This tub had to be the most unusual thing I saw at the Kitchen & Bath show earlier this month. The Viaggi wood tub by Maax is an egg-shaped freestander that comes on a wood base. Wonder how the finish holds up?

—JAN PARR  

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This tub had to be the most unusual thing I saw at the Kitchen & Bath show earlier this month. The Viaggi wood tub by Maax is an egg-shaped freestander that comes on a wood base. Wonder how the finish holds up?

—JAN PARR  

" />

This tub had to be the most unusual thing I saw at the Kitchen & Bath show earlier this month. The Viaggi wood tub by Maax is an egg-shaped freestander that comes on a wood base. Wonder how the finish holds up?

—JAN PARR  

" />

This tub had to be the most unusual thing I saw at the Kitchen & Bath show earlier this month. The Viaggi wood tub by Maax is an egg-shaped freestander that comes on a wood base. Wonder how the finish holds up?

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The lives of young adults can change multiple times in the course of several years. They get married, have children, send the kids off to school. When home values were rising fast, young people could afford to think short-term and buy a place that suited their immediate needs. For most, a rising market would make moving on to the next property a profitable step—or at least not a financially ruinous one. Read more
Conceived by J. C. Steinbrunner, an artist, and Tom MacDonald, the owner of The Bluebird, The Salon Series is in part a response to the weak economy. But it's also a reaction against typical gallery culture: How can artists show their work outside of the gallery system? How to you get people to talk about art in a different way?... Read more
Early Monday morning, I spoke on the phone with Jim Houlihan, whom I interviewed in person last Wednesday. I wanted an update on the Senate race in light of the closing of the Giannoulias family’s Broadway Bank on Friday. Houlihan was in Washington for the wedding of a friend, but he got a chance to see his pals, David Axelrod and Rahm Emanuel... Read more
A Fresh Take on Consignment
Even though Divine Consign (111 N. Oak Park Ave., Oak Park; 810 North Blvd., Oak Park; 708-386-3366, divineconsignoakpark.com) opened at the height of the economic recession, when many other Chicagoland shops were closing, the Oak Park home boutique found a niche. Read more

Kohler always has something to bring to the table, or bathroom as it were. At the recent Kitchen and Bath Industry Show, two new products stood out for me: the Karbon lavatory faucets and the Katagami wading pool lavatory.
The faucets are cool because they bring the convenient articulating and spraying functions of many kitchen faucets into the bathroom, where they’re often needed just as much (men, think how nice it would be to adjust the faucet while you are shaving; women, think how nice it would be to spray those globs of your man’s blue toothpaste down the sink without any contact with the gooey stuff). As for the caste-bronze Katagami basin, it’s just a simple, lovely design that will patina over time and make for an elegant touch in a powder room.

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Just ask our nightlife writer Amalie Drury, who lives nearby: Old Townies and Lincoln Parkers alike spent the better part of winter drooling in wait for this new wine bar to open—and finally, last week, it did, with a list of 21 varieties available both by the glass and the bottle, plus a menu of Southern European small plates. Our photographer dropped by Friday night and found a chic crowd in a... Read more
The pianist Laurence Hobgood is perhaps best known as the long-time collaborator and accompanist of the singer Kurt Elling, in equal measure for his sterling keyboard work and ingenious small-group arrangements. Last year, Hobgood put out the tremendous solo/duo album, When the Heart Dances, with the legendary bassist Charlie Haden; but for this trip back to Chicago he'll lead a sextet of old local friends, including the saxophonists John Wojciechowski and Pat Mallinger... Read more
 

Recently I met with Simon Doonan, all-around groovy guy and creative director of Barneys New York. You may know him as the genius behind the store’s traffic-stopping holiday installations or perhaps as Jonathan Adler’s witty Brit of a husband. I caught him sailing through town for a gig at Barneys. Want to know more of what’s on Doonan’s mind? See Barney’s Babble.

What was your most recent home design purchase?
Johnny and I just installed a ping-pong table in our Palm Beach home. It is a ridiculously important part of our lives. We covered it in vintage paisley wallpaper and play right over the accessories. I am a big believer in games and staying in for game night. I love Scrabble and Monopoly too.

Who wears the decorating pants in your family?

I am more of a prankster [he’s fond of putting kitschy books on his shelves]. I defer to Johnny. I see things as displays. I might see a great Pirelli calendar and frame it up. As far as tabletop, forget it. Stemware freaks me out.

What color combinations are you feeling?
I am happy to see orange about. Also with pink—in a sort of St. Laurent combination. In Victorian times, pink symbolized power and courage. You saw it used in hunting. It’s really much more poppy and bold, than girly. I am fascinated by the meaning of color. Like black—it is sexy, satanic, and seen on both widows and floozies. Some colors really have a complicated and complex association, don’t you think?

What’s new at Chelsea Passage at Barneys?
We are excited about new DL & Co.’s Essence of Green Home Fragrance collection—candles and diffusers. Kim Seybert bar accessories and placemats in great brown-and-white graphic prints. Celestina, a refined, glamorous home accessories collection that uses exotic materials and techniques in lacquer, shells, and shagreen. Resin home accessories from Tina Frey—very cool and Zen shapes in vases and bowls. Anything Fornasetti, from pillows and boxes to wall plates and trays. Sydney Albertini hand-painted abstract dinnerware. She will paint any custom design or color, don’t you love that?

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List Price: $5.75 million
Sale Price: $5.25 million
The Property: On April 15th, the developer and socialite Fred Latsko sold this Gold Coast chateau with its extensive rehab still unfinished. Mary Bennett, the sales agent for Latsko and his wife, Julie, says that her clients planned to live in the house, “but it didn’t work out that way.” She says that the buyer—identified in public documents as... Read more