As nature lifts into spring, we open the second issue of Holiday Interiors and Gardens.
This volume follows spaces shaped slowly by use, memory, and return. Places where time accumulates rather than resets. Interiors that settle, evolve, and endure.
We move through architectures that extend rather than erase, where every element becomes part of a longer continuity. Across landscapes and interiors alike, a similar logic emerges: nothing remains fixed. Forms persist, but they shift. In the summer light by a river, where the ordinary takes on a sharper presence. In lives shaped by attention and duration. In spaces that are not imposed, but built gradually through habits, objects, and time.
From a terrace overlooking the Pacific in Big Sur to more intimate interiors formed through daily use, what remains constant is not style, but a way of living. One that resists the new and instead absorbs it into what already exists. And, in doing so, a way of beginning to imagine what comes next.
Perhaps this is the thread running through the issue: a way of inhabiting the present without cutting it off from what came before.