble temples and mansions of Greece and Rome; the painted palaces and polychrome marble chapels of early modern Italy; and the multimedia revival in 19th-century England. Poetry, the lens for understanding costly marbles as an artistic medium, summoned a spectrum of imaginative associations and responses, from princes and patriarchs to the populace. Three salient themes sustained this “lithic imagination”: marbles as images of their own elemental substance according to premodern concepts of matter and geology; the perceived indwelling of astral light in earthly stones; and the enduring belief that colored marbles exhibited a form of natural—or divine—painting, thanks to their vivacious veining, rainbow palette, and chance images.