Hill Country Welding Camp
Think camp is just for kids? Kelly DeWitt Norman and Travis Norman invite you to spend a day in the Hill Country learning something new: how to weld.
Think camp is just for kids? Kelly DeWitt Norman and Travis Norman invite you to spend a day in the Hill Country learning something new: how to weld.
David Bond of Lucky B Design journeys across the state, painting soon-to-be iconic signs all along the way.
For these two friends, every day is flag day.
A family breathes new life into a historic King William home with their eclectic style.
How to celebrate Mom this weekend? Here are our top picks from local shops across Texas.
Cristina Lynch honors her Mexican heritage at a fiesta to remember in her family’s inspired home.
We found fast cars, big skies, and a whole bunch of daredevils at this annual high-speed race weekend out west.
Former Neiman Marcus fashion exec and fanatical antiques collector Derrill Osborn, at home in his Dallas apartment, where red and green reign supreme.
How Rob Flurry's childhood reading forged his passion for sword and knife making.
A family of four trades in their home in Keller for a life under the Texas stars.
By oil, acrylic, pen, or from behind the lens, meet a selection of the state's artists to watch.
Mining the stories of estate sale artifacts in photographer Norm Diamond’s book, What Is Left Behind.
We put on our walking shoes and hopped a bus to Texas’s antiques mecca. Here are some of the treasures we found.
Sheila Youngblood, the owner of Rancho Pillow, gives us an exclusive look at her whimsical Austin home.
A North Texas couple treats wood as a canvas.
A hot kiln can be entrusted with earthenware, stoneware, porcelain, and . . . brisket?
A fourth generation of Texas leatherworkers saddles up.
Out of the oven and into the credenza.
Go west—and east and north and south—young man.
Houston jewelry with a touch of northwestern India.
A Houston ad man embraces the DIY spirit.
A Dallas furniture maker creates pieces that are old and new at once.
When your day job has you down, building a canoe by hand may be the way to go.
Oaxacan style, by way of Dallas.
Keeping the cowboy legend alive.
The romance of doing everything by hand.
How the drought led to a revival of America’s only native caffeinated drink.
Because you know you’ve always wanted to kick it up.
When paddling on plastic just won’t do.
These San Antonio leather-workers keep it all in the family.
Corpus Christi fisherman John Garcia’s painted creations are off the hook.
Something’s burning in Amarillo.
A novice Austin jewelry maker catches Anthropologie’s eye.
Keeping movable type alive in the age of laser printers.
Houston bladesmith Russell Montgomery finds calm living on the edge.
The simple beauty of wood and wire and not much else.
The earthy wonders of clay.
Handcrafted bows that never miss their mark.
The happy marriage of performance and aesthetics.
A Houston textile designer shows that the art of dyeing isn't dying.
The science and mystery of the luthier craft.
Handcrafted leather bags that tell a story.
Tom Sterne makes waves in the Gulf.
Kathie Sever’s nice threads.
For the longest time, quinceañeras were simple, down-home celebrations held in parish halls and backyards. Then along came the stretch Humvees, the carriages and thrones, the choreographed dance routines, the smoke machines, the climbing walls, and the dinners for four hundred bedazzled guests. One thing remains the same, though: It’s
These twelve Texas artisans herald the victory of man over machine, carefully crafting wood, metal, or stone into items for your home and hearth that are tomorrow’s heirlooms today.
The ceramic designs created by these four Texas studios will look great in your kitchen or bathroom—and except for their shape, there’s nothing square about them.
Has the best-known Latina writer of our day painted herself into a corner?
Master builders.
Accessories for sexual adventurers, columns for your Craftsman bungalow, tasteful tables made from old manhole covers: You can find it all on this reborn Houston strip.