Real feel outside: -4°F.
Real feel inside: cozy among friends.







January 1st, 2018
Real feel outside: -4°F.
Real feel inside: cozy among friends.







January 1st, 2018

East Village
December 26th, 2017
This is it friends – 2017 is almost over! It has been adequately bumpy and all kinds of weird and felt, at times, like going two steps back for every step forward but, on a personal level, it’s been a rather good year. So it is only fitting that we bid it adieu with a splash of colour from one of New York City’s most beautifully restored neighbourhoods, the South Sea Port historic district.
Fulton Street is glowing in a ”Sea of Light”, an installation that will run through March 2018.







Wavertree, the great sailing ship, is decorated with its own Christmas tree, as is tradition in maritime countries around the world.
Tonight, even the New York Central No. 31 railroad barge pilothouse is bathed in light.

And so is the Titanic Memorial, the lighthouse erected in honour of the lives lost in the sinking of the Titanic.
From the iconic South Sea Port, my warmest wishes for a Happy, Healthy and Peaceful New Year!
May the light be with you always!
December 26th, 2017
Speaking of arctic chills, that’s how we had to get dressed to go out for a walk in the park – so you see why I can barely move under the layers.
Fighting ice with ice: perhaps some rounds in the rink would have kept me warm.
Although the cold didn’t seem to ruffle this bird’s yellow feathers!


Greetings from an icy cold Central Park
December 28th, 2017
It is a freezing end of year, here in New York City. We may not have seen much snow, but the weather forecast keeps making mention of an ”arctic chill” and warning merrymakers heading to Times Square to ring in 2018 that they are about to face one of the coldest ball drops on record this New Year’s Eve! As for me, I can barely move under multiple layers of clothes, undercoat, overcoat and headgear and nothing could make me withstand the Times Square agony. So why on earth was I lining up in the frigging cold outside the Google pop-up store, together with a bunch of youngsters half my age?
To meet this photogenic guy? Nope (sorry Chris)!
To play with the interactive pixel board? Nope, nope. 
To dive into the snow globe pool? Yaaaaas!!


Because where else would I get to play Ophelia in the contemporary drama “Death by Selfie”? 


Because kids of all ages wanna have fun.
Made by Google pop up store will be open until December 31st.
December 26th, 2017
Holiday window displays in Manhattan are integrally connected with Christmas in the collective consciousness of New Yorkers – and in that of the regular, or even occasional visitors too. They’ve become part of the tradition, glitz and glamour and beauty of the holiday season and there just can’t be Christmas in the City without them.
Here, for instance, are some takes from Bergdorf Goodman’s breathtaking displays, inspired by some of the city’s most iconic institutions such as the American Museum of Natural History, Museum of the Moving Image, The New York Botanical Garden, New York Philharmonic and New-York Historical Society (there are also windows for Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) and UrbanGlass but I have no captures of them).
Entitled ”To New York with Love”, a celebration of the city’s ongoing love affair with arts, history and music, they are simply spectacular.

New York Philharmonic



The New York Botanical Garden

Museum of the Moving Image
American Museum of Natural History (and an avid admirer)

New-York Historical Society

And back to business with the commercial part and evening gowns – entrance in grand style guaranteed.



A ball in the Four Seasons, maybe? 
At which point I have to move on because I feel I’m turning green; head over heels (image from Elie Tahari)

Midtown Manhattan
December 17th, 2017
Every Nutcracker’s nightmare before Christmas: standing all day at attention in the bitter cold, spotting all those nuts walking by and not being able to crack even a single one. Oh, the horror! 

Avenue of the Americas
Midtown Manhattan
December 3rd, 2017
And yet… I’d swear the cookie mountain was lower this morning. Much, much lower.

Christmas in Manhattan,
December 25th, 2017
Enjoying an extended and-of-year break in New York City!
A Radio City Stage Door Tour for an insider’s look at the Art Deco details, a walk into the – otherwise off-limits – Roxy Suite, a photo with a Rockette, cheesy as this may sound – check, check!
Starting point, a view over the Grand Foyer.
Art Deco elements are omnipresent, floor to ceiling: the carpet we are walking on was designed by Ruth Reeves in 1932 to form a tile collage, each tile an abstract depiction of a musical instrument. Reeves had studied with French painter Fernand Léger in Paris in the early 1920s. Léger’s influence is evident in Reeves’ innovative design – so innovative that it looks every bit as modern today as at the time it was conceived, 85 years ago.
Radio City’s interior designers Edward Durell Stone and Donald Deskey spared no expense nor effort to make the place as grand and stylish as possible. That is evident everywhere and restrooms are no exception. Here we are at the Ladies’ lounge, adjacent to the restroom on the third level, with a ”Panther” Mural of 1932, by Jenry Billings at its centre. Stylistically leaning towards Surrealism, still very much in place in an Art Deco environment.
A ”Wild West” Mural, by Edward Buk Ulreich graces the Gentlemen’s lounge.
The period leading to Christmas and New Year is the high season for the Rockettes who regularly go through their grueling routine of high kicks and tapping up to seven times a day and still do it with precision, impeccable style and – most difficult of all – a radiant smile (albeit a teary one at the end of the day). Here, we steal glimpses of one of their routines from the balcony.
Marveling at the vast, 6000-seat auditorium, where there are no pillars to obstruct the view, our guide informs us that, actually, it is what goes on under the stage that’s most impressive – the stage elevator system. This feat of engineering allows Radio City’s massive stage to be moved as necessary, in three parts, at the push of a button. Now, if that didn’t impress you just consider that, when assessed during the building’s massive renovation of 1999, the inspectors established that it was in such excellent condition, the elevator system was more or less the only feature that could be left untouched. It was built in 1932!
Interestingly, it attracted the Navy’s interest and the same principle was used in their aircraft carrier systems during World War II. It was thus that the stage elevator system of the Radio City Hall, became a national secret and even had its own government security agent guarding it throughout the War.
That staircase leads to Roxy’s Suite, where impresario Samuel “Roxy” Rothafel, the man who opened the venue and commissioned most of the features we enjoy today in Radio City Music Hall, used to receive his glamorous guests. Today, it is available to hire as a reception space.




The Spirit of Dance, Aluminium Sculpture, 1932 – by William Zorach. This was one of three statues removed from the Music Hall just before its opening, because they were considered risqué. They were later reinstalled after several months, following strong criticism.
The Phantasmagoria of the Theater by Louis Bouche, at the main lounge of Radio City Music Hall.
The crystal Christmas Tree stealing the limelight from the chandeliers and Ezra A. Winter’s epic mural that overlooks the grand foyer. ”The Fountain of Youth”, 1932, is one of the first commissions for the Music Hall and depicts a legend from the Oregon Indians about the beginning of time.



From the Radio City Music Hall, Happy Holidays to one and all!
Tour on November 26th, 2017
Yan Pei-Ming
Louis Vuitton as a young man, 2015
In 1906, a reference catalogue precisely inventoried items and luggage from Louis Vuitton. The trunks that would make the House a success were already there.
Louis, Georges and Gaston-Louis Vuitton posing with craftsmen in the courtyard of the Asnières-sur-Seine workshops, ca. 1888
Collage workshop at Asnières-sur-Seine, ca. 1903
Ideale trunk in natural cowhide, ca. 1903 with accessories from the 1900s
Paris suitcase in natural cowhide leather, 1914
Restrictive trunk in monogram canvas, once belonging to Gaston-Louis Vuitton, ca. 1925
Shoe trunk for thirty pairs of shoes in monogram canvas, once belonging to Yvonne Printemps, 1926


at the American Stock Exchange Building, through January 7th, 2018.
Admission is free
November 12th, 2017
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