Walker & Hall Panorama collection

For new mums, Walker & Hall’s sentiment-rich pieces are the ultimate gift

Moments that change everything deserve a gift worth equal weight, and Walker & Hall’s sentiment-rich pieces mark those life-altering beginnings with meaning.

Few milestones hold the magic and magnitude of becoming a mother. It’s a chapter that redefines life — from the exhilarating early days to the triumphs and tender moments of the first year, through to every Mother’s Day and beyond. Walker & Hall knows this implicitly (126 years of helping people mark life’s greatest moments will do that), curating timeless, sentiment-rich pieces that honour the extraordinary role of mum and live on as family treasures.

Walker & Hall Panorama rings

Think keepsakes she’ll wear daily — refined diamond studs, a timeless tennis bracelet, or a stunning statement ring, each imbued with memory and meaning. These are the kind of treasures that become part of her journey, quietly gathering significance with every milestone that follows. Whether it’s a sparkling push present, a jewel to mark the first year, or a gift that signifies a more personal milestone, each piece is a celebration in itself.

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For Mum
Palmera earrings from Walker & Hall
Jubilee Tennis Bracelet from Walker & Hall
Flamenco dress ring from Walker & Hall
Lotus necklace from Walker & Hall
Trinity ring from Walker & Hall
Isla Tennis bracelet from Walker & Hall

The beauty of these thoughtful and enduring gifts lie not just in their beauty, but in their power to preserve a moment — distilling the joy, pride, and unbridled love of motherhood into something she can carry always — a lasting reminder of life’s most enduring bond.

walkerandhall.co.nz

Coveted

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Left to right: Tove, Nanushka, Emilia Wickstead, Burberry

All the best looks from London Fashion Week

The second stop on the fashion month agenda was London, with Laura Weir, recently appointed CEO of the British Fashion Council, giving the event a welcome renewal. Burberry stole the show, taking over Perks Field in Kensington Palace with a show for the ages, drawing on Britain’s unrivalled festival scene, while our very own Emilia Wickstead delivered a masterclass in daring romanticism. Below, we round up some of the best looks from London Fashion Week.

Spring 2026 Ready-To-Wear
Nanushka

Shop Nanushka

Spring 2026 Ready-To-Wear
Burberry

Shop Burberry

Spring 2026 Ready-To-Wear
Emilia Wickstead

Shop Emilia Wickstead

Spring 2026 Ready-To-Wear
Tove

Shop Tove

Coveted

The jewellery designed for movement, ease and everyday elegance
Van Cleef & Arpels’ Fascinating Egypt: Inside one of high jewellery’s most anticipated annual events
Gucci’s transports us to Monte Carlo with a dreamy European summer escapade
Satya Chai Lounge

Satya Chai Lounge has once again joined forces with Garage Project for the ultimate pop-up

Garage Project and Satya Chai Lounge are back at it, reviving one of Auckland’s favourite pop-ups for a limited run. Open now, the Karangahape Road lounge has been transformed into Hyderabad Hotel — a vibrant nod to the spirit of India’s southern food capital, where spice, music, and conviviality reign supreme.

Hyderabad Hotel

Expect all the cosy energy of Satya’s beloved K’ Road haunt, now paired with a full Garage Project bar pouring cult favourites and fresh additions like Zinger, a brewed alcoholic ginger beer designed to zing up the season. On the menu, street eats shine: smashed dahi puri, onion bhaji, papdi chaat, and curry fries, alongside more substantial offerings of Hyderabad fried chicken, biriyani, curries, and rotating street snacks.

True to Satya’s style, the flavours are unapologetically bold and perfect for sharing over craft brews or a chilled natural wine. With its mix of atmosphere, spice, and playfulness, Hyderabad Hotel once again promises to be a short-lived but much-loved fixture on K’ Road — best experienced before it disappears.

Hyderabad Hotel’s doors are officially open for an undisclosed period of time, so we suggest you make your way to the pop-up fairly quickly, before it’s too late. 

Opening hours:
Wednesday — Monday from 5.30pm
Closed Tuesday

satya.co.nz

Hyderabad Hotel

Satya Chai Lounge
271 Karangahape Road
Auckland

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SANTOS DE CARTIER WATCH in Steel

Cartier’s refined new Santos is a masterclass in petite perfection

Cartier’s iconic Santos de Cartier has been given a refined update. The new ‘petit’ model balances heritage and modernity in steel, gold, or two-tone — proof that timeless design knows no scale.

A little smaller, no less striking. Cartier’s latest release sees the beloved Santos de Cartier scaled down — a nod to the watch’s early dimensions and a reminder that elegance often lies in proportion. 

Santos de Cartier watch in Yellow gold

At 27mm wide and 34.5mm high, the new downscaled model brings a finely tuned sense of balance to the collection, while retaining the bold design language that has defined the Santos since 1904: square case, visible screws, and sharp Roman numerals. 

Santos de Cartier watch in yellow gold and steel from Partridge
Santos de Cartier watch in yellow gold from Partridge
Santos de Cartier watch in steel from Partridge

Created for aviator Alberto Santos-Dumont, the Santos was the first modern wristwatch, designed for ease in the cockpit. Today, it’s more about precision of style. This petite evolution adds a sunray-effect dial and a high-autonomy quartz movement specifically adapted to its scaled-down case. It’s available in all-steel, two-tone yellow gold and steel, or solid yellow gold, with the same QuickSwitch system that makes straps refreshingly interchangeable — calfskin for the mixed-metal models, and alligator for the gold. 

Santos de Cartier watch in yellow gold and steel

Proof that less can indeed be more, this refined Santos keeps the spirit of flight intact, while feeling perfectly grounded in the now. A classic, recut — still square, still striking, just more subtle in its statement.

partridgejewellers.com/cartier

Coveted

The jewellery designed for movement, ease and everyday elegance
Van Cleef & Arpels’ Fascinating Egypt: Inside one of high jewellery’s most anticipated annual events
Gucci’s transports us to Monte Carlo with a dreamy European summer escapade
Loungescape Sofa by Flexform from Studio Italia

Antonio Citterio’s Loungescape is a versatile seating system that adapts to any interior vision

Presented by Flexform, Antonio Citterio’s Loungescape is a versatile seating system that adapts fluidly to its environment. With sculptural forms inspired by the contours of a landscape, the modular design becomes the living space’s nucleus, offering ever-new perspectives on comfort and contemporary elegance.

Loungescape Sofa by Flexform from Studio Italia

studioitalia.co.nz

Design

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From gripping novels to captivating non-fiction, these are the books we’re reading this season

Whether cosied up by the fire or sprawled in the sun, there is always occasion for a good book, no matter where the season may take you. Here, we deliver a line-up of recently released, unmissable reads that run the gamut from moving memoirs to gripping novels to escapist reads.

What to read
ESCAPIST NOVELS

Gravity Let Me Go
by Trent Dalton

It feels fitting that Trent Dalton’s latest novel bears the word gravity in its title, given the weight his stories always hold. Set in suburban Brisbane, this work — which Dalton describes as “his most personal book yet” — follows journalist Noah Cork in the wake of the greatest scoop of his career: an exposé on a cold-blooded killer. But what Noah uncovers reaches far beyond the crime itself. The novel evolves into a meditation on love and marriage, the transformative power of storytelling, and the search for life’s true meaning — all delivered in Dalton’s trademark prose that is at once gripping, heartbreaking, hilarious, and profoundly life-affirming.

People Like Us
by Jason Mott

From the National Book Award–winning author of Hell of a Book comes a stirring meditation on identity, grief, and the stories we inherit. Two Black writers’ intersecting journeys blend reality with surreal, dreamlike turns, revealing humour, loss, and the true power and impact of love.

Moderation
by Elaine Castillo

In a future shaped by virtual reality and corporate power, content moderator Girlie Delmundo is climbing the ranks — until an unexpected connection forces her to reckon with reality. Witty, inventive, and razor-sharp, this is a love story tangled in algorithms, ambition, and the hazy landscape of human interaction.

I Am You
by Victoria Redel

Set in 17th-century Amsterdam, this sensual, atmospheric novel traces the tangled bond between two women — artist and muse, master and servant, lover and rival. Blurring the lines between obsession and devotion, I Am You is a richly painted story of art, identity, and power.

L.A. Women
by Ella Berman

Set against the glittering backdrop of 1960s L.A., this electrifying novel charts the complex friendship between two ambitious writers — until one vanishes, and the other sees an opportunity to rewrite her life as fiction. A fierce exploration of art, envy, and the price of betrayal.

Life, and Death, and Giants
by Ron Rindo

In a quiet Wisconsin town, a boy of impossible size and unexpected grace grows up hidden from the world — until fate intervenes. What follows is a luminous story of buried secrets, hard-won faith, and the extraordinary ways one life can transform many.

When the Cranes Fly South
by Lisa Ridzén

Translated from Swedish by Alice Menzies, this tender bestseller follows Bo, an ageing man facing the loss of his beloved dog — and his independence. A stirring, soul-deep journey of love, regret, and the fierce fight to hold on.

What to read
Daring Debuts

The Unbroken Coast
by Nalini Jones

Spanning the turbulent years when Bombay became Mumbai, this luminous debut follows the unlikely friendship between a retired historian and a fisherman’s daughter. Evocative and emotionally resonant, it’s a story of shifting coastlines and the search for home in a changing world.

Happiness and Love
by Zoe Dubno

At one excruciating dinner party, a woman is forced back into the orbit of her estranged best friends — an artist and a curator who epitomise everything she loathes. This sharp, merciless debut skewers materialism, self-obsession, and the sometimes shallow ambitions of the cultural elite.

The Irish Goodbye
by Heather Aimee O’Neill

One Thanksgiving weekend, three sisters reunite — each hiding a secret. When Cait invites a figure from their past to dinner, long-buried tensions erupt, forcing the Ryan girls to confront the events that shattered their family decades earlier and find a path to forgiveness. 

What to read
International Booker Prize

Heart Lamp
written by Banu Mushtaq & translated from Kannada by Deepa Bhasthi

Winner of the 2025 International Booker Prize, Heart Lamp illuminates the everyday lives of women and girls in southern India through 12 sharply observed, richly textured stories. With wit, compassion, and quiet fury, Banu Mushtaq crafts a vivid, unforgettable portrait of resilience and resistance.

Perfection
written by Vincenzo Latronico & translated from Italian by Sophie Hughes

Anna and Tom have everything a modern millennial couple could want — creative jobs, a cool Berlin apartment, and a lively social life. But behind the façade of conscious living and Instagrammable moments, disillusionment festers. Perfection is a sharp, stylish portrait of a generation lost in its own reflection.

Eurotrash
written by Christian Kracht & translated from German by Daniel Bowles

In this semi-autobiographical novel, a writer and his eccentric mother (fresh from a psychiatric clinic) set off on a chaotic road trip across Switzerland to rid themselves of her tainted fortune. Darkly funny and unflinchingly personal, Eurotrash is a razor-sharp reckoning with family, guilt, and legacy.

On the Calculation of Volume I
written by Solvej Balle & translated from Danish by Barbara J. Havel

The mesmerising first instalment in Solvej Balle’s acclaimed septology sees Tara Selter stuck in a time loop. As the world resets around her every single day, she alone carries memory forward, unti 365 days into the loop, she decides to look for an escape.

What to read
Real Life Reads to Shift Your Perspective

Dead and Alive
by Zadie Smith

In this incisive new essay collection, Zadie Smith turns her sharp, humane gaze to art, politics, film, grief, and place. From North-West London to New York, Dead and Alive is a brilliant meditation on culture, connection, and the texture of modern life from one of the most critical literary voices of our time. 

Protocols: An Operating Manual for the Human Body
by Andrew D. Huberman

Renowned Stanford neuroscientist Dr. Andrew Huberman delivers a clear, science-backed guide to mastering your brain and body. Protocols offers practical, customisable strategies to boost mental clarity, mood, energy, and physical performance — transforming everyday challenges into opportunities for lasting change.

Mother Mary Comes to Me
by Arundhati Roy

In her first memoir, Booker Prize–winner Arundhati Roy reflects on a life shaped by the formidable presence of her mother, Mary Roy — a trailblazing educator and uncompromising force. Tender, sharp, and unsparingly honest, it’s a story of love, rupture, and the making of a writer.

The Tragedy of True Crime: Four Guilty Men and the Stories That Define Us
by John J. Lennon

Written from inside prison walls, this groundbreaking work blends personal memoir with immersive journalism as Lennon shares the stories of four men who have killed — revealing their complex lives, search for redemption, and the human truths often lost in our true crime obsession.

Baldwin: A Love Story
by Nicholas Boggs

A revelatory portrait of James Baldwin through the relationships that shaped him. Blending archival research with lyrical insight, Boggs traces the emotional and creative bonds that fed Baldwin’s art — offering a deeply human perspective on one of the 20th century’s most vital voices.

Make It Ours
by Robin Givhan

Part biography, part cultural reckoning, Make It Ours traces Virgil Abloh’s extraordinary ascent — from outsider to Louis Vuitton menswear’s first Black artistic director. With sharp insight and rare access, Givhan explores how Abloh reframed luxury.

Culture

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Sala founder Sarah Lindsay

We sit down with Sarah Lindsay of Sala to discuss her unique movement philosophy

Founded by Sarah Lindsay, Sala offers a deeply personal approach to Pilates, where rhythm, mood, and movement intertwine to create an experience that transcends the physical.

“From the beginning, I didn’t want Sala to feel like a gym,” explains Lindsay. “I wanted it to feel like a sanctuary. A space you enter to come home to yourself, not perform for anyone else.” With its warm hues, natural light, and tactile interiors, the studio feels more like a community hub than a fitness space. And that’s the point.

At Sala, Pilates is just one part of a rich, rhythm-driven offering underpinned by a movement philosophy that blends discipline with softness, form with feeling. “We approach movement as something sacred,” says Lindsay. “It’s not about fixing your body — it’s about returning to it.”

Language plays a significant role in the experience, “We refer to our clients as students and our instructors as teachers. It creates a dynamic of curiosity and learning, not instruction and correction.” Lindsay notes a clear transformation in students who commit to regular practice. “It’s not just about physical change, though that happens too; it’s about presence. You start to see people soften, then strengthen. They stop asking, ‘Am I doing it right?’ and start saying, ‘This feels right for me.’ That’s the shift.”

Lindsay advises anyone starting or restarting their movement journey to let go of perfection. “You don’t need to overhaul your life. Just start with one class. Let it be about how it feels, not how it looks.” Her favourite practice right now? “Chroma followed by mobility. One builds heat and joy, the other brings space and calm. Together, they’re the arc of aliveness.”

sala.studio

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Artland: An Installation by Do Ho Suh and children

These school holidays, make for Artland — an immersive exhibition the kids will love

Step into a world of wonder at Artland, the Auckland Art Gallery’s playful new installation by renowned Korean artist Do Ho Suh and his young daughters. Crafted from colourful modelling clay, this evolving, hands-on experience invites families to shape their own fantastical landscapes. 

When: Saturday 20th September 2025 — Sunday 19th July 2026
Where: Te Aka Matua | The Creative Learning Centre  — book here

aucklandartgallery.com

Culture

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From architecture to adventure: The coffee table books worth collecting now
Labour of love: Katherine Throne’s botanical paintings arrive at Sanderson

Dance for Abilities is back with an exciting event, but it needs your support — here’s how to help

Making its highly anticipated return for 2025, Dance For Abilities‘ lively event is back and better than ever. For anyone unfamiliar with the work that Dance for Abilities does, it’s a charity that seeks to create inclusive, fun spaces in which those with disabilities can cut loose a little, have a dance and express themselves. Started by brothers Jonathan and Daniel Hopkirk who saw very few opportunities for their sister with Down Syndrome to go out in the same way they did, Dance For Abilities has facilitated a number of highly-popular social events both here and in Australia.

This year, DFA is hosting its popular dance party on Tuesday 7th of October, from 5.30pm at the Royal Akarana Yacht Club. For 2025, the theme is Disnee Danceoff — a fan favourite that’s been requested time and again. Guests are invited to step onto the red carpet in their best character-inspired looks, ready to light up the dance floor alongside celebrities, special guest performers, and showcase dancers. From pamper stations to dessert and lolly bars, themed venue fit-outs to fabulous prizes, this promises to be one of DFA’s most spectacular nights yet.

“Disnee Danceoff is all about creating a fantastical experience for the unique ability community — a chance to get glammed up, walk the red carpet, and feel like rockstars,” says Daniel Hopkirk, DFA Director. “The popularity has continued to soar, and we are learning more each time we throw an event about how we can cater for the needs of the community to form unforgettable nights across New Zealand and Australia.”

And while the event itself is free, it needs donations to take place. So, anyone who is in a position to help out, we encourage you to do so. As DFA is a not-for-profit, crucial events like this can’t happen without the kindness of strangers, with a donation of just $50 enough to cover drinks, food and entertainment for one guest. Donations can be made to DFA’s Givealittle page, here.

Tickets are available now for anyone aged 18+ with an intellectual disability (or those supporting someone who would love to attend), here.

danceforabilities.com

Culture

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From architecture to adventure: The coffee table books worth collecting now
Labour of love: Katherine Throne’s botanical paintings arrive at Sanderson
left to right: Calvin Klein, Khaite, Ralph Lauren, Prabal Gurung

All of the best looks from New York Fashion Week

From Ralph Lauren’s minimalist masterclass to Khaite’s cinematic showcase to Veronica Leoni’s sophomore outing for Calvin Klein, here, we’ve rounded up some of our favourite looks from the NYFW S/S 26 collections.

Spring 2026 Ready-To-Wear
Khaite

Shop Khaite

Spring 2026 Ready-To-Wear
Ralph Lauren

Shop Ralph Lauren

Spring 2026 Ready-To-Wear
Prabal Gurung

Shop Prabal Gurung

Spring 2026 Ready-To-Wear
Calvin Klein

Shop Calvin Klein

Spring 2026 Ready-To-Wear
Tibi

Shop Tibi

Spring 2026 Ready-To-Wear
Alexander Wang

Shop Alexander Wang

Coveted

The jewellery designed for movement, ease and everyday elegance
Van Cleef & Arpels’ Fascinating Egypt: Inside one of high jewellery’s most anticipated annual events
Gucci’s transports us to Monte Carlo with a dreamy European summer escapade