While the Domino website and podcasts will continue, the new owners say they have yet to determine how to proceed with the print edition. Since its 2013 relaunch, it’s been published as a quarterly with a high single-copy price sold primarily on newsstands. The magazine had been a monthly with a one million circulation base at Conde Nast when it folded in 2009 during the Great Recession. Jessica Romm Perez, Domino’s editor-in-chief for the past five years despite two ownership changes, said she will stay in her job under the new owners. “We will conduct the same thorough and thoughtful review we do with all of our brands that have print products in order to determine the best way forward.” “Having only just acquired Domino, we have not made any decisions on the print product,” said a spokeswoman. “Domino is a phenomenal addition to our portfolio, and better positions North both in interior design as well as the broader home and DIY landscape.” “We’re ecstatic to finally welcome them to our family,” said Andrew Perlman, Managing Partner of North Equity, which last year bought the handyman special. The beloved title, focused on home decorating tips, has been sold to private equity firm North Equity. Pickleball craze inspires new lifestyle magazineĬNN star’s bylines mysteriously vanish from her Daily Caller storiesĭomino, once a red-hot Conde Nast magazine, has been sold for the second time in three years - and the fate of the print edition is up in the air. Kaitlan Collins’ missing Daily Caller bylines restored - but mystery remains (After finding a doll-size version of the bed, Boothby had the striped print scaled down to make a matching miniature version.A fond farewell from Keith J. “My workroom basically reproduced the canopy in our chosen fabric,” explains the designer, who had every detail covered, from the roll-up flaps to the headboard pockets. To play up the design, she picked a low-to-the-ground house-shaped bed that came with an optional tent cover. “I thought this stripe was absolutely perfect because the saffron and green tones worked really nicely with the book print,” says Boothby. The palette came together thanks to an Ottoline fabric. “We did a woodland creature vibe in her nursery, so this was just a different take on her interests.” After coming across a vintage Madeline print from the famed children’s book, the designer imagined a safari theme with a circus twist that would bring the illustration to life. “Madison loves animals, and that was a big inspiration,” says Boothby, referencing the zebra, ostrich, and duck figurines that she peppered throughout the now-refreshed room. But when the Westchester, New York–based couple found out they were pregnant with their second child, plans inevitably changed and layouts shuffled around: The new baby would stay in their daughter Madison’s nursery the guest room would move down the hall and a “big girl room” needed to be created-but not from scratch. Boothby had recently reimagined the space as a serene guest room for her clients Sarah and Greg Sommer. A subdued gray grasscloth wallpaper isn’t necessarily the first pick for a 3-year-old’s bedroom, but interior designer Chauncey Boothby knew she could make it work.
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