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At Katz’s Delicatessen, on the Lower East Side, the fashion crowd and associated influencers gathered to celebrate Prada Mode, a traveling culture series organized by the Italian fashion house, which began on Wednesday. At the party, guests including the actress Hunter Schafer, the poet Amanda Gorman and Ella Emhoff, the artist and stepdaughter of former Vice President Kamala Harris, were offered pastrami sandwiches and other deli staples. During lulls in conversation, our reporter @yolamzizi spotted some attendees checking the score of the NBA finals game. The first two days of Prada Mode are invite-only workshops, music performances and talks, but the series will open to the public from Friday until Sunday with art installations on view at several locations across Manhattan. At the link in our bio, get an inside look at how @prada took over @katzsdeli for the night and learn more about Prada's cultural series. Photos by @dollyfaibyshev by @nytstyle
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"I am a high school teacher, and occasionally I wear sandals. Students have started to tell me I shouldn’t have my toes out, but I am of the generation where you don’t wear socks with sandals," a reader wrote to Vanessa Friedman, chief fashion critic for The New York Times. "Is that changing, and if so, why? What are the “rules” of socks and sandals for 2026?"Tap the link in our bio to read @vvfriedman's tips on how to navigate fashion's fraught relationship with feet. Photo by @simbarashecha by @nytstyle
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How do couples come together despite major challenges, and how do their stories push beyond expectations of human connection? @nytstyle reporter Sadiba Hasan explores these questions and more when she covers love and weddings. 💐💍 by @nytstyle
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When Danielle Snyder’s husband got her tickets to her first NBA game in 2021, she faced a relatable conundrum: She couldn’t figure out what to wear.For Danielle, who has a keen eye for craftsmanship — she runs a jewelry brand with her sister, Jodie Snyder — regular merch with standard team logos was simply not going to cut it. So she chopped up one of her husband’s old Warriors jerseys, stitched it to a plain white T-shirt in a patchwork fashion and covered the number 30 on the front and back in crystals.Her DIY project would become the catalyst for a new business venture for the sisters: a creative sports merchandise brand @dannijopro. Only two years in, the brand is sold at about half a dozen stadiums across the country and is worn by celebrities as well as a host of athletes’ wives and girlfriends (or WAGs, as they are sometimes called), including Ayesha Curry.Much other women’s sports apparel is just modified from men’s items following a “pink it and shrink it” model. Read more about how the Snyder sisters charted their own course, at the link in our bio. Photos by @dollyfaibyshev by @nytstyle
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“Cats: The Jellicle Ball” has received nine Tony nominations, including one for Qween Jean, the costume designer. Our chief fashion critic, Vanessa Friedman, joins our chief theater critic, Helen Shaw, to talk with Jean and uncover some of the show’s hidden references.At the link in our bio, read our full review of “Jellicle Ball.” Video by Helen Shaw, Vanessa Friedman, Léo Hamelin, Laura Salaberry and Sutton Raphael/The New York Times by @nytstyle
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As we approach the Knicks’ first appearance in the NBA finals since 1999, fans with the misfortune of not being named Timothée Chalamet or Spike Lee have been cursing the gut-punching ticket prices for the team’s home games at Madison Square Garden.But tickets are not the only Knicks commodity to have peaked during the team’s providential playoff run. The market for vintage Knicks apparel has soared, as have the prices. Over the weekend on eBay, a tee from the 1999 finals sold for $350. What is the obsession with vintage merch?"To wear a tee from the ’90s or the ’00s is to demonstrate (genuinely or not) that you have been with the team through the good times and the bad," our fashion reporter, Jacob Gallagher, wrote. In his latest The Fashions newsletter, @jacobwgallagher talked to vintage clothing sellers in New York about keeping up with the demand. Tap the link in our bio to read the full story and subscribe to The Fashions. Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE, via Getty Images by @nytstyle
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To celebrate Marilyn Monroe's 100th birthday, 1,037 fans came together to dress as the screen legend in downtown Palm Springs, beneath her giant statue.In doing so, they set a Guinness World Record in the very place where her career began. Palm Springs — whose identity is inextricably linked with the star — likes to claim Marilyn Monroe, born Norma Jeane Mortensen, and the feeling was mutual.Participants arrived with Marilyn handbags, Marilyn necklaces, Marilyn earrings, Marilyn umbrellas and enough red lipstick to supply the entire city. Blonde wigs and white dresses were provided by Palm Springs Pride, the organizers of the citywide birthday party. Though all the wigs were the same, no one appeared to be celebrating the same Marilyn Monroe.At the link in our bio, read about what the cinematic legend means to her fans and see more photos from the record-breaking event. Visuals by @francesca.forquet by @nytstyle
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Anyone walking down the street in the ’90s would not have been surprised to see a passerby toggling between a couple of pagers at once, and maybe retrieving an early flip phone or a Discman from a Kate Spade purse.But after years of progressive slimming down and merging of our electronics into single devices that do everything, clunky seems to be back. The screens are bigger, the headphones are more obtrusive and, crucially, there are two or even three phones on hand.It may seem counterintuitive, but many people who carry two cellphones believe it’s the healthier choice, allowing for clearer boundaries between work and life. But the poly phone life comes with the inconvenience of having to actually carry them. And everyone handles it a bit differently. From stacking to pocket stuffing, tap the link in our bio to see how New Yorkers are managing the multiple-phone life. Photos by @instadickie by @nytstyle
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Every lifestyle entrepreneur needs a home grand enough to serve as an aspirational backdrop. Martha Stewart had Turkey Hill, her historic farmhouse in Westport, Connecticut. Hannah Neeleman has Ballerina Farm, a 328-acre spread in Kamas, Utah.Nabela Noor found such a place two years ago, an 11,000-square-foot white-brick Georgian Revival mansion, built in 1912, in York, Pennsylvania, the small city where she grew up. The daughter of immigrants from Bangladesh, Noor has been a full-time digital creator for a decade, and her social media followers, more than 12 million of them, have watched her transform her home and grounds with her family.Now, the mansion serves as the setting for the new Tubi streaming series “Hosted by Nabela Noor,” as she moves her idealized take on family life beyond the social media platforms where she started. The New York Times got a tour of her home and spoke with @nabela about her content, the show and what's next for her and her family. Tap the link in our bio to read the full article. Photos by @schaunchampion by @nytstyle
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Walking through SoHo with Maurice Kamara, you get the sense that he is judging every outfit he sees. Often, he likes to ask strangers — and, increasingly, celebrities — about their outfits on camera, posting the videos on his Instagram account the People Gallery.At its core @thepeoplegallery_ is a document of personal style. The account has featured Kim Kardashian, Michael B. Jordan and Anna Wintour. His interviews with celebrities come off as spur of the moment, but in reality, they typically require a decent amount of planning — or waiting. “A lot of people don’t know that it’s a lot of work,” Kamara told The New York Times.But interspersed among the celebrities are video interviews with everyday people whose outfits simply happened to catch his eye. At the link in our bio, more about Kamara’s passion for fashion and how he has built his account into what it is now. Photos by @aundre by @nytstyle
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Rachel Dratch, the veteran comedian beloved for her “Saturday Night Live” characters like "Debbie Downer," is finally getting her due, with her popular, mystical "Woo Woo" podcast and a return to the Broadway stage.In late March, Dratch began her run as the Narrator in “The Rocky Horror Show” at Studio 54, a role that has earned her her second Tony nomination. (Four years ago, she was nominated for her role as Stephanie in “POTUS: Or, Behind Every Great Dumbass Are Seven Women Trying to Keep Him Alive.”)The role of the Narrator is often performed by an older white man. But Sam Pinkleton, the show's director, envisioned Dratch in the role for a reason: “Nobody can do dry, understated, commanding humor quite like Rachel,” he said.After she left “S.N.L.” in 2006, Dratch's career seemed to be slowing down, and she started to panic about her future. “And then I sort of decided not to,” she told The New York Times. Read more about how @raedratch not only manifested her dreams, but is exceeding them, at the link in our bio. Photo by @ok__mccausland by @nytstyle
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On Tuesday evening, devoted fans of the Bravo series “Summer House” gathered an AMC theater to watch the first episode of a three-part reunion. The fans, who had bought one of the $70 tickets for the screening, wore themed apparel including shirts and hoodies with several of Kyle Cooke’s most popular lines: “Carl’s a mess” and “Summer should be fun.”The show, which was once a chance to live vicariously through hot, young people in the Hamptons, shifted into more emotional topics after it was announced that cast members, Amanda Batula and West Wilson were romantically linked off-camera. Batula had recently separated from Cooke, her husband, and Wilson had dated Ciara Miller, another cast member and one of Batula’s closest friends on the show, sparking conversations around friendship breakups and romantic betrayal.Many in the crowd seemed to share a desire to watch the reunion with other fans of the show. “Usually I’m just at home yelling at my TV, so it’s going to be nice to yell with other people this time,” one fan told our reporter @shivanigonzalez. At the link in our bio, read more of what fans thought about the "Summer House" reunion and see more photos from the screening. Photos by @kristaschlueter by @nytstyle
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