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Highlights

  1. A Rare View of the Met Gala

    For most of us, fashion’s party of the year ends with the red carpet. But our reporter got a look inside.

     By Matthew Schneier and

    Kim Kardashian West, Kendall Jenner, a replica of Jared Leto's head, and Jeff Bezos.
    CreditLandon Nordeman for The New York Times
  2. No Regrets

    Katy Perry Comes With Extra Cheese

    Inside the Met Gala after-parties held by Gucci, Moschino and the Top of the Standard.

     By

    CreditKrista Schlueter for The New York Times
  1. In Oklahoma, a ‘Vastly Different’ Kind of House

    The neighbors in Tulsa may think it looks like a modernist museum, but that suits one art collector just fine.

     By

    Credit
    ON LOCATION
  2. Leonia, N.J.: A Suburb of Artists, in Easy Reach of Manhattan

    Known for its creative community, the Bergen County borough is said to have “more oboists per capita” than anywhere else. But look out for the traffic.

     By

    Overpeck County Park, on the western edge of town, has biking and walking trails, as well as an equestrian center.
    CreditTony Cenicola/The New York Times
    Living in
  3. Does This Dress Make Me Look Guilty?

    This week Anna Sorokin, Elizabeth Holmes and Cardi B all provided a visual brief on how to use clothes to communicate in court.

     By

    CreditRichard Drew/Associated Press
    Unbuttoned
  4. Just Like Home: Freshly Folded Dumplings in Brooklyn

    At Mama’s Noodle House in Bensonhurst, the line between kitchen and dining room isn’t always clear.

     By

    The menu centers on hand-folded dumplings and Sichuan-inflected noodle soups, but also veers into Thai and Korean dishes, and Chinese home-cooked staples like creamy scrambled eggs and tomatoes over rice.
    CreditAn Rong Xu for The New York Times
    Hungry City
  5. Photos From Sri Lanka: Grappling With Tragedy

    Images from the devastation of the Easter Sunday bombings show glimpses of how the country is mourning.

     

    A mass funeral on Tuesday at St. Sebastian’s Church in Negombo, Sri Lanka. As many as 100 people were killed in a suicide bombing at the church on Easter Sunday.
    CreditAdam Dean for The New York Times

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  3. Whales, From Above

    The photographer Sutton Lynch is documenting a dramatic turning point off the coast of Long Island — a resurgence of sea life after decades of depletion.

    By Ellie Duke and Sutton Lynch

     
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  8. Seeing the World Through Kids’ Eyes

    To find out how children’s travel experiences differ from their parents’, we enlisted families around the world to share their perspectives — and their pictures.

    By Derek M. Norman

     
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  10. Following a Folk Tale Through the Himalayas

    On a trip through northern India, a writer was guided by the age-old epic story of “Rajula Malushahi,” which led him to a series of unexpected places.

    By Michael Benanav

     
  11. The World Through a Lens

    Timeless Portraits of L.A.’s Arcades

    Documenting video game parlors offered a French photographer a way to explore Los Angeles and its surrounding areas.

    By Franck Bohbot

     
  12. The World Through a Lens

    How Wild Turkeys Find Love

    A photographer in Wisconsin set out to learn how wild turkeys attract their mates — and found that the answer involves wingmen and sexy snoods.

    By Anne Readel

     
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  16. The World Through a Lens

    Is This the World’s Most Picturesque High Dive?

    Catch a glimpse of a storied tradition in Bosnia and Herzegovina, where, for hundreds of years, divers have leaped from a bridge in the southern city of Mostar.

    By Alessio Mamo and Marta Bellingreri

     
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  19. Serena’s Game Day Hair

    Serena Williams’s on-court hairstyles: 27 years of self-expression.

    By Sandra E. Garcia and Antonio de Luca

     
  20. The World Through a Lens

    Reckoning With Memories of Budapest

    A Times journalist spent three months capturing a contemporary portrait of Hungary’s capital, where he lived for several years as a child in the early ’90s.

    By Stephen Hiltner

     
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  27. The World Through a Lens

    Documenting India’s Distinctive Birdhouses

    For seven years, a photographer based in Delhi has collected images of ornamental structures known as chabutras. Here are some of his favorites.

    By Nipun Prabhakar

     
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  31. The World Through a Lens

    Circling Sicily on Its Regional Trains

    A Dutch photographer, documenting the culture of regional train travel, managed to get around the Italian island for less than $100. Here’s what she saw.

    By Sanne Derks

     
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  35. The World Through a Lens

    A Long Walk in a Fading Corner of Japan

    As is true throughout rural Japan, many of the once-vibrant villages on Honshu’s Kii Peninsula are aging into nothingness.

    By Craig Mod

     
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  40. The World Through a Lens

    In Wisconsin: Stowing Mowers, Pleasing Bees

    Can the No Mow May movement help transform the traditional American lawn — a manicured carpet of grass — into something more ecologically beneficial?

    By Anne Readel

     
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  42. The World Through a Lens

    The Overlooked Stone Carvers of Escolásticas

    A small town in Central Mexico is home to around 200 open-air carving workshops, from which an astonishing array of sculptures continuously emerges.

    By Walter Hodges

     
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  45. The World Through a Lens

    Six Days Afloat in the Everglades

    After a storm disrupted plans for a 99-mile paddling trek, a Times journalist’s time on the water took a more reflective turn. Come look and listen alongside him.

    By Stephen Hiltner

     
  46. The World Through a Lens

    Glimpses of Northern India’s Vanishing Nomads

    For centuries, Kharnak nomads have raised livestock in one of the most hauntingly beautiful — and inhospitable — places on earth. Can their traditions outlast a generational exodus?

    By Ronald Patrick

     
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  54. The World Through a Lens

    Helping to Reveal a Still-Shuttered World

    Our weekly photo essay series offered readers a glimpse of distant places and cultures that, for a second straight year, remained largely inaccessible.

    By Stephen Hiltner and Phaedra Brown

     
  55. The World Through a Lens

    Inside the Campaign to Save an Imperiled Cambodian Rainforest

    Deep in the Southern Cardamom Mountains, former loggers and poachers have assumed new roles as protective rangers and ecotourism guides. Can their efforts help preserve a vast stretch of wilderness?

    By Francesco Lastrucci

     
  56. The World Through a Lens

    Cultivating Olives on the Slopes of Mount Etna

    For millenniums, farmers and vintners in northeastern Sicily have benefited from the area’s mineral-rich soil, a result of volcanic eruptions.

    By Marta Giaccone

     
  57. The Last Plunge in Pennsylvania

    Since 1980, Dutch Springs, a flooded quarry in the Lehigh Valley, has been the unlikely underwater home for a devoted diving community. Now its future is uncertain.

    By Michael Turek and Aidan Gardiner

     
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  59. The World Through a Lens

    Bearing Witness to Svalbard’s Fragile Splendor

    To visitors, the Norwegian archipelago can seem both ethereal and eternal. But climate change all but guarantees an eventual collapse of its vulnerable ecosystem.

    By Marcus Westberg

     
  60. The World Through a Lens

    Meet the Beauty Queens of Al Dhafra

    Camel beauty contests take center stage at a celebration of Bedouin culture, held annually in the United Arab Emirates.

    By Kiki Streitberger

     
  61. A Vaccine Veteran Hits the Road Again

    When coronavirus vaccines first became available, Uri Bassan, a pharmacist, traveled 19,000 miles bringing shots to people all over New Mexico. Now with booster shots and vaccines for children, he and his team are setting out again.

    By Sophie Kasakove and Paul Ratje

     
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