A new exhibition at the Center for Book Arts in New York features a range of items — transistor radios, lanterns, cigarette lighters and more — designed to look like books.
It's not clear when, exactly, the store will shutter — but the closure will leave many Livingston crafters without a go-to shop for supplies.
Reduce, reuse, recycle” is one of those unforgettable chants. It makes its way into our brains and can affect our actions in the real world. All of us would readily ...
The frigid doldrums of January and February are not boom times for most brewery taprooms. Customers are burned out by holiday revelries, and winter’s raw winds and ceaseless gray skies make ...
Three months into business, local independent bookstore, Lif Books, is settling into the neighborhood and building it's own ...
Here are the best gifts for writers, journalists and authors that will inspire their creativity. Shop books, stationery, ...
While the new administration takes aim at DEI initiatives, there’s one place where diversity is alive and well: Children’s ...
By Melissa Gephart Rowan Public Library Children’s programs have resumed at Rowan Public Library following a winter break. In addition to Storytimes at all locations and a Homeschool STEAM class ...
When Ms. Kim set out to design the cover of “Fresh Complaint,” a 2017 story collection by Jeffrey Eugenides, a writer she had ...
With a coffee table book, museum acquisitions, celebrity collaborations, and a growing prominent collector base, barely-teen prodigy Andres Valencia continues to amplify his art world profile.
In James Stourton's new book, the history of London's art scene and how it became the big-money, cutthroat enterprise it is today, is explored with a gimlet eye and all of the necessary receipts.
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