Latest news with #NoLIta


Vogue
03-07-2025
- Entertainment
- Vogue
Batsheva Resort 2026 Collection
Like many designers, Batsheva Hay is feeling the pull of a certain kind of nostalgia, but unlike others who may be doing it with the purpose of chasing clicks, for Hay the nostalgia appeared unexpectedly. 'My mom is an artist, and she always wore these huge sack dresses, like smocks, and I think a lot of my identity was a rebellion from that—being very nipped in at the waist and over-the-top and almost kind of 'look at me!,' because there was something about her where she kind of erased herself for her work,' she said on a recent afternoon inside her NoLIta flagship. 'Recently, she was wearing one of her big sack dresses and I asked her if I could try it on, and she gave me the dress off her back. And I tried it on and I was like, 'wow I feel cool in this.'' Not that the square silhouette is entirely new for the designer—she's been working with it since fall 2024 when she first collaborated with the dancers from the Isadora Duncan Dance Foundation & Company who said it was their favorite shape for movement. The difference is that Hay has wholly given herself to it. A smock dress in green silk was almost an exact copy of the one favored by her mother—she added the '50s influenced neckline—while others were embellished with her signature curtain-ruffle shape at the hem. There were long sacks and short sacks, though the best of her experiments was certainly a patchworked version with sleeves that can snap off; which opens an exciting possibility of customization. 'This is the kind of stuff that you see on a hanger and it looks terrible, but then on the body, it has so much energy,' she said, pulling the neckline of her own dress, a tie-dyed T-shirt dress with safety-pin patchwork detail that is also part of the collection, off her shoulder. Some of her classic pieces remain: little button-down blouses, ruffled capri pants, and versions in black and cream of her original silk taffeta dress because 'people keep asking for them and we keep selling them.' She once again modeled the collection for the lookbook, but it is a fact that she is her own 'muse,' a kind of authenticity that goes a long way. Who else could make a semi-sheer floral Victorian shirt and purple sequined bicycle shorts look so damn cool and desirable? 'I've thought about it, and I really do make things that I want to wear with the truly risk-averse belief that if people don't want it, I will wear it,' she added. 'And that's it. That's what I'll keep on doing.'


New York Times
28-06-2025
- Entertainment
- New York Times
Is the Local Weed Store the New Place to Hang Out?
A cannabis dispensary might seem like an unlikely place to play mahjong, the Chinese tile game typically associated with older Asian and Jewish adults, but that's where Leah Flacco showed up on a recent Wednesday evening in Manhattan. The game has grown in popularity with younger generations, so at a table inside Alta Dispensary in NoLIta, Ms. Flacco, 36, shuffled and matched groups of tiles among friends and strangers. The event was one of a growing number taking place at New York's cannabis dispensaries, where retailers have been making space for people to socialize. 'We want more dispensaries to do these sorts of things,' Ms. Flacco, who works in financial technology, said. 'It's hard to make friends in this city.' From intimate classes to block parties, hosting events has given dispensaries in New York a way around rules limiting their ability to market their businesses. As many Americans choose to drink less alcohol and seek connection offline, the activities allow the sellers to offer places where people can gather. Dispensary owners also hope that some of the visitors will become customers and that the events will help their businesses gain acceptance among neighbors who might still hold negative views of cannabis. Meredith Nydam, 37, said she had invited her friends, including Ms. Flacco, to mahjong night because she wanted to do something other than a happy hour. 'I don't need to go to a bar,' Ms. Nydam said. 'I can come here.' Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


New York Times
28-05-2025
- Business
- New York Times
Another Arrest in Crypto Kidnapping and Torture Case
Good morning. It's Wednesday. Today we'll look at the story of an Italian man who told the police he was kidnapped and tortured in a Manhattan townhouse for the password to his Bitcoin wallet. Three people have been arrested in a cryptocurrency-related torture scheme that sounds like a horror novel: a man tied up inside a luxury townhouse, tormented with electric shocks, carried up five stories and dangled over a ledge. He said his captors had threatened him with death unless he agreed to hand over the password to his Bitcoin wallet, my colleagues Chelsia Rose Marcius and Maia Coleman reported. For nearly three weeks, authorities say, two men, John Woeltz and William Duplessie, held the victim, Michael Valentino Teofrasto Carturan, in a 17-room townhouse in the NoLIta neighborhood of Manhattan, with the intent to steal his multimillion-dollar crypto fortune. A third person, Beatrice Folchi, was initially arrested and charged for her role in the scheme, but has since been released. According to an internal police report, Carturan told authorities that his captors had bound his wrists, submerged his feet in water and shocked him with a Taser, and pointed a firearm at his head. Prosecutors said that Woeltz had also threatened Carturan's family, according to a criminal complaint. After Carturan refused to grant them access to his crypto wallet, the captors suspended him over the ledge and threatened to kill him, the complaint said. The episode came to light on Friday morning when Carturan escaped the townhouse and sought the help of a traffic agent nearby. When police officers entered the home, they found Polaroid pictures showing Carturan bound and being assaulted. They also found several guns, a ballistic vest and other items used in the torture, a law enforcement official said. Woeltz, 37, a crypto investor, and Carturan, 28, had ties to a hedge fund in New York, according to the internal police report. But the two men had a falling-out over money, and Carturan flew back to Italy, where he is a citizen. Woeltz persuaded Carturan to return to New York, where Woeltz was renting a townhouse. Upon Carturan's arrival at the NoLIta home on May 6, Woeltz and Folchi, 24, took their visitor's electronic devices and passport, held him captive and tortured him to get the password to his Bitcoin wallet, the report said. On Saturday, Woeltz and Folchi were arrested, and Woeltz was charged with assault, kidnapping, unlawful imprisonment and criminal possession of a gun. Folchi was initially also charged with kidnapping and unlawful imprisonment, but she was released shortly after and her prosecution was deferred, according to law enforcement. Folchi's connection to Woeltz is not yet clear. On Tuesday, a third person, Duplessie, 33, turned himself in after negotiating his surrender with the police for several days, according to two law enforcement officials briefed on the matter. He is expected to be charged with kidnapping and unlawful imprisonment, Police Commissioner Jessica S. Tisch said Tuesday in an interview. Duplessie has ties to Switzerland and Miami, though it is not clear how he knew Woeltz, Folchi or Carturan. The charges are the latest in a global wave of crypto-related violence targeting executives for the fortunes stored in their digital wallets. France, in particular, has been the site of several attacks on prominent crypto entrepreneurs in recent months. In January, the father of a crypto influencer was found in the trunk of a car, bound and covered in gasoline, after the family was attacked at their home in eastern France, according to French media reports. Expect a cloudy day and rainy afternoon, with a high around 65. In the evening, rain is likely, with a low around 57. In effect until Solemnity of the Ascension (May 29). The latest Metro news Well-worn Dear Diary: A few years ago, my friend Adrienne was in an Upper West Side coffee shop when she looked down into a stroller. Then she looked up at the woman standing with the stroller, who happened to be my babysitter. 'Is that baby named Wyatt?' Our babysitter was surprised. 'Yes,' she replied. 'Why?' 'I thought he must be,' my friend said. 'I knit that sweater for his brother two years ago.' — Sarah Pinneo Illustrated by Agnes Lee. Send submissions here and read more Metropolitan Diary here. Glad we could get together here. We'll see you tomorrow. — T.R. P.S. Here's today's Mini Crossword and Spelling Bee. You can find all our puzzles here. Stefano Montali and Ed Shanahan contributed to New York Today. You can reach the team at nytoday@ Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox.