Results for Travel Category

Early Look at the Ace Hotel

blog_ace_hotel_01.jpgIts no-man's-land location of 29th and Broadway notwithstanding, the Ace Hotel New York (see our story in the new issue) set to open this February, is on track to attract a fashionable foodie crowd.  April Bloomfield and Ken Friedman of The Spotted Pig fame will be opening a 150-seat restaurant adjoining the hotel where diners can expect "rib roasts, racks of veal, lots of potted meat and some terrines," says Bloomfield, adding that offal will also be offered. "It's going to be kind of rustic, almost medieval."

blog_ace_hotel_02.jpg
A model room in the Ace Hotel.

According to Friedman, in the past few years he and Bloomfield (who also just opened The John Dory) have been approached by  "dozens of hotel people to do new hotels," including W Hotels and Morgans Hotel Group. The Ace won out, he says, because of Friedman's long-time ties with Ace founder Alex Calderwood.  In the Nineties, Calderwood, then based in Seattle, was known for throwing "legendary parties" explains Friedman, who had a previous career as an exec at London Records. "I'd always see him when I'd go out to Seattle or Portland to check out bands." 

Design firm Roman and Williams (they did Kate Hudson's LA house) will be giving the restaurant a turn-of-the century pub feel with an oak floor reclaimed from two different barns, a massive vintage bar and curtain-enclosed booths which, according to the firm's Robin Standefer, are a riff on Irish snugs (once used to shield ladies whilst they imbibed). There's still no word on their restaurant's moniker, though. "We've had a name for about six months and then I decided that I hated it," said Friedman.

blog_ace_hotel_03.jpg

Categories:

Utilities:

How Bazaar, How Bazaar

blog_bazaar.jpgFrom the glass shops and evil-eye bead stands to the carpet boutiques, Istanbul's Grand Bazaar (think extremely ornate mall) offers plenty of goods to take home to family, friends, and of course, ourselves. Carving out a few precious minutes from a shoot last week, my colleague Shiona Turini and I snuck off to spend some dough. Here's a sampler of our shopping tour in Turkey:

First-stop: Meters away from the bazaar entrance. Tunics and satchels, some made from old woven fabrics, others from popular prints a la Burberry, hang from the outdoor stands, tempting buyers to spend before even stepping inside. Purchased tunics for the moms, bags for the sisters. Regret not buying these tie-dye scarves.

blog_bazaar_scarves.jpgSecond stop: Inside the bazaar, after a number of left turns. Gorgeous lamps! Wait, those are hookahs...But inside a glass shop, we find lovely actual lamps to hang from our ceilings. Sweet. Even sweeter, the Turkish delights tasted at candy stores--good for roommates and coworkers. Quick stop for Turkish coffee before keeling over from over-stimulus.

More…

Categories:

Utilities:

Editor Chat: James Reginato

blog_jnrportrait.jpgFrom the high-rises of Doha to the Paris home of David Sedaris, it's been a busy spring for Jim Reginato, W's Features Director and connected man-about-town.

Have you been to any good parties lately?
Last week I went to a party thrown by Jonathan Burnham celebrating my friend Bob Morris' new book, Assisted Loving: True Tales of Double Dating with my Dad, which is Bob's hilarious tale of trying to help his recently widowed 80-year-old dad find a girlfriend. It wasn't like the typical impersonal book party. It was at Jonathan's house, and there was a surprise performance: Jonathan sat down at the piano and accompanied Bob, who sang a song inspired by the book.
 
What's on your agenda for the week?
Wednesday I'm looking forward to hearing David Sedaris--I interviewed him for the June issue--read from his new book at Barnes & Noble on Union Square. But the highlight will surely be the next night when I'm going to see Eartha Kitt at Cafe Carlyle. Anybody who hasn't seen Miss Kitt live needs to go.

Where have you traveled recently?
I just got back from Doha, the capital of Qatar, for a story I'm doing there. Though I spent three days in Doha, it's hard to describe, since virtually the entire city is a construction zone. On every corner a 60-story building is going up. Meanwhile you can still visit camel markets and falcon breeders.

Are you reading anything great right now?

I just finished Lucrezia Borgia: Life, Love and Death in Renaissance Italy, by Sarah Bradford. I love historical biographies and this offers an amazing glimpse inside the ultra-decadent Vatican of the late 15th-century.

Portrait by Mario Sorrenti.  

Categories:

Utilities:

Report from Harbour Island

Blog_harbour_island_beach

I've recently returned from my first visit to Harbour Island in the Bahamas, and I have the tan—and, more importantly, the caftan—to prove it. Famous for its white sand beaches and billionaire homeowners (think Ron Perelman, Barry Diller, Arki Busson and Robert Miller), the island is also home to The Sugar Mill, the cultishly revered store owned by model-turned-designer India Hicks.  In fact, one of the first things my friends and I did upon arrival was get on a golf cart (the preferred mode of transportation of the Brilanders, as the locals are called) and zip over to the shop.

Blog_harbour_island

The irony was not lost on us that we were coming from New York, a city with thousands of boutiques, and we were spending hours shopping at one store on a tiny island. But we couldn't resist the floaty caftans and cute bikinis—not to mention the decent exchange rate.

Unfortunately India herself was in Los Angeles filming Top Design—she's the show's new host—but we still had fun perusing the clothes from Allegra Hicks (India's sister-in-law), Anya Hindmarch Beach, Taka and the Danish line Day (my favorite). I ended up walking away with a pink-and-white scarf from Kenya, Spider Lily body polish (part of a bath collection India created with Crabtree & Evelyn) and a gorgeous cotton tunic that India had made, well, in India. I wore mine the very next day to Sip Sip, the restaurant where all the Brilanders, it seems, stop for lunch.

The Sugar Mill
(242) 333-3558
thesugarmill@coralwave.com

Categories:

Utilities:

Highgrove On The High Street

Blog_highgrove_exterior

Until recently, the quaint market town of Tetbury in England's Cotswolds district was best known for the antique shops lining its narrow, cobble-stone streets. Now there's another reason for visitors to flock to the Gloucestershire town. Last month, the area's starriest resident, Prince Charles—whose rambling country pad Highgrove is just outside Tetbury—set up shop there.

The store—Highgrove Shop—stocks a cornucopia of organic fruit and vegetables sourced from Highgrove's own Home Farm. There's also china decorated with images of hens, designed by Samantha Buckley, an alumna of Charles's Traditional Arts School in London, and soaps infused with hypericum plucked from his gardens.

So far, the store's royal connections have been drawing in the tourist crowds. "We've even had people from America signing the vistors' book," says Sally Jarrett, the shop's manager. But it's not only those eager to experience a slice of royal life who are turning up. Local residents are regulars too, snapping up chutneys, honey and leeks. The store's Champagne and red and white wines have also proved popular, perhaps because they're the very same as those served at official functions in the Orchard Room at Highgrove.

Even the usually cynical British press has nodded approvingly at the store, both for its relatively competitive pricing and the fact that all the store's profits go towards the Prince's various charities and projects. And for those who can't make the trip across the pond to visit the royal corner shop, not to worry. Later this year, the store will launch its own Web site, and the goods will ship worldwide.

Categories:

Utilities:

Mo' Better Mohonk

Blog_mohonk

"I didn't know there were any great, old, cool places like this in New York," marveled my step-daughter soon after we checked into the 139-year-old Mohonk Mountain House on a recent weekend. A teenage world traveler, she's seen Asia and Europe, but her first trip to the Shawagunk Mountains of upstate New York did not fail to impress.

With its winding hallways, creaky staircases and oak-panelled everything, the lodge reminded me of The Shining—that is, if The Shining had been a family comedy. Kids were everywhere in evidence, scampering through the halls, spending their parents' quarters in the game room and dressing up for dinner in the massive dining hall, where jackets are still required for men of all ages. We slept late, overate and played endless rounds of Scrabble and hearts in front of our room's crackling fireplace.

Blog_mohonk_outdoor_spa

Mohonk has managed to make its spa, which opened just three years ago feel equally old-world. There's an outdoor hot tub, a sauna, steam rooms and sixteen treatment rooms where you can get treatments like warm stone massages and rosemary sage body exfoliations. While you wait for your appointment, you can relax in the spa's glass-enclosed veranda, surrounded by ancient trees. I now hear that Mohonk may soon offer outdoor treatments. Excellent. Now I have a work-related excuse to plan our next visit.

Categories:

Utilities:

Thai One On

Blog_thai_fish_pants

The idea of getting a Thai massage has always seemed unappealing to me. In a Thai massage, I was always led to believe, one's body is stretched mercilessly into all sorts of uncomfortable positions, and instead of the masseuse's long, swooping movements, there are individual applications of pressure up and down the body. Sounded like way too much work. But a recent trip to Thailand, where I sampled the treatment at Chiang Mai's Four Seasons and the spa at Phuket's Trisara resort, proved me wrong. Not only was the massage, a combination of exacting moves, yoga and physical therapy, oddly energizing, it actually made me feel like I had done a bit of exercise—a serious plus. Still, the real bonus for me was the discovery of Thai fisherman pants, the oversize one-size-fits-all cotton trousers that one wears during the massage. The sarong-pant hybrid makes more of a style statement than sweats, and is the ultimate after-hours uniform. I scooped up 10 pairs at a local handicraft store for 100 baht (about three dollars) each;  you can score a pair online for $22 at fisherpants.com.

Fisherman photo: APICHART WEERAWONG/APPhoto

Categories:

Utilities:

Making a M1NT in Shanghai

Blog_mint_view

M1NT Shanghai, view overlooking the Bund

Three years ago, the members-only club M1NT was London's talk of the town. Billed as the world's first club in which members could own shares, M1NT quickly became known as the place where nouveau riche and old money rubbed shoulders, with members reportedly including Val Kilmer and Laura Parker Bowles.

But not all went smoothly for M1NT and its brash young founder, former trader Alistair Paton. The club's original location, on Sloane Street, closed in summer 2006 after the building's landlord (a company owned by Gordon Ramsay) claimed M1NT had fallen behind on its rent. And some of the boldface names identified as M1NT members—Elizabeth Hurley among them—told the press they'd never set foot in the place. But the club persevered, relocating to Mayfair and more recently opening locations in Hong Kong and Cannes.

This August, M1NT will bring its bling to Shanghai, opening a new club on the city's historic waterfront. The perks touted are almost cartoonishly billionaire-bratty: Members can sip Champagne from the rooftop Jacuzzi or buy Aston Martins directly from a catalogue that accompanies the drink menu. With no shortage of new wealth in China, finding people willing to plunk down the $25,000 minimum investment to become shareholders (non-shareholder members pay an $800 annual fee) shouldn't be a problem, says Paton. "The market has just changed dramatically," says Paton. "The next New Yorks, Parises, Londons—to me, that's Shanghai."

Blog_mint_bldg

M1NT Shanghai

Categories:

Utilities:

Love in the Time of Sarkozy

Blog_sarkozy_bruni

When I moved to Paris from Los Angeles last year, one of the upsides was a welcome respite from the never-ending onslaught of trashy celebrity culture. In L.A., if you don't Tivo The Hills and check TMZ twice a day (as I did, I admit), you often have nothing to contribute to a dinner party conversation. In Paris, however, being seen buying a tabloid like Gala is still more embarrassing than being caught chain-smoking in a maternity ward.

In truth, I always suspected that the relative paucity of gossip rags here was due not just to the time-honored Gallic respect for la vie privee, but also to the lack of interesting French celebrities.

And then Nicolas Sarkozy came along. In recent months the president (who appeared on Gala's cover seven times in 2007) has overturned decades of social and political protocol, and the ever-discreet French have been trying to figure out how they got tricked into electing Donald Trump. From his scandalous October divorce from Cecilia to his all-media globetrotting with ex-supermodel Carla Bruni to last weekend's release of three new biographies revealing Cecilia's true opinion of her ex—as an unstable egomaniac—the talk here is all Sarko all the time, which seems to suit the president just fine.

Alas, the hyperkinetic Sarkozy moves so fast that it's almost impossible to cover him in a monthly magazine like W. A few weeks from now, when our next issue hits the newsstands, who knows? Sarkozy may already have confirmed the latest rumors that he and Carla are expecting a child, or he may have dumped her for Angelina Jolie.

The French themselves, meanwhile, are watching the drama unfold with that mix of horror and fascination that we Americans know so well. At a dinner party the other night, a wealthy and elegant Frenchwoman declared that Sarkozy was the first plouc (a notorious Gallic put-down meaning something like a peasant or a hick) to ever occupy the Elysee Palace. After trashing his flashy clothes, his bad grammar and his unfathomable lack of discretion, she admitted that he does have attractive, muscular legs, which she knew from seeing his jogging photos in magazines like Gala. Then, when pressed, the woman admitted that she finds Sarkozy kind of hot. "He's a plouc," she said, "but a plouc with a certain charm."

Khaled Desouki/AFP/Getty Images

Categories:

Utilities:

Ski Report

Blog_snowbird_ski

Who needs the beaches of St. Barth's for Christmas when a new foot of snow is being dumped daily over Utah's Little Cottonwood Canyon? My family and I just returned from a week-long ski trip to Snowbird and Alta, and although every muscle in my legs has yet to recover, I'm still thinking about some of the sybaritic pleasures we discovered.

Snowbird and Alta, which are literally around the bend from each other, each offers its own distinct translation of luxe comfort. Snowbird's is, without a doubt, Cliffspa, high atop Cliff Lodge. Its rooftop pool and hot tub offer spectacular views of the white-peaked mountains. Whether you're a native Mormon or a New York City atheist, the view gives new meaning to the term "God's country."

Alta, generations older than Snowbird, has kept its old-school ways, from its charming rustic lodges to its no-snowboard policy (they've even resisted adding safety bars to the chairlifts). And it offered a most thoughtful surprise that we discovered on our last day. Stopping for lunch at the restaurant at the mid-mountain Watson Shelter lodge, we began the tedious process of removing mittens and loosening buckles. Then we noticed several pairs of inviting fleece Ugg-like slippers stowed neatly in a corner. "Oh yes, please, they're for you to wear while you eat," offered one of the waitresses. The four of us pounced on the pile and happily wiggled our newly cozy toes throughout our meal.

Blog_snowbird_cliffspa

Cliffspa at Snowbird

Categories:

Utilities:


Check in daily for the latest fashion news, shopping tips and celebrity scoop from the editors at W.

Join W on our Facebook fan page!

The seven best lip balms on the market.

Our up-to-date archive of all W's exclusive fashion and celebrity videos.
W Specials

Revisit Posh & Becks, Brad & Angelina, Naomi on cleanup crew, Madonna's yoga poses, the Kate Moss tribute issue and more at W Classics.

Check out W magazine's covers from the past five years, starring everyone from Angelina Jolie to Renée Zellweger.

From a castle in the Dolomites to a modernist masterpiece in Malibu, revisit some of the most spectacular homes featured in W.
Inside Wmagazine.com

Forget the obvious. These 10 chic gifts will surprise and delight.

Blake Lively is emerging as the buzziest (and busiest) of the Gossip Girl gang.