posted a now-deleted video looking for input from fellow parents, and they did not shy away from sharing their honest thoughts.
Chic. Ease. Italian, Indian—I know I cheated.If I'm shopping, I'm mostly looking for vintage...even if I'm shopping online. I tend to veer towards French and Italian brands, or when I'm visiting India, there are specific stores I go to. There is a place in Paris, in Le Marais, where I found my favorite Saint Laurent shoes. Love me a Saint Laurent! And in Rome, where I grew up, there's the Porta Portese market where you can get a vintage cashmere cardigan, old books, and unique pink knee-high socks.
It's a pair of jeans that everyone always asks me about that are really old Levi'. They were given to me by a guy, so you know they have that kind of heavy weight to them. I wear those with a white T-shirt and usually Repetto ballerina slippers.It's funny, I never thought about [style] in my family, you know, definitely on my British side. I do have a certain reserve, and I love a good collar and an A-line skirt. There's definitely an influence there. Recently, when I went home to Kolkata, one of my aunties came over, and she was wearing a sari that had a very old look to it, almost like a black and white photo made in red, and she had these thick rim, almost like German intellectual glasses on, and I looked at her, and I was like, "Oh if I wore a sari, I would wear it like her."Every city has its thing, and in New York, it's more about the person you
than the clothes you're wearing. New York has a real sense of freedom of expression, and you can change who you are or what you wear every year, and no one will judge you. Whereas, in a smaller place, everyone is like, "Who does she think she is? You know?" I don't feel that here.In New York, there are so many people from different countries and backgrounds that it's not as apparent on the street what a trend is. I can fall in love with a trend without really knowing what it is, but I definitely don't follow them.
Caitlin and I have this running joke, because when we first met, which was over Zoom, I said to her, "Since I'm new to this, do you mind if we keep things to like only one or two emails and only a few choices of dresses because I think I'm going to get overwhelmed?" She laughed and goes, "That's my dream!" So we kind of stuck to that, and now it's kind of beautiful working with her because she really watches out for what I like.
Fashion comes from the books you read, the art you like, and the way you love and flirt. Like when you flirt, do you like to look at the ease [of someone], or do you like to look [at them] architecturally? I think the same goes for fashion.This one is best played with a group of fathers and kids. Have the kids write down a list of things they think are in their dads’ wallets. Then invite the dads to empty their wallets and see who has the most matches.
A new mom took to TikTok to ask whether it was normal not to talk to her baby, sparking a wave of criticism.posted a now-deleted video looking for input from fellow parents, and they did not shy away from sharing their honest thoughts.
"Does anyone else like not talk to their kid or their baby?" she began the video.“My daughter is 11 months old and me and my wife spend most days with her together," she explained in the video. "Today, it was just me and her all day, and I realized sitting at dinner that it was just quiet and we weren’t even talking, which she can’t talk about, but I don’t talk to her."