LIFE has published a previously unseen photo essay by legendary photographer Alfred Eisenstaedt, documenting Ernest Hemingway's life in Cuba in 1952.
New York magazine braves the glacial stares of Anna Wintour to bring readers the best looks from this year's pared-back Fashion Week. If you don't have any time, don't start looking -- it's addictive!
Danish designer Joaquim Marquès Nielsen takes readers through the long and fascinating creative process of conceiving, designing and creating an eye-grabbing poster for a friend's short film project.
People were critical of his cover for Nick Cave's novel, featuring as it did a lass with her legs open. Now an eBay seller has censored it. Crikey blogger and book cover designer WH Chong wonders what you think.
What else to open the 5th Typophile Film Festival but a stop motion homage to typography that's so good you could eat it. Includes letter soup and licorice all-fonts.
A stunning collection of images from photographer Edward Burtynsky captures the high environmental price we pay to live in an industrialised world, giving "a second look at the scale of what we call progress".
Women in Britain dress like frumps, says Linda Grant. A decade of noteworthy changes in fashion will do little but alter the colours they wear: from beige, grey and stone to navy and white. Aaargh.
Two Sydney-based architects have created a way to build new suburbs without contributing to urban sprawl: build them in the city, and build them vertically. Their 'Skyburbs' are skyscrapers housing entire communities.
Listen up, Western hipsters: if you're going to slavishly follow the fashion by wearing a keffiyeh, learn to do it properly. Ahmed Al-Omran explains how real Arabic men style the headscarf. A fascinating look at Middle Eastern fashion.
£500,000 pencils? Don't worry, Chong explains all with the story of a graffiti artist turned thief who's landed in big big trouble. The moral of the tale: contemporary artists have no sense of humour.