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Crazy Aunt Helen s Is the Joyful, Nostalgic, Comfort Food Restaurant Capitol Hill Needs

Crazy Aunt Helen s Is the Joyful, Nostalgic, Comfort Food Restaurant Capitol Hill Needs
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Crazy Aunt Helen s is Capitol Hill s New Destination for Comfort Food

Share this: Get to know D.C. with our daily newsletter We dive deep on the day’s biggest story and share links to everything you need to know. Get the free newsletter Success! You re on the list. Whoops! There was an error and we couldn t process your subscription. Please reload the page and try again. Processing… Don’t expect your mugs to match when Crazy Aunt Helen’s opens for breakfast, lunch, and dinner on Barracks Row this summer. “I’m going to pour you a cup of coffee, but everyone’s going to have a different mug, just like you came to my house,” says owner

Look Inside My Home: A Renovated Bloomingdale Apartment With Tons of Natural Light

Look Inside My Home: A Glover Park Studio With Black Walls and Peel-and-Stick Tile Floors

Tweet Share Imani Keal has lived in her Glover Park studio apartment for two years. The 25-year-old project manager, who’s roommates with her 10-month-old Yorkie, Salazar Slytherin II (aka Sal), originally moved to Glover Park because it was close to her job in Georgetown. She’s now in a permanent work-from-home role, but she says she still loves the neighborhood thanks to local spots like Ghostline. “Also, I get to be neighbors with the VP and fellow Howard grad Kamala Harris,” she says. At the start of the pandemic, Keal’s home was white and minimalist. But she got bored and decided to switch things up, and launched her home decor Instagram to document the process. Along the way, she’s painted her walls black and pink, installed patterned wallpaper, refreshed her kitchen, and embraced the bold. “I used to want my house to be this serene, minimal place that didn’t have much to it, but that left me feeling like my house had no soul and forced me to keep all my kn

Millennial Maximalism, the Design Trend That Explains Why So Many Younger People s Homes Are Starting to Look Like Your Grandma s Groovy 1970s Living Room

Photograph courtesy of Libby Rasmussen If you’ve grabbed a cup of coffee or a salad in, oh, the past decade, you’ve likely noticed that public spaces geared toward the professional millennial crowd tend to look exactly the same: sparse white walls, minimalist wooden furniture, perhaps some neutral-hued subway tile. The Scandinavian-chic vibe has dominated in the homes of twenty- and thirtysomethings, too just open Instagram and count the knockoff Eames shell chairs in your feed. But after years of this pared-back aesthetic, a shift is afoot. Some in the design world are calling it “grandmillennial” or “cottagecore” references to the shelves stuffed with houseplants, rich velvet textiles, macramé wall hangings, mismatched vintage furnishings, and other decor showing up in millennial abodes that looks straight out of your nana’s groovy 1975 living room. Here, we talk to some Washingtonians who have fully embraced this new wave of maximalism.

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