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Attractions and Accessories for the Tennis Obsessed

Plus: tableware that channels rural Britain, illustrated pastry boxes and more recommendations from T Magazine.

You’re reading The T List newsletter.  A weekly roundup of what T Magazine editors are noticing and coveting right now, and guides to the world's best hotels and destinations.

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Left: in La Embajada’s bedroom, a wheat straw wreath from Michoacan hangs over an array of textiles and an indigo rug from Teotitlán del Valle. Right: in the kitchen, where coffee and snacks are made for guests, tiles from Guanajuato cover the wall behind a La Cornue range. The floor design is by Francisco Toledo.Credit...Clay Grier

Clarksville, a historic district of Austin, Texas, has lately emerged as a stylish dining and shopping enclave. Among the area’s most compelling new businesses is La Embajada, a design shop housed in a 1923 Craftsman bungalow. Combining the hospitality and interiors expertise of its founder, Raul Cabra — who has designed tableware for some of Mexico City’s most celebrated restaurants, including Rosetta and Pujol — La Embajada presents a refined, regionally diverse selection of Mexico’s artisanal offerings. A series of small rooms display vintage and contemporary furniture, from stately midcentury armchairs and 1970s glass sconces to a minimalist agave fiber rug by the Oaxaca-based textile artist Trine Ellitsgaard. The house is also an actual residence. Cabra often stays in the bedroom up the creaky stairs, and he’s recently made it available for short-term stays (bookings include a daily basket of baked goods from Austin’s Swedish Hill). Guests can purchase the room’s handmade décor, such as a pair of sleek bedside lamps in milky white onyx, a 1960s La Malinche dresser and a bedspread from a Michoacan manufacturer that once supplied Herman Miller. Downstairs, glassware, candles and gifts fill a section modeled after a typical general store in a small Mexican town. But La Embajada’s heart is its inviting kitchen, where visiting chefs cook elaborate meals and staff prepare ice cream and coffee. In another twist, every bespoke detail — including a hammered copper sink, caramel-colored tiles and waxed pine cabinets — can be custom-ordered for one’s own home. From $295 a night; email queonda@laembajada.shop to inquire about a stay.


Consider This

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Left: the tennis courts at La Rosière in La Rosière-Montvalezan, France, as pictured in the book “The Tennis Court.” Right, from top: “Outta Gas” logo tee, $34, The Courts; the Racquet Oxford by Palmes for Sperry, $100, palmes.co; MCM Tennis racket cover, $650, us.mcmworldwide; J.Lindeberg Miko Headband, $13, jlindebergusa.com.Credit...Left: from "The Tennis Court" by Nick Pachelli (Artisan Books). Photo: Courtesy of La Rosière. Right, from top: Courtesy of the brand; Simon Knudson; Courtesy of the brands (2)

Tennis, everyone? The starchy sport, long the province of country clubs and corporate sponsors, has inspired a whole new creative class. Palmes, an online magazine that sells a streetwear version of the sport’s classic togs, is also a burgeoning community that aims “to break down the barriers to tennis,” says founder Nikolaj Hansson, with outreach such as free hitting sessions and lessons around the world. Tennis Club Milano Alberto Bonacossa in Italy’s design capital — featured in a new art book-travelogue “The Tennis Court, A Journey to Discover the World’s Greatest Tennis Courts,” by Nick Pachelli — dates back to the late 19th century but now doubles as a venue for opera, gallery openings and book signings. The Courts, a funky little public oasis in the California desert, also functions as a design studio. Fashion labels MCM and J. Lindeberg have incorporated the sport into their collections in the form of logoed racket bags and Borgian headbands. And the first New York solo show of the 75-year-old Scottish tapestry weaver Elizabeth Radcliffe will debut during this year’s US Open, at the Margot Samel gallery in TriBeCa (Sept. 6 through Oct. 12). Picking up from her waxed motorcycle jacket series from the 1970s, Radcliffe has been inspired by iconic and vintage tennis gear, as in “Philly in Lacoste,” a 17.7 inch by 11.4 inch tapestry depicting a polo shirt that took about 200 hours to weave.


Shop This

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The artist Laura Chautin’s new ceramic tableware collection features her delicate nature drawings.Credit...Masami Hosono

The New York-based artist Laura Chautin grew up in London and has fond memories of childhood trips to the English countryside. The heaths and ponds of the country’s rural areas often show up in her delicate landscape paintings, while blossoms and vines adorn the plates, vases and other tabletop staples she’s sold in limited runs since 2019. Now she’s expanding her offerings with a new venture, Goods by Laura Chautin, which she says will eventually include all the elements to set “the perfect table,” including linens, tablecloths and seat cushions. The initial Goods collection consists of new ceramic pieces handmade by artisans in Porto de Mós, a town in central Portugal, and painted with Chautin’s beloved English flora and fauna. A candlestick holder is accented by rings of foliage and sky, while a pair of egg cups come with pink or blue accents. A dinner plate features a flowery marsh; a dessert plate, a pair of swans. The collection is available online at Moda Operandi, and at a late September New York pop-up at Vacancy Project, a hair salon in the East Village owned by Chautin’s partner, Masami Hosono. From $50, modaoperandi.com.


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