There’s been a wave of brands embracing maximalism in fresh and exciting ways over the past few years. Think of Figma’s latest rebrand that waved goodbye to static geometric shapes and launched ...
Kosuke Okahara for The New York Times Supported by By Clay Risen One afternoon in February 1891, a Japanese chemist named Jokichi Takamine arrived by train in Peoria, Ill. He was there at the ...
Over the years, the family maintained the original wooden and traditional structures like Shoji doors and geometric Japanese indigo-dyed curtains for a Japanese feel, while adding works by foreign ...