SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2010

FEATURES

Going Gaga
Who's that "Lady"? Fhis fall's fashion trends bring to mind a certain uniquitous pop star.

Healing Gardens
All over the city, small pockets of green offer unexpected encounters with nature.

Best Dressed Sale
The annual sale coordinated by the Women's Board of Johns Hopkins is a chance to rack up deals on designer duds, all whiel benefiting the hospital.

'Mad Men' in Baltimore
Two local advertising executives reflect on their own real-life version of the hit TV show.

Ship Shapes
A Baltimore tugboat is the backdrop for this season's spins on the classic men's peacoat.

A Signature Store
With its palace-like downtown emporium and five chick barnches, Stewart's was a mainstay of the Baltimore retail scene for 82 years.

Prison Yarns
Columbia resident Lynn Zwerling has created a program that teaches inmates at Jessup to knit.

Rooms at the Top
Designer Alexander Baer has created a personal space to house his books, collections and art in an uptown penthouse with sweeping views of the city.

The Fat Lady Still Sings
Think opera is dead in Baltimore? Think again. Five small local companies are keeping the flame alive.

DEPARTMENTS

Editor's Letter


Showcase
"Cirque Dreams Illumination" comes to the Hippodrome.

Get Out
Style's picks for the can't-miss events to put on your calendar.

Gallery
Jordan Faye Contemporary.

Savvy Shopper
Style's own gal-about-town dishes on what's new in stores.

The Details
Stylish bookends.

Beauty Mark
What's new and notable.

Epicure
Food, wine and frivolity.

Food for Thought
Writer Mary K. Zajac learns to cook an Indian dessert.

Good Tastes
Four new upscale apple recipes from chef Andrew Evans.

Travelogue
Inns for leaf peeping.

Getaways
Hope & Glory Inn.

Past Perfect
The old downtown campus of Calvert Hall College.

Spotlight
Baltimore native handbag designer Danielle DiFerdinando.

Life Lessons
College of Notre Dame of Maryland's president Mary Pat Seurkamp.

Entertaining
David and Jane Smith host a garden party for Kennedy Krieger Institute.

The Back page
Essayist Chris Corbett ponders Banned Books Week.





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