On the Hunt With Eight and a Half Interior Designers at Round Top
I shadowed the women of Audrey Scheck Designs up and down the aisles of the antiques festival, through countless cane chairs and dozens—nay, hundreds—of hand towels.
I shadowed the women of Audrey Scheck Designs up and down the aisles of the antiques festival, through countless cane chairs and dozens—nay, hundreds—of hand towels.
In a turn away from clean, cold mid-century modern decor, the design experts out of Round Top are favoring cozier “grandma-chic” furnishings, complete with the dings and imperfections of a well-loved history.
Pianist James Dick has spent half a century crafting the Round Top Festival Institute into a world-class destination for classical musicians, where architecture, fine arts, green space, and history meet.
Combine Dolly Parton with Stevie Nicks, and you get the idea.
For four days, Sisters on the Fly members from around the country camped in their retro Airstreams, Shastas, and more.
We hit Day One of the shows at Marburger and Excess Fields to show what you can find with some dedicated hunting.
With new shopping and hotel options, this biannual antiquing hub is now a year-round destination.
Amy and Brian Kleinwatcher, the owners of Old World Antieks, give us a peek inside their Round Top home built almost entirely out of salvaged materials.
Former Neiman Marcus fashion exec and fanatical antiques collector Derrill Osborn, at home in his Dallas apartment, where red and green reign supreme.
We put on our walking shoes and hopped a bus to Texas’s antiques mecca. Here are some of the treasures we found.
Sheila Youngblood, the owner of Rancho Pillow, gives us an exclusive look at her whimsical Austin home.
Accounts to follow and hashtags to search for the latest intel on Texas’s biggest antiques show.
Who's ready for some world-class junking?
Pretty soon, Round Top won’t look much like Round Top anymore.
Texas’s biggest shopping event is upon us!
What to do in this Hill Country hamlet when not antiquing.
Round Top, when there’s hardly anyone ’round.
Every spring and fall, thousands of buyers head to Round Top Antiques Week, looking for the object of their dreams—or just a cheap doodad to hang from the rearview mirror. A field guide to separating the corny dogs from the nineteenth-century armoires.
Elegant antebellum furniture in Jefferson, Latin American folk art in Smithville: Where the buys are in two dozen communities.