Here you will see a Pekinese pagoda made of fresh and crackly peanut brittle —there a snow-white marshmallow igloo —there a toothsome pink nougat in the Florentine manner, rich and delicious with ...
Reporting from San Francisco — Sometime between 1924 and 1929, an unknown photographer stood on the hillsides that flanked Beachwood Canyon, pointed a camera north and snapped an image that would come ...
California Architecture and Design will be the topic at an upcoming presentation featuring Marc Appleton and Ted Bosley, being held at the University Club on November 16. Architect and author Marc ...
Between stacks of rolling flat files, Silvia Perea slides open a drawer and flashes a smile. “This, let me show you,” she says, “is a house made by Rudolph Schindler in 1922. Born in Vienna, Schindler ...
“If you saw a giant ice cream cone, you knew ice cream is up ahead.” If you were driving down Olympic Boulevard in Los Angeles in 1950, you’d be able to spot the Sanderson Hosiery store from a ...
Every item on this page was chosen by a Town & Country editor. We may earn commission on some of the items you choose to buy. As deadly wildfires raged in Southern California, Save Iconic Architecture ...
Frank Gehry’s passing at 96 has sparked tributes worldwide, but in California, his influence isn’t just remembered—it’s visible. From the gleaming curves of Walt Disney Concert Hall to the inventive ...
Most folks know Frank Lloyd Wright as America’s most influential architect. What’s lesser known is he loved the movies, and Hollywood loved him. “Wright was a big fan of the movies. He really admired ...
Robert Winter’s new book, “The Architecture of Entertainment: L.A. in the Twenties,” details how advertising and movies introduced eclecticism and exoticism to Southern California architecture.
On December 9, 1968, Silicon Valley witnessed an event that’s become known as the “mother of all demos.” For the first time, computer engineer Douglas Engelbart introduced elements of the personal ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Frank Gehry’s passing at 96 has sparked tributes worldwide, but in California, his influence isn’t just remembered—it’s visible.