Country & Town House - May/Jun 2024 PROMO

Page 1

LUKE THOMPSON

Bridgerton’s boy

Meet our new columnist THE WILDIST

A night with the Black Mambas

A GOOD LOOK AT LONGEVITY

into

MAY ⁄ JUN 2024 £5.99 A LIFE IN BALANCE
SUMMER Spring
AFRICAN QUEENS
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Contents

COLUMNS

28 THE GOOD LIFE Alice B-B has decided to decamp from the countryside

32 THE WILDIST Meet our new Editor-at-Wild

34 THE RURBANIST e River Cottage’s Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall

216 LAST WORD Michael Hayman learns a lot about himself in an Army-style bootcamp

STYLE

37 COCOON ME It ’s a wrap

38 THE STYLIST Seeking a vintage bargain

40 THE EDIT Fashion, beauty and jewellery news

42 TO THE NINES Style for e Season

50 WELL GROOMED Rich pickings for men

54 THE MAGPIE Shiny things

57 TIME TO SHINE Simon de Burton brings you the latest watch models to ogle at

HEALTH & WELLBEING

65 HIT YOUR STRIDE We can’t all look like Gisele Bündchen but we can admire her from afar

66

BODY & SOUL Combating pollutants at home

68 BODY LANGUAGE Olivia Falcon checks out London’s latest longevity clinics

70 THE SCOOP Trying out a blood sugar sensor

72

BEAUTY DILEMMA Bye-bye skin laxity

CULTURE

75 EN PLEIN AIR Open-air theatre is back

76 CULTURAL CALENDAR Your must-have guide to what to see, read and do

87 ARTIST’S STUDIO Sophie Charalambous

88 THE EXHIBITIONIST Female artists are centre-stage, says Ed Vaizey

90 GOOD NEWS Raising your spirits

92 THE CONSERVATIONIST Are you prepared for a wet and wild future?

94 THE SOLUTIONISTS How do we change the way we travel? Here are three innovations

96 THE GREEN LANE Jeremy Taylor tests the mettle of the new Corsa Electric

98 SCARFES BAR Tamara Harvey and Daniel Evans are the dream duo at the helm of the RSC

FEATURES

100 HIGH KICKS Having fun with pattern and colour at Beaverbrook’s Dower House

108 YOUR SUMMER STARTS HERE Clear your diary – we’ve got all the summer smash hits you don’t want to miss 100

MAY JUN 202 4
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Contents

MAY JUN 202 4

FEATURES

112 MAN ABOUT TON Bridgerton’ s Luke ompson isn’t in it for the fame

116 MOVING MOUNTAINS Giving artisans a livelihood and restoring their pride in their cultural heritage is Soshana Stewart’s mission

120 GREENER PASTURES Is it time for the legal industry to face up to its own oily ethics? asks Rachel Donald

124 FROM THE GROUND UP How Georgia Scott, CEO of Groundtruth, built a brand with purpose

THE AESTHETIC GUIDE

129 A look at longevity and how to feel and look your best self in our annual guide edited by Annabel Jones

INTERIORS

177 CITRUS SPRITZ A Canary Wharf apartment with fresh charm

180 DESIGN NOTES Interiors news

182 ALL TIED UP Coquette home styling

184 MY INTERIOR LIFE Martin Kemp

TRAVEL

187 MOTHERS UNARMED Lucy Cleland gets up close and personal to the Black Mambas

190 LEAVE NO TRACE A safari in Botswana with the lightest of touches

194 THE ESCAPIST African travel news

198 THE TRIP Francisca Kellett wonders if the age of overtourism is over

200 MIND YOUR MANOR Fiona Duncan luxuriates at Estelle Manor

202 POSTCARDS FROM... Raja Ampat,

FOOD & DRINK

205 DOUBLE TROUBLE A cocktail duo from the Connaught Bar

207 GASTRO GOSSIP Bar y

PROPERTY

209 HOUSE OF THE MONTH An architectural icon in the Turks and Caicos

210 FIVE OF THE BEST Country estates

212 ANGEL OF THE NORTH Anna Tyzack on Manchester’s many charms

Indonesia
REGULARS 18 EDITOR’S LETTER 22 CONTRIBUTORS 62 SOCIAL SCENE ON THE COVER Jacket, shirt, skirt and shoes Erdem Signatures blue topaz and diamond earrings Kiki McDonough Fashion Director: Nicole Smallwood Photographer: Carla Guler Make-up: Joe Pickering @ Arch The Agency using Dior Forever Foundation and Capture Totale Le Sérum. Hair: Joe Pickering @ Arch The Agency using Hair Ritual by SISLEY. Model: Gia Tang @ Milk 129 12 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024
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and, I’m betting, Mr Stewart thinks himself one very lucky man indeed. Lisa Grainger interviews her on page 116.

Women working to create a better world, like Shoshana, are no strangers to these pages. Take the Black Mambas, who I was fortunate enough to spend a night with at their bush camp in Kruger, South Africa last month with B Corp company Intrepid Travel. ey are the world’s rst all-female anti-poaching unit, and the success of this radical approach to conservation lies in the data. Poaching incidents have fallen by 63 percent since this impeccably trained unit rst put boots on the ground just over ten years ago. Crucial to this positive outcome, believes its founder Craig Spencer, is that they patrol unarmed. Intrigued? Find out more on page 187.

Editor’s LETTER

like Rory Stewart. I like his ‘explainers’ in the wildly popular podcast he co-hosts with Alastair Campbell, e Rest is Politics

I like the fact he walked across Afghanistan. I like his thoughtthrough approach to politics. And I also like his wife. As president of Turquoise Mountain, an NGO working in Afghanistan, Myanmar, Saudi Arabia and Jordan to revive historic neighbourhoods and traditional crafts in areas where culture is under threat, Shoshana Stewart is smart, capable, beautiful

It was lmmaking in war zones that prompted sisters Georgia, Sophia and Nina Scott to create a brand that not just ful lled their own need for really good bags to carry camera kit, but did so in the least planet-damaging way possible. Enter Groundtruth, bags that are not just t for extreme conditions but are also happy swinging through Knightsbridge. Amy Wakeham nds out the founders’ story on page 124. If you’re a Bridgerton fan, then you’re in for a treat. As the third series of this mega-hit airs on Net ix this May, Tessa Dunthorne sits down with Luke ompson, who seems able to blend e ortlessly into the background of the busy London cafe in which they meet. He likes it that way, he says. You pretty soon get to realise that this serious young man is not in acting for the fame, on p112. is issue also features our Aesthetic Guide, edited by expert Annabel Jones, from page 129. Our approach to aesthetics is like our approach to most things – it’s all in the balance. Undoubtedly, there is pressure to keep looking as good as you can for as long as you can, but there is value in that. Looking good makes you feel good and when you feel good, everything is just that little bit easier. We only feature the best doctors and journalists in the business and bring you some interesting dives into sleep, what it’s like to be on Ozempic long term and why, perhaps, we need to be looking at the food on our plate instead. Enjoy.

SPRITZ I swear that whenever I wear this incredible scent from Matiere Premiere, I get stopped and told I smell so good...

SPEAK Thanks to smart phones and social media, we’re losing the art of conversation... Reclaim it with some help from this book
TREAD Merry People makes by far the comfiest wellies I’ve come across and perfect for town and country BOOK Summer isn’t summer without Giffords Circus. I’m booked into its London appearance in Chiswick this June EDITOR’S PICKS 187 112 57 18 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024

FALMOUTH

DARTMOUTH COWES

LE HAVRE

02.06.24 CLASSIC YACHT
RACING
15.06.24 RICHARDMILLECUP.COM

CONTRIBUTORS

REBECCA NEWMAN

What are you most looking forward to this summer?

Sunshine on the Solent and boatlife with the kids at home.

When it's good, there is nowhere better… Horses at dawn and water skiing at sunset – we live for those summer days.

Favourite place for a sundowner? At anchor, on any boat. I love Alum Bay on the Isle of Wight where the water is aqua and flattens off at dusk, the bay encased by the high chalk cliffs of The Needles, making the perfect sunset spot.

What's on your wrist at the moment? Actually – nothing. I love not knowing the time. But I am lusting after a sleek diving or adventure watch.

Top beauty secret?

Face yoga. I’m trying to be disciplined at it, but it is hard to be consistent. And keeping my gua sha tools in the freezer.

When it comes to make up – less is definitely more as I grow older.

RACHEL DONALD FIONA GOLFAR FEE DRUMMOND WANT TO KNOW WHAT’S ON?

What are you most looking forward to this summer?

Spending one month nestled in the mountains of Crete writing my book, a poetic and powerful deconstruction of how the law erases violence against women in order to justify violence against nature.

Favourite place for a sundowner? I have no idea what a sundowner is, but it made me think of how the sun is setting on Europe – a peace project can only last for so long in a military industrial complex.

What's on your wrist at the moment? I was at a conference when a French man delightedly explained to me that time is ‘made up’ He had recently discovered this fact, despite the expensive watch on his wrist; I've been happily losing track of man-made concepts for years. Top beauty secret? The only ingredient your beauty cabinet needs is a jar of manuka honey.

What are you most looking forward to this summer?

The beach at Saunton Sands stretches out forever, and the waves are glorious for a wannabe long boarder like me. I’m also entirely besotted with two brothers, Jack and Jamie, who teach surfing and come out with me: it’s heaven.  Favourite place for a sundowner? On the dunes (it’s a UNESCO biosphere reserve, and I wisely surf with a friend that makes the most incredible mezcal margaritas).  What's on your wrist at the moment? A Swatch. I go through phases of Apple Watch and Oura to watch my Heart Rate Variability (stress, which is affected by unlikely things) and training times. But I love the peace of analogue, too. Top beauty secret? Sleep, sex, and Pat McGrath.

What are you most looking forward to this summer?

I’m looking forward to spending time at my home in Fowey, Cornwall. I love not having to go to an airport to go on holiday. My husband’s family were friends of the author Daphne du Maurier who lived there and his aunts followed her to work on the land during the war. It holds his history and we all love it. Favourite place for a sundowner? My favourite sundowner is sitting at North Street Kitchen, again in Fowey, watching the sailing boats come in at the end of a long day on the water while enjoying a frozen margarita. What's on your wrist at the moment? I like a classic man’s watch. I wear a 1951 Cartier London Tank Normale. What's your top beauty secret? I swear by Gucci Westman’s glow drops. They make my skin look radiant.

Get the C&TH editor’s picks and our weekly guide to What’s On — and you’ll never say you have nothing to do.

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LUCY CLELAND

EDITORIAL DIRECTOR

EDITOR-AT-LARGE ALICE B-B

ASSOCIATE EDITOR CHARLOTTE METCALF

DEPUTY EDITOR AMY WAKEHAM

ASSISTANT EDITOR & SUB EDITOR TESSA DUNTHORNE

SUB EDITORS KATIE BAMBER, RUBY FEATHERSTONE, ANDREW BRASSLEAY

FASHION DIRECTOR NICOLE SMALLWOOD

BEAUTY DIRECTOR NATHALIE ELENI

INTERIORS DIRECTOR CAROLE ANNETT

CULTURE EDITOR ED VAIZEY

EXECUTIVE RETAIL EDITOR MARIELLA TANDY

EDITOR-AT-LARGE FRANCISCA KELLETT

TRAVEL

EDITOR-AT-WILD FEE DRUMMOND

SUSTAINABILITY EDITOR LISA GRAINGER

PROPERTY EDITOR ANNA TYZACK

MOTORING EDITOR JEREMY TAYLOR

ONLINE CONTENT DIRECTOR REBECCA COX

DEPUTY ONLINE EDITOR ELLIE SMITH

ONLINE WRITERS CHARLIE COLVILLE, OLIVIA EMILY

ONLINE ASSISTANT MARTHA DAVIES

SOCIAL MEDIA MANAGER DANIELLA LAXTON

CREATIVE & PRODUCTION DIRECTOR PARM BHAMRA

DESIGN & PRODUCTION MIA BIAGIONI

ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER ELLIE RIX

HEAD OF FASHION EMMA MARSH

SENIOR ACCOUNT DIRECTOR PANDORA LEWIS

ACCOUNT DIRECTOR SERENA KNIGHT

DIGITAL COMMERCIAL DIRECTOR ADAM DEAN

DIGITAL BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR JOEY GOLDSMITH

SENIOR ACCOUNT MANAGER SABRINA RAVEN

SALES SUPPORT, OFFICE & B CORP PROJECT MANAGER XA RODGER

TECHNICAL DIRECTOR MARK PEARSON

CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER GARETH MORRIS

FINANCE CONTROLLER LAUREN DELGADO

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HUMAN RESOURCES CONSULTANT ZOE JONES

CHIEF COMMERCIAL OFFICER TIA GRAHAM

CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER JAMES THROWER MANAGING DIRECTOR JEREMY ISAAC

CONTRIBUTING EDITORS AND WRITERS

TIFFANIE DARKE, JAMES WALLACE, FIONA DUNCAN, OLIVIA FALCON, DAISY FINER, AVRIL GROOM, MICHAEL HAYMAN, LAUREN HO, RICHARD HOPTON, EMMA LOVE, MARY LUSSIANA, CAROLINE PHILLIPS

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COUNTRY & TOWN HOUSE is a bi-monthly magazine distributed to AB homes in Barnes, Battersea, Bayswater, Belgravia, Brook Green, Chelsea, Chiswick, Clapham, Coombe, Fulham, Hampstead, Holland Park, Kensington, Knightsbridge, Marylebone, Mayfair, Notting Hill, Pimlico, South Kensington, Wandsworth and Wimbledon, as well as being available from leading country and London estate agents. It is also on sale at selected WHSmith, Waitrose, Marks & Spencer and Sainsbury’s stores and independent newsagents nationwide. It has an estimated readership of 150,000. It is available on subscription in the UK for £39.99 per annum. To subscribe online, iPad, iPhone and Android all for only £9.99/month, visit: exacteditions.com/ read/countrytownhouse. For subscription enquiries, please call 020 7384 9011 or email subscribe@countryandtownhouse. co.uk. It is published by Country & Town House Ltd, Studio 2, Chelsea Gate Studios, 115 Harwood Road, London SW6 4QL (tel: 020 7384 9011). Registered number 576850 England and Wales. Printed in the UK by William Gibbons and Sons Ltd, West Midlands. Paper supplied by Gerald Judd. Distribution by Letterbox. Copyright © 2024 Country & Town House Ltd. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission is strictly prohibited. Materials are accepted on the understanding that no liability is incurred for safe custody. The publisher cannot be responsible for unsolicited material. All prices are correct at the time of going to press but are subject to change. While every care is taken to ensure information is correct at time of going to press, it is subject to change, and C&TH Ltd. takes no responsibility for omissions or errors

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The GOOD LIFE

Alice B-B is off in search of new horizons – with a quick stop at the spa first, of course

THE MAGIC COTTAGE our dreamy, enchanting Cotswolds home is for sale. (As I write this – I’m thinking ARE YOU MAD?!)

But we’ve decided, after 12 years, it’s time to chuck all the balls in the air. I nd change terrifying. But also exhilarating. And I’ve realised that change through freedom of choice – rather than forced necessity – is a huge privilege. But, my god, I’ll miss the deafening dawn chorus as the birds salute the sun rising over the hill, wandering through the intense bluebell woods, the gentle sing-song of the stream that meanders through our garden, sneaking o to our local pub, e Bull in Charlbury, for a pint and some toothsome grub or to Daylesford for a decadent massage. But it’s time to hand our happy home over to someone else. And time for us to roll up our sleeves and take on a fresh project.

DAMN IT’S GOOD... But probably the best thing about the new Reconnect Retreat at Heck eld Place hotel in Hampshire – it starts weeks before you set foot in the place. ere’s a pre-retreat Zoom session with resident eco-psychologist Amy Steadman, who feeds back what you hope to achieve from the retreat. is information is used by the team to create a personalised programme. So, by the time you arrive, every therapist and practitioner is ready to deliver your speci c programme, to facilitate whatever it is you need from this time. Each sta member has been plucked for their world-class treatments delivered intuitively. e Bothy spa is – I believe (and I’ve tried a few!) – the most beautiful in the UK. While the food is mostly biodynamically grown at the hotel’s farm and then spun into heavenly manna by chef/magician Skye Gyngell. e retreat ends with a walking and talking session through the woods with psychologist Amy – a brilliant way to close the loop on your experience. If you need time to reconnect with yourself, with a friend or a gang of pals – e Bothy at Heck eld is the place to do it. (heck eldplace.com)

‘We’ve DECIDED, after 12 years, it’s time to CHUCK all the balls in the AIR’

‘FANCY GOING TO... the theatre?’ Groan. For years I’ve struggled with it; the spitting, the shouting, the overacting, the feeling trapped, the inability to suspend my disbelief. But then I saw e Picture of Dorian Gray with Sarah Snook (Shiv in Succession). And in those two hours everything changed. is production and phenomenal performance hasn’t just raised the bar – but slung it into a new stratosphere. So now my beak is whetted and I’m going all in. My hot-list: Romeo & Juliet with Tom Holland, A View from e Bridge with Dominic West and in the autumn there’s Steve Coogan in Dr Strangelove I blame the brilliant Snook – I’ve done a 180 and gone full-luvvie. n

(juliesrestaurant.com).
HUNTING
shleep.co). THIS
I’LL BE...
REVISITING the revamped Julie’s restaurant in Notting Hill – where Mr Love and I had our first date
SPRITZING Tan Luxe X Paris Hilton’s excellent tan-in-a-can (tan-luxe.com).
for the best bed linen – curious to try Shleep’s wool sheets (
MONTH
ILLUSTRATION BY MEI MEI, @MEIMEI_2503 28 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 COLUMN

The WILDIST

Our new editor-at-wild Fee Drummond celebrates the importance of the tribe

he Wildist’ – the name of this new column, which will explore a return to old ways that can nurture and feed our souls, while restoring our fragile biochemistry – could imply a solitary spirit; as though being wild was about being alone rather like the image of the howling wolf in front of the moon. But it’s almost entirely the opposite. It is about freeing a magnetic aliveness and being open to connection. It is a form of togetherness, of nding your place within your ‘tribe’.

Nowadays, we lack the historical social structure of living within the security of a tribe, where everyone has a role, a sense of unconditional belonging, shared knowledge and aligned values. And where trusted peers, loyal-to-the-death friends, and a permanent community would surround you to support, share and hand down skills and knowledge about the intricate daily needs for human survival.

Li fe today mostly consists of separated boxes and small units of co-dependency, far from friends,

family and a like-minded cohort, which makes it almost impossible to feel that we are surviving, let alone thriving.

I grew up travelling, having adventures lost in nature, o -grid exploring and surviving – experiences that have shaped me. But it has taken a lifetime of battling conformity to learn to respect the parts of me that yearn to be wild, and which need daily sustenance so that I can be the best version of myself.

Over the past ten years therefore, I have been exploring the science behind natural wellness. I try to listen to my gut instinct and lean towards ‘wild’ choices in everything from food, medicine and travel to parenting and lifestyle. As a mother of three, I have battled disease, trauma, and long-term illnesses, using food as medicine, and rejecting convention. Tuning into the call of nature, noticing where it leads me and better understanding why it is good for me, has become a habit.

In this column, I will be exploring what it is to live a luxe, barefoot, intelligent, nature-based, wild life in today’s world. I hope you’ll nd your wild side with me.

WILD HACKS

1 ABSORB

Water needs to contain minerals for your body to absorb it. If water is filtered of all nutrients or minerals, you are merely ‘flushing’, and not ‘absorbing’ any minerals. I sprinkle salt flakes – I use Celtic Sea Salt – under my tongue before drinking water.

2 GLOW

We lack collagen in the foods we eat, and need more of it to keep fluid, and youthful. What you put on the inside, glows on the outside. Add one table spoon to your latte. Try OSSA Organic Grass Fed Organic Collagen Peptides, £32. ossaorganic.com

3 STEEP

Choose tea leaves instead of teabags, as they contain plastic and chemicals that you then ingest. Plus, taking time to slow down while waiting for a real brew, is a form of mindfulness in itself. Try TeaPigs Loose Tea Subscriptions, from £1. teapigs.co.uk n

‘T
PHOTOS: FEE DRUMMOND X FUJIFILM
32 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 COLUMN
Fee has tapped into her wild nature to be the best version of herself Collezione ANNIVERSARY LOVE

The RURBANIST

Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall on finding peace in nature, and holding the government to account

What’s bringing you joy at the moment? e dawn chorus. In spring and early summer, I love when the noise of it is a little bit louder every morning, and I start seeing birds pairing o and doing their funny little dances.

What’s annoying you most right now? e government’s refusal to fully understand that the way we eat is fundamental to our health, and o ering no help to people in terms of real education about food, or food policies that will make a di erence to people’s lives.

What could you have been arrested for? It wouldn’t altogether surprise me if I was arrested for protesting about an environmental cause. If we don’t see some real commitment to policies that will change the energy sector and move us away from fossil fuels towards renewables, then, not for the rst time, I may well be on the streets again.

Best life hack? Cold water. I know people love to make jokes about it, but I have a pond at home that I swim in, or I have a cold shower. You feel fantastic afterwards.

A moment that changed everything? Waking up at the original River Cottage (which I rented to escape from London), sometime in the very early spring of 1999, and thinking, ‘Oh, I wonder if I could persuade Channel Four to let me do a series about downsizing here, and I wouldn’t have to go back to London, I could start my vegetable garden and keep a few chickens and see how it goes.’

Where do you go to escape? For a walk in the woods. We’re lucky to have a bit of woodland here at home, and several times a week, I’ll just wander down to the end of the eld and into the woods. So just outside and being in nature generally, but speci cally being among trees.

What does sustainability mean to you? Being conscious of the impact of your decisions on the planet. We’re never going to get it right all the time. Just to be engaged and thoughtful, and conscious of the fact that all the decisions you make will have an impact.

Your greatest triumph? I’ve campaigned on a lot of issues, and I wouldn’t consider any of them a triumph, even though we changed European law on discarding sh at sea. It’s always a mistake to think you’ve triumphed, because there’s always more to do.

Your greatest failure? I’ve made TV series about the climate crisis and tried to engage the government to persuade them to think again about their environmental policy. Given they have basically doubled down and backed o their commitments to tackle climate change, you could say that’s a pretty spectacular failure. But I’m not deterred by that.

What does a life in balance mean to you? at every day you need to take some time to enjoy and relish those aspects of life that nourish you. For me, that’s family and nature.

How to Eat 30 Plants a Week is out on 9 May (Bloomsbury, £25) n

QUICK FIRE FAVOURITES...

SCENT Bay leaf. BOX SET The Wire. CHOCOLATE BAR Toffee Crisp. SONG Baba O’Riley by The Who. DISH My mum’s shepherd’s pie. GADGET A potato ricer. RESTAURANT St John. HOLIDAY The Hebrides.

PHOTOS: MIKE HOLFORD / UNSPLASH; NILS LEONDHARDT / UNSPLASH; STEFAN JOHNSON; MATT AUSTIN
34 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 INTE RVIEW
River Cottage 2.0

STYLE

Cocoon ME

Elevate your late-spring layers with a glorious quilted coat thrown over a crisp cotton dress –just the thing to ward off the British chill before the sun (finally) comes out. Reversible coat, £595; Ekberg dress, £385. wiggykit.com

May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 37

The STYLIST

Tiffanie Darke is on the hunt for a (vintage)

bargain

It takes 278 steps to make a Chanel ap bag. Apparently, the craftmanship that goes into making these iconic bags is akin to that of a Chanel jacket – which may explain why one now costs over £10,000. is amounts to a 75 percent price increase in the last ve years, but it seems the higher they’re priced, the more desirable these bags become. How does luxury get away with it?

e rise of the secondhand market o ers a clue. Luxury goods are now investment pieces, whereby you may not just recoup the money you spend, but if you buy wisely, you could get it back with interest.

‘Revenues from reselling luxury bags and clothing now add up to around $200bn a year,’ reports

e Economist. For the sensible (and mindful) shopper, the resale market is beginning to eclipse buying new.

However, a warning. ere is no sign the rise of the secondhand market is slowing the rise of primary ( rst-hand) goods – in fact it may even be fuelling it. Shopping preloved is not a sustainable choice in itself – shopping preloved mindfully is. Personally, I’m trying to buy only ve new things a year, and another four secondhand.

So, what are the rules? For leather goods, Sellier London, Vestiaire and Xupes are where most of the marketplace goes down. If you can’t bear the scroll, Reluxe Fashion and Hardly Ever Worn It (HEWI) o er a more curated experience. For clothing, go elsewhere. It’s hard to do any kind of return on these platforms and the seller is not always honest. I bought a Gabriela Hearst shirt last year that arrived with a button missing and a pull in the fabric. I have yet to wear it.  Instead, go to an actual shop and do some actual shopping. Chelsea’s Sign of e Times is a treasure trove of goodies, as is SK Vintage in Kentish Town and (for cool streetwear vibes) Chillie London on Portobello Road (trawl the excellent market while you’re there too).

But best of all are charity shops. Not only is your money going directly to a good cause, but you could pick up a major bargain. One well-known in uencer told me she deposits piles of gifted clothing in her local Oxfam (Hampstead), meanwhile the Charles Tyrwhitt partnership with British Heart Foundation means you can nd brand new, quality shirts for just £10. At these prices, who’s going to Chanel? n

CLOCKWISE FROM ABOVE: Sellier London stocks preloved Birkins; Chillie London’s founders Lydia McNeill and Natalie Hartley outside their store; an Hermès Kelly bag from Xupes; Chanel from Sellier London
38 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 STY LE | Column
BY APPOINTMENT TO HRH THE PRINCE OF WALES MANUFACTURER AND SUPPLIER OF FOOTWEAR CROCKETT & JONES LIMITED, NORTHAMPTON MADE IN ENGLAND | SINCE 1879 CROCKETTANDJONES.COM F m th Khaki & Ocean Suede Our interpretation of a classic summer Boat Shoe featuring our new Rubber Wedge Sole

The EDIT

Blue sky dressing.

SUMMER SKINCARE

Varley has teamed up with Fairly Made – which enables brands to measure and improve the environmental and social impact of their products – to understand the traceability of its designs and work towards a more transparent and responsible future. This means you can shop its relaxed everyday outfits with more confidence. varley.com

LOVELY LINEN

London-based fashion label Labeca, which aims to create the perfect capsule wardrobe, has just what we’re looking for this summer. Its new linen collection features beautiful designs made from the natural, breathable and durable fabric. Hazel dress, £270. labecalondon.com

FRESH SCENTS

Three sublime spring fragrances

1 Summer Fridays Jet Lag Eye Serum, £46. spacenk.com 2 Ilia Skin Rewind Stick, £48. iliabeauty.com 3 Chantecaille Rose de Mai body cream, £150. harrods.com
eau de
fenwick.co.uk
Estée Lauder Bronze Goddess
Flora Verde
parfum, £70.
Van Cleef & Arpels Moonlight Rose eau de parfum, £145. selfridges.com Molton Brown Sunlit Clementine eau de parfum, £120. moltonbrown.co.uk
40 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 STY LE | News

ON THE RADAR

This season, the lady is in red

HAPPY FEET

We love Longchamp’s take on classic summer sandals made in collaboration with master sandal maker K.Jacques. Even the iconic closure from the brand’s beloved Pliage bag range has been incorporated into the shoes. Longchamp x K.Jacques sandals, £270. longchamp.com

HANDS OF TIME

From 26 May to 9 June, Van Cleef & Arpels is staging its rst-ever London watch exhibition at Cromwell Place. Telling the story of the maison’s timekeeping heritage, sources of inspiration and incredible craftsmanship, it’s an unmissable event that will enchant watch and craft lovers alike. ere’s also talks and children’s workshops from L’ÉCOLE, the brand’s School of Jewelry Arts, and on display will be its exquisite new launches, like this Lady Arpels Brise d’Été watch, with its butter ies that tell the time and owers that sway with a single touch. vancleefarpels.com

NATURE KNOWS BEST

Star Seed’s new Forest Cream boasts a waterless formulation made from 100 percent natural, wildcrafted with ingredients from coastal forests. e formula works harmoniously to restore the skin’s natural balance and rebuild the microbiome, nourishing the skin without clogging pores. Made in small batches, Star Seed partners with East African smallholders who forage for its key ingredients, like baobab and neem, ensuring traceability and sustainability. £89, starseednatural.com

GANNI Port Royale sunglasses, £185. ganni.com REFORMATION Bethany ballet flats, £268. thereformation.com MOTHER Bomber jacket, £470. netaporter.com KIOHNE Coral swimsuit, £145.69. kiohne.com VARANA Cashmere jumper, £650. varana.com JACQUEMUS Leather trousers, £1,315. harveynichols.com ROUJE Apero bag, £375. rouje.com
May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 41

TO THE NINES

Put your best foot forward this social season, says Mariella Tandy

PRELOVED INVEST RENT

DIOR Milly Carnivora necklace, £27,400. dior.com

SUZANNAH LONDON Dress with cape, £2,490 suzannah.com

LALAGE

£775. lalagebeaumont.com

ME+EM Dress, £395. meandem.com

BEULAH Yahvi lemon dress, £750. beulahlondon.com

RIXO

THE ATTICO @ BY ROTATION

Heels, rent from £39 byrotation.com

BEAUMONT Maya Mignon bag, GUCCI @ HANDBAG CLINIC Marmont mini bag, £895 handbagclinic.co.uk BOTTEGA VENETA @ COCOON CLUB Mini Jodie bag, rent from £19. cocoon.club CHRISTIAN LACROIX @ 4ELEMENT Star earrings, from £85. 4element.co.uk BUNDLE MACLAREN @ MWHQ Waverley Pout headpiece, rent from £9. mywardrobehq.com SIR @ RITES Frankie dress, rent from £79. rites.co BORGO DE NOR @
RELIKED
@ BY ROTATION Bag, rent from £3. byrotation.com
42 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 STY LE | Wardrobe

WHAT DREAMS ARE MADE OF

Lead the celebrations with Malone Souliers’ partyperfect wedding shoes

There’s nothing as magical or joyful as a wedding –whether you’re the happy couple, part of the bridal party, or there to celebrate your good friends’ happiness.

Step forward, Malone Souliers. The British brand’s fabulous collection of wedding shoes offers both comfort and oodles of charisma for its wearers – meaning you can dance the night away in style.

For brides, the brand has a divine collection of gorgeous bridal shoes, featuring dreamy pearl and crystal embellishments that’ll put a sparkle in your step as you make your way down the aisle.

For guests, the brand also has a myriad of styles for every outfit. Designed with flair and finesse in London and handmade in Italy, each pair of Malone Souliers shoes brings personality and elegance to your special occasion ensembles, whether that’s a black tie gown, sleek slip dress, or impeccably tailored

trouser suit. Whatever you’re looking for – luxurious satin styles, dazzling crystal embellishments or sleek slingbacks –Malone Souliers has a shoe for you.

So, for every wedding invite dropping through your letterbox this spring, you can RSVP with a flourish knowing Malone Souliers has the perfect pair for you to hit the dance floor in.

ABOUT THE SHOEMAKER

Founded in 2014 by Mary Alice Malone, Malone Souliers has been crafting timeless, effortlessly modern shoes for discerning women ever since. The brand works with highly skilled Italian makers who use the finest materials to produce shoes that combine beauty with comfort and the perfect fit. A certified member of the Leather Working Group, Malone Souliers also designs and manufactures with a zerowaste approach and continually strives to care for the wellbeing of the planet and its people.

Discover the wedding collection at malonesouliers.com and at Harrods Shoe Heaven. harrods.com

Bonnie 80 heeled mules, £605 Tala 90 heeled sandals, £765
May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 43 PROMOTION
Blythe 80 heeled mules, £580
Suits YOU Your complete guide to Royal Ascot style with Fairfax & Favor Designed with town and country in mind, Fairfax & Favor designs and makes luxurious contemporary classics, for an elevated sense of style. fairfaxandfavor.com
LEFT: Dress Self-Portrait; Hat Victoria Grant; Belmont bag in Tan Fairfax & Favor; ‘Eternity’ stud earrings Tilly Sveaas CENTRE: Esme jacket in Navy Fairfax & Favor; Dress Emilia Wickstead; Hat Emily London; Loxley bag in Stone and Newbury heel in Porto Blue Fairfax & Favor; ‘Molten’ 18ct gold-plated vermeil hoop earrings Missoma
May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 45 PROMOTION
ABOVE: He wears morning suit, shirt and top hat Oliver Brown; Tie and Balmoral loafer Fairfax & Favor. She wears dress The Fold; Hat Awon Golding; Gloves Cornelia James; Brancaster heel in Black, Langham clutch in Melon and Sennowe belt in Melon Fairfax & Favor; ‘Molten’ 18ct gold-plated vermeil hoop earrings Missoma

BELOW & CENTRE:

Beatrice blazer in Ecru, Belmont bag in Black and Newbury heel in Tan, Navy & Cream Fairfax & Favor; Dress Phase Eight; Hat Lock & Co; ‘Eternity’ stud earrings Tilly Sveaas FAR RIGHT: Dress AJE; Hat Lock & Co; Finsbury bag in Stone and Florence wedge in Ivory Fairfax & Favor; ‘Eternity’ stud earrings Tilly Sveaas

May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 47 PROMOTION

BELOW:

Esme jacket in Ecru and Highbury clutch in Blush Croc

Fairfax & Favor; Dress AJE; Hat Lock & Co; ‘Eternity’ stud earrings Tilly Sveaas

CENTRE:

He wears blazer, shirt and trousers Hawes & Curtis; Wells deck shoe in Pine Green

Fairfax & Favor. She wears dress Ghost; Hat Awon Golding; Finsbury clutch in Stone and Sorrento wedge in Black Fairfax & Favor; Gold hoop earrings Tilly Sveaas

FAR RIGHT:

Victoria jacket in Biscuit Wool and mini Tetbury bag in Melon Fairfax & Favor; Headband Karen Millen; ‘Molten’ 18ct gold-plated vermeil hoop earrings Missoma

May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 49 PROMOTION

KEEPING IT LIGHT

Lightness is key to the luxurious collections created by British designer Alan Scott, which spans outerwear and casual jackets through to polo shirts, using a revolutionary cashmere stretch technology. alanscott.co.uk

SUNSHINE STYLE

Get summer-ready with these updates for your warm weather wardrobe

PLACES AND FACES

Formula 1 champ Jenson Button and British actor Matthew Goode are both sporting Hackett’s SS24 collection inspired by sunny Seville, where the palette stretches from trad greens, blues and beiges through to bright mandarin, seagrass and ash pink. hackett.com

LINING UP

is eld jacket from Purdey is a sportswear classic and the ultimate in seasonal versatility, with a wool or a cotton lining designed for breathability and comfort in warmer weather. £1,200, purdey.com

OFF THE WALL

Lee has launched a collection inspired by maverick 80s artist Jean-Michel Basquiat, incorporating sweats emblazoned with his riotous artwork through to paint-splattered jeans and customised denim jackets. lee.com

Spring style updates, sorted.
Well
BEST OF THE
Let the sunshine in with a refreshing citrus scent… 1 PARFUMS DE MARLY Perseus eau de parfum, £245. harrods.com 2 LOEWE Solo Vulcan eau de parfum, £118. perfumesloewe.com 3 GEO F. TRUMPER Extract Of Limes Cologne, from £26. trumpers.com 4 ACQUA DI PARMA Mandarino di Sicilia, £147. acquadiparma.com ABTANY Abrobad swim shorts, £210. abtany.com SWAINE Indy backpack, £2,900. swaine.london MANOLO BLAHNIK Monaco suede loafers, £595. manoloblanik.com SUNSPEL T-shirt, £85. mrporter.com
Groomed
ZEST
PHOTOS: © BRYAN ADAMS 50 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 STY LE | Men’s

MADE BY HAND

The House of Swaine has been proudly crafted by artisans in England since 1750

THE HISTORY

Established in 1750 as whip and saddlery makers, The House of Swaine has served the British royal family and luxury connoisseurs alike ever since. Its founder, James Swaine, set the standard for quality British goods – a reputation the brand upholds to this day.

Over the years, The House of Swaine welcomed Brigg Umbrellas and Herbert Johnson Hats to its family, creating a uniquely British luxury offering with elegance, style and craft at its heart.

Almost 300 years later, all House of Swaine products are still made by hand in England by the brand’s team of dedicated artisans. Whether a hat, umbrella or attaché case, all designs are made from the finest selection of natural and durable materials, with leather sourced from English cattle and tanned and shaped in workshops using the traditional bridle leather silage process.

THE BESPOKE JOURNEY

Tailor-made creations are at the heart of The House of Swaine. As every product is made by hand in Swaine’s workshops, they can be customised or even created from scratch for discerning customers.

1 The first step in the journey starts with an in-depth consultation, to discover exactly what the customer would like to commission. Mood boards, pictures and sketches can be provided to further personalise the experience.

2 Next comes material and leather selection that will bring the design to life. Swatches are always provided, as the tactile sensation of the leather is integral to the bespoke experience.

3 Then comes the iterative design process, when Swaine’s dedicated in-house team develop the customer’s unique idea, polishing it until it’s exactly as required, and ensuring that it matches the original vision.

4 Finally, Swaine’s artisans will begin the meticulous process of creation, using their expertise and the chosen materials to bring the unique vision to life.

52 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024

THE HOUSE OF SWAINE FAMILY

THE LEATHER COLLECTION, since 1750

Swaine is known for its classic attaché cases, which feature traditional construction techniques kept alive by the brand’s master craftspeople. Each case takes more than 30 hours to make, using the finest English bridle leather, and drawing on Swaine’s saddlery background. Every item is made to last a lifetime, fully repairable and made with passion.

Also in Swaine’s signature leather goods collection are folios, handbags and holdalls, each timeless design crafted to last. Vintage glamour meets modern day elegance in the Margot bag – which can be customised if desired – while the Kensington is a modern laptop bag, sleek and stylish in supple leather.

Swaine is also famed for its bespoke trunks and suitcases, which are made to order in a choice of leathers and colours. Each trunk takes over 500 hours to make.

THE HERBERT JOHNSON COLLECTION, since 1889

The hatter of choice for royalty and nobility in the late 19th century, Herbert Johnson first made its name for its silk-velvet top hats. In the 20th century, its hats witnessed many of era’s sporting and cultural moments: Sir Stirling Moss wore a Herbert Johnson helmet when he won the British Grand Prix at Aintree in 1957, and its hats appeared in The Avengers and Dr Who. Most notably, Harrison Ford as Indiana Jones sported a Herbert Johnson ‘Poet’ felt hat in the iconic film series.

THE BRIGG COLLECTION, since 1836

Craftmanship and heritage are at the heart of Brigg Umbrellas, an icon of British luxury – its designs can be seen in Singin’ in the Rain and Mary Poppins. All of its umbrella handles are made from the finest hardwoods, like oak, stripped cherry, and polished chestnut, and feature a goldplated collar.

See more at www.swaine.london
May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 53 PROMOTION

PEARLY QUEENS

e gemstone gets a bold new look with A Sinner in Pearls’ latest collection, ‘Purity’, which captures the essence of water and the graceful movement of droplets in nature.

Freshwater pearls are paired with onyx, crystal quartz and dalmatian for unisex pieces with real impact. asinnerinpearls.com

The Magpie

The latest jewellery news.

FOR YOUR EYES ONLY

Fabergé and James Bond have teamed up celebrate the monumental 007 archive. eir rst outing is inspired by the 1983 lm Octopussy, which actually features a Fabergé egg. e new egg, limited to 50 pieces and taking seven months to make, is crafted from 18ct yellow gold and hand-painted with green enamel. e accompanying locket, meanwhile, is set with blue sapphires and white diamonds, and the octopus inside has two black diamonds for eyes. faberge.com; 007store.com

BIRD IN THE HAND

Ti any & Co’s iconic Bird on a Rock design has been given a rainbow makeover in a new collection created as a tribute to its famous designer, Jean Schlumberger. is time, it has been reinterpreted with a curated selection of colourful gemstones, diamonds and pearls accented by rare paillonné enamel. £POA, ti any.co.uk

RETURN OF THE CHOKER

GOLD RUSH

Super stylist Petra Flannery (who names Emma Stone, Carey Mulligan and Amy Adams among her clients) and her sister Meehan have collaborated with Vrai on a range of vintage-esque Fair Trade diamond and gold pieces, inspired by their California childhood. From £5,000, vrai.com

1 ELHANATI Velvet and flower choker, £7,750. elhanati.com

2 SYDNEY EVAN Beaded choker with charm, £595. brownsfashion.com

3 YSSO Ariadne 18ct gold-plated choker, £700. theysso.com

4 CECE FINE JEWELLERY Sweetheart necklace, from £4,750. cecejewellery.com

54 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 STY LE | Jewelle ry

MESSIKA BOUTIQUE

Unit 6, East Piazza, Covent Garden

London, WC2E 8 HD

Time to SHINE

Simon de Burton on the latest watch models to get excited about

OOH, IT’S A BIT FROSTY…

Recently arrived Audemars Piguet CEO Ilaria Resta hit the ground running with the launch of one of the grooviest watches of the year so far. The Royal Oak Concept Flying Tourbillon is the result of a collab with Australia-born, London-based fashion designer Tamara Ralph and features a frosted gold case containing a dial composed of three off-set rings made from different tones of pink gold, each with a diamond polished edge. The dial frames a flying tourbillon set with 19 brilliant cut diamonds and the watch is limited to 102 examples. £POA, audemarspiguet.com

May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 57 Watches | STYLE

CHAIN REACTION

No watch maker is quite as masterful in the eld of form and function as Patek Philippe, so it’s not surprising that the latest version of its classic ‘Golden Ellipse’ dress watch is set to become an instant classic. e original Ellipse was launched in 1968, its elliptical shape being based on the mathematical formula for the ‘golden ratio’.

Combining a gold case with one of the rst blue dials seen on a wrist watch, it measured a small but perfect 27mm by 32mm and soon established itself as the ‘sine qua non’ of dress watches. is new version measures a more imposing 34.5mm by 39.5mm, has a deep black dial and brings back the deliciously slinky gold chain bracelet that hasn’t been available on an Ellipse since the 80s. Fabulous. £51,470, patek.com

THAT’S A CUT ABOVE

Not so long ago the new ‘Cut’ from Hermes might have been described as a watch just for the lay-deez – but with horological gender lines now being thoroughly blurred and smaller case sizes well and truly ‘in’, the 36mm diameter Cut is pitched as a watch for everyone.

Named after the subtly chopped-o edges of its cushion case, the sporty newcomer can be had in steel or steel and rose gold and with or without diamonds. A choice of matching bracelets or a range of brightlycoloured rubber straps (all featuring a quickchange system) make it easy to mix and match your Cut – and to take advantage of its 100 metre water resistance. £5,430, hermes.com

58 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024

AVAST BEHIND

Historic dial name Breguet has dipped into its past as one-time chronometer maker to the French navy and ‘launched’ this new tourbillon in the sea-worthy Marine range. e Reference 5577’s crystal case back reveals a beautifully decorated movement awash with maritime imagery, such as a compass rose and rope-work engraved on the top of the mainspring barrel, a mainplate striped to resemble deck planks and a wave pattern decorating the platinum peripheral rotor. e nautical theme extends to the strap, too: whether you choose rubber, leather, or a metal bracelet, the clasp is based on the look of a ship’s wheel. It costs £174,200 in platinum or £158,200 rose gold – so watch out for pirates... breguet.com

I ZAY, ZAT’S GOOD STUFF

Harry Winston’s ‘Project Z’ kicked-o 20 years ago with the introduction of the ‘Z-10’ watch featuring a case made from a sci- -sounding material called Zalium – an ‘exclusive’ dark grey Zirconium-based alloy that is ultralight, non-allergenic, non-corrosive and decidedly tough. And Zalium has certainly stood the test of time, as demonstrated by its appearance in these new versions of the high-end brand’s Ocean range of sports watches. Limited to just 50 pieces each in zingy neon green and black, turquoise and orange or navy blue and white, they feature open worked dials based on the architecture of New York’s Manhattan Bridge. Which way to the beach? £21,600, harrywinston.com

YOU MIDAS WELL

Rolex wowed the crowds at April’s Watches and Wonders show in Geneva by pulling the wraps off a shamelessly decadent version of its ‘Deepsea’ dive model with a case and bracelet hewn from 18 carat yellow gold. The veritable sea monster of a timepiece weighs a wristdragging 320 grams – but it’s far from being all show and no go. The massive case features a helium escape valve and guarantees ‘waterproofness’ (as Rolex likes to call it) down to a lung-crushing 3,900 metres.

There’s also a scratch-proof ceramic bezel and a ‘Glidelock’ bracelet clasp that makes it easy to adjust in the (unlikely) event that you need to strap it over the cuff of your wet suit… £45,700, rolex.com

May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 59 Watches | STYLE

HE’S ALWAYS A GOOD SPORT

With Wimbledon fortnight just around the corner, we should all be dusting-off our racquets and ironing our thigh-skimming skirts –and that’s just the boys. And while we’re at it, let’s not forget to equip ourselves with a watch just like Rafa’s (that’s Rafael Nadal, to those unfamiliar with Spain’s master of the green sward). For the past decade, he’s worn ultra high-tech Richard Mille tourbillons built to withstand the shock of his mighty forehand – and the latest RM 35-03 Automatic Rafael Nadal model features a patented ‘butterfly rotor’ that enables its mechanism to be adjusted to alter winding speed, just as a modern car’s transmission can be switched from ‘comfort’ to ‘sport’. So whether you’re thrashing-out a match-sealing tie-break on Centre Court or slobbing out on the sofa watching the Wimbledon highlights, the mainspring of your RM35-03 should always be perfectly tensioned. Phew…. £POA, richardmille.com

BACK TO THE FUTURE

Who needs designers when you have a back catalogue as rich in fabulous creations as Longines? Well, the historic Swiss maker does need a designer or two to keep things fresh – but they seem to know the meaning of restraint and are not prone to over-tinkering with the classics. Which is why the latest versions of the Conquest model (created to mark the 70th anniversary of Longines landmark dive watch) successfully combine a modern feel with a vintage look. As the name suggests, the Conquest Heritage Central Power Reserve gets a power reserve indicator in the middle of its lovely anthracite dial, which also features contrasting gold-coloured hands and hour markers. £3,500, longines.com

60 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024

LOOK WHAT JUST BREEZED IN

e latest take on couture house Dior’s eency, weency, tiny, teen La D de Dior cocktail watch is this ‘Etoile des Vents’ or ‘Wind Star’ model. Penned by Victoire de Castellane - who has been Dior’s head of watch and jewellery design for 23 yearsthe watch takes inspiration from the ‘lucky star’ beloved of brand founder Christian Dior. Choose from dials made from motherof-pearl (£42,000) or malachite (£44,000), each decorated with golden stars set with diamonds and contained in gold cases with diamond-set bezels. dior.com

GUCCI COO COO

e roots of the ‘fashion watch’ can be traced back to a remarkable man called Severin Wunderman who persuaded Aldo Gucci to grant him sole rights to produce Gucci timepieces back in 1972. Under the ownership of luxury goods giant Kering since 1999, Gucci now takes it watch division extremely seriously - as evinced by its latest series of high complication models that includes this addition to the 25H collection, its rst-ever minute repeater. Featuring three tiny hammers and gongs that sound the hours, quarters and minutes, the 340-part movement is housed in an ultra-thin ‘tri-layer’ case with an octagonal crown hidden at three o’clock. e intricately patterned openwork dial was inspired by ‘cymatics’ – the creation of forms from sound waves.

£POA, gucci.com

WELL THAT CERTAINLY TOOK OFF

It’s widely accepted that one of the rst men’s wrist watches was made for pioneer aviator Alberto Santos Dumont. e Brazilian-born pilot was a close friend of jeweller Louis Cartier and (so the story goes) complained to him about the di culties of having to use a pocket watch at the controls of his aircraft - so, in 1904, Cartier presented him with a watch designed speci cally for wearing on the wrist while ying. Seven years down the line it went on public sale as the ‘Santos’ – and almost 115 years (and lots of evolution) later, it remains one of Cartier’s most popular models. Several new models are available this year, but we love this three-hander with a smoky brown dial that comes with both a bracelet and a leather strap. £7,400 (large model), cartier.com n

PHOTOS: SHUTTERSTOCK May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 61 Watches | STYLE

EVERY WOMAN

Celebrating International Women’s Day at The Hari hotel

For the second year running, County & Town House and Paper London hosted a lunch at The Hari hotel in Knightsbridge to acknowledge and celebrate female founders. Our very special speaker, Chrissie Rucker of e White Company, shared her founder journey with 35 guests, wowing them with the fact that she built a business without any outside investment that is now worth hundreds of millions. Chrissie is also really passionate about paying it forward and as patron of e Prince’s Trust, in 2018 she started the campaign # ChangeAGirlsLife with the aim of raising funds and empowering young women across the UK in employment, education or by starting their own businesses. With investment in female-founded brands still dismally low, stories were shared around successes and challenges from founders at all stages of their business journey. Whatever the future, supporting each other with insight, knowledge, experience and a glass of Pomello spritz feels a good way to keep breaking down those barriers.

Charlotte Stavrou Philippa Thackeray Jade Holland Cooper Desideria Tantalo Nathalie Schyllert Kerstin Remy Ruby Raut Chrissie Rucker Alice Edwards Priya Downes Marine Tanguy Coco Baraer Panazza Carmella Sternberg Rahel Tesfai Katie Fyfe Maeve Doyle Amy Powney Butty McConville Malin Spano Eshita Kabra-Davies Lucy Cleland Sophie Lis Marina Beaumont Nina Briance Alexandra Carello Madeleine Sangster
PHOTOS: © MARCUS DAWES 62 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 STYLE | Social Scene
Wiggy Hindmarch
Available at Unlock your hidden beauty.

HEALTH & WELLBEING

Hit Your STRIDE

While we can’t all look like Gisele Bündchen, we can take our cues from her healthfilled approach to life. The supermodel has collaborated with luxury athleisure label Vaara on its new SS24 collection of sporty swimwear and pilates-to-brunch activewear. Belted swimsuit, £240. vaara.com

PHOTOGRAPHER: LACHLAN BAILEY; STYLIST: GERALDINE SAGLIO
May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 65

BODY & SOUL

Camilla Hewitt is on a mission to

combat pollution at home

Environmental pollutants are cited as one of the main factors in uencing health. Air pollution, water contamination, and the chemical substances in the food we eat, the products we use, and the homes and buildings we live and work in can all contribute to chronic disease. Although we are becoming increasingly aware of this link, the invisibility of pollutants means they often go ignored.

Ecological medicine expert Dr Jenny Goodman (drjennygoodman.com) gives us an insight into just one of the ways harmful substances can enter the body and be detrimental to health. ‘ e skin is the largest organ in the body. It absorbs all sorts of toxic chemicals from not only cosmetics, perfumes, and deodorants but also from clothing and bed linen. Most of the chemicals that contaminate fabrics are lipophilic or fat-soluble, meaning they can penetrate the skin and then head for fatty organs, which include the brain. ese petrochemicals have been implicated in cancer, endocrine disruption (messing with your hormones), reproductive and neurological problems.’ When looking for clothing and bedding, Dr Goodman recommends investing in fabrics such as organic cotton, hemp, ax linen, and undipped wool.

Dr Nikita Grover, who is the Head of Functional Medicine at Lanserhof at e Arts Club (theartsclub.co.uk), points out the knock-on e ect of environmental pollutants that enter the gut: ‘Chemical substances foreign to animal life disrupt our intestinal microbiota, causing dysbiosis. is, in turn, impacts the resilience of our immune systems, increases the risk of metabolic disorders, and manipulates the two-way communication

between the gut and the brain, resulting in a predisposition to psychiatric or neurological disorders.’ She goes on to say, ‘We each, as individuals, di er in our ability to detoxify from these pollutants, which is re ected in the variation in our susceptibility to developing chronic diseases. Paying attention to stress levels, sleep, regular exercise, gut-friendly bre, and fermented foods will all positively enhance our microbiomes and our bodies ability to deal with environmental pollutants.’

While we can all make healthy lifestyle choices to limit their e ects, we must acknowledge that most pollutants derive from human activities. In order to have a positive impact, each one of us needs to work towards using greener alternatives. n

SQUEAKY CLEAN

Four home products that won’t pollute

CHECK IN: NOORDHOEK

Fronted in glass and Cornish stone, Noordhoek is an eco-retreat on the edge of Porthcothan Beach on Cornwall’s north coast. Built using local suppliers and craftspeople, the property boasts solar panels and EV chargers for electric boats, plus an outdoor kitchen, fire pit, and its own yoga studio with bifold doors, meaning guests can make the most of the fresh saline air.

1 Reome Contains broccoli leaf and aloe extract, clinically proven to purge skin of the effects air pollution. Three Suns Balm Cleanser, £55 .reome.com

2 Hello Klean Removes pollutants and impurities from water, such as chlorine and heavy metals, and minimises their harsh effects. Purifying Shower Filter, £65. helloklean.com

3 Navy Grey British made, within a radius of 145 miles from fibre to finished jumper. Field Vest, £250. navygrey.co

4 Piglet in Bed Woven from European flax linen and cotton. Quilt, from £309. pigletinbed.com

HEALTH & WELLBEING | Wellness
How toxic are your bed sheets? PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES BOOK IT: From £5,050, sleeps 12-16 guests. perfectstays.co.uk 66 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024

Hästens 2000T®

Experience the bed of your dreams at your nearest Hästens store. HASTENS.COM
Photography Simon Procter

BODY Language

Olivia Falcon checks out London’s new longevity clinics

Bryan Johnson is a man on a mission and a social media sensation who spends around $2 million a year biohacking and blueprinting every organ of his body in a live experiment to live longer and live better. e good news is you probably don’t need to spend quite as much to dip your toe into the longevity pool as London is awash with new clinics and private healthcare clubs promising to enhance and extend our lifespans.

First up: e Galen Clinic (consults from £500; thegalenclinic. com) is a plush townhouse o Harley Street, founded by Dr Andreas Androulakakis a renowned surgeon who has overseen the aesthetics arm of the famed Palace Merano Medi Spa in Italy for the last 15 years. At Galen, Dr Andreas will be o ering both non-invasive injectable cosmetic treatments as well as surgical procedures such as face lifts and breast rejuvenation in the clinic’s state of the art operating theatre. Also on the menu, comprehensive diagnostic testing with in-house functional medicine guru, Dr Nathan Curran, who might suggest the new EBO2 Ozone erapy, a real boon for those circling the drain of burnout, it involves extracting blood from the patient’s arm and oxygenating it to boost the mitochondria cells – the machine also has an infrared lter to reduce in ammation to give one an incredible boost of energy. ere are also dermatology services led by Catherine Borysiewicz, the Duchess of York’s dermatologist and a raft of other specialists on hand.

For those who feel they never get enough airtime with their GP, Solice is a new generation members-only healthcare concept (from £4,950 for a three-month membership; solice.health) that provides unlimited access to a private GP, health concierge and advanced

diagnostic test such as epigenetic testing which will evaluate your predisposition to ageing diseases such as cancer and Alzheimer’s with curated regenerative programmes led by Dr Tamzin Lewis and Dr Liza Osagie-Clouard.

Hooke London also o ers in-depth health assessments aiming to boost your body, mind and emotional resilience (from £7,500; hooke.london). Guests are asked to ll in detailed questionnaires crafted by the psychiatry team, who want to know how you cope with change and stress. ere are also blood panels and full body scans, with results given through an interactive presentation before guests are handed to a team of experts who might include Professor Boloux, a world leader in endocrinology and a godsend for women in the menopause.

erapies range from personalised supplementation and meal deliveries to behavioural coaching for motivation, and physiotherapy. If you are someone who also puts yourself at the bottom of your to-do list then this service is for you. n

MIND OVER MATTER

1 BLUR

Sweed Miracle Powder works like the Paris Instagram filter to magically blur imperfections and imbue skin with an incredible glow. Free from talc and bismuth oxychloride, it contains vitamins and minerals. In five shades. £38, sweed beauty.com

2 SOAK

The ultimate hostess gift and so much better than a box of chocolates, these cold pressed organic oils from Nyita are supercharged with plant infusions and sublime fragrances such as pink damask rose, zesty yuzu and ylang-ylang. Bath Oil Discovery Set, £125. nyitacollection.com

3 SOOTHE

Scientifically formulated to fight inflammaging, this powerful cream contains xanthohumol, an antioxidant 30 times more powerful than vitamin C. It tones down redness, fades pigmentation and gives skin a sheen of good health. Pro XN Antioxidant Therapy, £129. proxn.eu

4 PERFECT

Formulated with powerful antiinflammatory ingredients that rapidly repair blemishes without damaging the skin –apply eyeAM’s Crystal Clear Pigmentation and Spot Treatment with a rose quartz applicator. £29. eyeamworld.com

PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES
Hooke London
68 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 HEALTH & WELLBEING | Review
Solice
THE HOME OF COUNTRY CLOTHING SCOTLAND AT ITS VERY BEST To request a copy of our new Spring Summer catalogue please call 01796483236 or visit our website. Many amazing fresh Spring brands are also available online. WWW.HOUSEOFBRUAR.COM

The SCOOP

Caroline Phillips on lingo and lasers

LEARN THE LINGO

If you’ve ‘done’ the Zoe app, possibly the most intriguing feature of the gut, blood fat, and blood sugar response programme was wearing the glucose monitor – which tells you how your body’s glucose levels react to certain circumstances, food (sugar – in all its forms generally means a big spike), exercise and stress. But the sensor they use is meant for those who actually already have Type 2 Diabetes.

Now though, for wellness warriors interested in preventative measures and those wanting to improve their metabolism, Abbott – a global leader in diabetes care and the company behind the Freestyle Libre monitor used in Zoe – has launched a consumer lifestyle wearable called Lingo. It’s the same principle – you stick the biosensor in your arm and o you go – logging your meals, exercise and other activities on the app and learning – through prompts, and educative bites of information, how to better manage and understand your own glucose reactions.

e more steady your graph, which looks rather like a mountain range with troughs and peaks throughout the day, and the fewer larger and long-lasting spikes you log, the better functioning your insulin regulation – and better blood sugar control you have.

Given that, according to Diabetes UK, 4.3 million people in the UK live with diabetes and roughly 850,000 people could be living with diabetes who are yet to be diagnosed, and a further 13.6 million are pre-diabetic (and probably don’t know it), Lingo is part of the new wave of preventative healthy tech that empowers us as individuals to get a grip of what’s going on with us personally – wearing it for two months is advisable to give you a decent time range in which to monitor yourself – and to be able to test out what works and what doesn’t. Future iterations will have more actionable feedback. Two-month programme, £300. hellolingo.com

LIGHT FANTASTIC

Listen up Lyma fans, the Lyma Laser Pro, the must-have device that uses low-level laser therapy (LLLT) to help smooth ne lines, fade acne scars, tighten skin and regenerate muscle, has arrived, boasting three times more power than the original. Unlike traditional red-light therapy, Lyma activates cellular rejuvenation deep within the skin – as used for decades in hospitals for cartilage repair to wound healing. It’s ouchy-pricey but, bye-bye plastic surgeons, pain and downtime, hello smoother, tighter, brighter skin.

e LYMA Laser Pro, £4,995. lyma.life

CELL IT TO ME

If you don’t know this very e ective, Swiss skincare brand, get it on your radar now. Better still, book for it to come (with a therapist) to your home. Because Cellcosmet has partnered with the fabulous Lucie app, allowing you to experience this wellness o ering chez vous. Lucie may send Sezen (an ex-Bulgari Spa therapist) to do your facial. You’ll then enjoy a two-step cleanse, exfoliation, clay mask, face and hand massage, hot and cold compresses. Your skin will be radiant and revitalised. 90 mins, £250. lucieapp.co.uk

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HEALTH & WELLBEING | Beauty Dilemma

At a LOSS

Nathalie Eleni targets skin laxity

With the latest skin tightening technology available, it’s not only your spirits that will be lifted. Skin laxity occurs when collagen and elastin bres (think of them as the sca olding for your skin) start to break down, resulting in loose or sagging skin.

What causes collagen breakdown? A lthough it’s a natural result of ageing, exposure to harmful UV rays, poor nutrition, lack of exercise, weight loss and genetics all add to the mix.

Are there any quick beauty hacks? Home-use gadgets like CurrentBody’s NuFace range (from £162, currentbody.com) – which uses microcurrents to gently stimulate muscles and help improve muscle tone long term – can also give a temporary lifting e ect as a quick x. Face massage is another way to instantly change the look of skin. Use upward lifting movements, with medium pressure and an oil or serum to allow glide (no dragging!), and a pinch-and-lift movement along the brow-bone – this can work wonders to help release muscle tension, which can exaggerate the look of heavy-looking lids.

Can face cream help? Although I truly believe you should never underestimate the powers of a good moisturiser, expectations should be realistic. A cosmeceutical-grade vitamin C like Skinceuticals C

E Ferulic can help stimulate collagen production, as can retinol. Peptides and amino acids can also help to improve the skin condition and encourage a slight tightening e ect over time, giving an overall healthy appearance to your complexion. But, most importantly of all, an SPF should be worn every day –I recommend Hello Sunday’s illuminating primer.

What about micro-needling? Certain home micro-needles are great for product absorption, but to get the collagen-boosting results to help lift and tighten skin, a professional treatment needs to be carried out. I have been micro-needling my clients’ skin for years. It creates micro-wounds that supercharge your skin’s natural collagen production, and results can be amazing. I use the Xcellaris Pro Twist, which triggers the body’s natural regeneration process (treatments from £250, omniya.co.uk)

How about remodelling treatments? Dr Jennifer Doyle, Head of Aesthetics at e Clinic Holland Park, recommends Softwave non-surgical treatments as a successful way to achieve remodelling and lift. ‘Energy is delivered 1.5mm below the surface of the skin, targeting the mid-dermis exclusively to stimulate huge amounts of collagen. e clever way in which the ultrasound is delivered means that the energy coverage is superior to other devices on the market,’ she says (treatments from £1,750, theclinichollandpark.com)

And injectables? If you don’t want to go down the ller route, Dr Wassim Taktouk advises Sculptra for increasing skin rmness and de nition (treatments from £800, drwassimtaktouk. com). It is an injectable bio-stimulator clinically proven to increase skin’s natural collagen production to help volume loss. It’s a great non-surgical option to achieve a sculpted jawline, with results lasting up to two years. n

PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES
DR SEBAGH Platinum Gold Elixir £395. drsebagh.com DIOR Capture Totale Hyalushot wrinkle filler, £75. dior.com WILDSMITH SKIN Active Repair Copper Peptide Serum, £100. wildsmithskin.com ALASTIN SKINCARE Regenerating Skin Nectar with TriHex Technology, £180. skinpharmacy.co.uk HELLO SUNDAY The Illuminating One Glow Primer, £23. cultbeauty.com CURRENTBODY NuFACE Trinity device, £302. currentbody.com SKINCEUTICALS C E Ferulic, £165. skinceuticals.co.uk HYDROPEPTIDE Retinol Routine Booster, £84. hydropeptide.co.uk 72 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024

HEALTH IS WEALTH

Echelon Health is the world’s leading provider of preventative health assessments

Echelon Health, located at the heart of Harley Street, is one of the world’s leading providers of Preventative Health Assessments. The clinic utilises only the most advanced and cutting-edge imaging technology that, combined with the talent of its renowned radiologists and doctors, enables the clinic to detect tumours as small as 1-2mm and subsequently, detect up to 92 percent and 95 percent of the causes of preventable death among men and women, respectively (available via the Platinum Assessment).

Echelon Health recognises that no single scanner can assess for all diseases, so it utilises a combination of advanced MRI, CT and ultrasound technology, alongside comprehensive blood tests such as tumour markers, to give its clients optimum accuracy in their results. The most comprehensive assessment takes six hours to complete, with no down time.

The clinic, situated in a beautiful Harley Street establishment, also benefits from having it own in-house medical advisory committee, which comprises a large network of best-infield consultants and practitioners, who consistently advise Echelon Health on best practice and provide knowledge on the most up-to-date medical science, meaning it remains at the forefront of preventative medicine.

Echelon Health’s Platinum and Gold clients have access to a beautifully appointed private suite for complete privacy during the assessment, which can be extended to accommodate couples coming to undergo the assessment together.

Call Echelon Health on +44 (0)20 7580 7688 for a confidential conversation with one of its private client managers or email info@echelon.health

CASE STUDY

Amanda Wakeley OBE reflects on her assessment with Echelon Health

‘The combination of losing a seemingly healthy sibling to a brain tumour, a milestone birthday, and 30+ years of a highly stressful career were the catalysts for me in signing up for the Echelon Platinum Health Assessment.

If you are like me, with a positive mindset, with a healthy lifestyle, it is less scary to assume that 'all is well'. However the reality is sometimes we have no idea of what is actually going on in our bodies – and our health is truly our most important asset. A hackneyed old phrase but so true.

My assessment was incredibly thorough. The day was stress free as I was gently guided from one procedure or check to another, always with kind reassurance and informed answers to my many questions.

The follow up consultation was reassuring but also revealed a couple of issues that my regular health checks would not have uncovered, and if left untreated would possibly have had an impact at a later date. I feel encouraged by this health MOT, relieved to be aware of where my body is at, and reminded to never be complacent or take my health for granted.’

Dr Paul Jenkins, Medical Director
PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 73 PROMOTION

CULTURE

En Plein Air

As summer returns, so too does outdoor theatre. And what else projects better than The Bard’s back catalogue? His work was built for the open stage. As You Like It at the Holloway Garden Theatre, 18 July to 1 September. rsc.org.uk

PHOTO: © RSC
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THE CULTURAL CALENDAR

Installations and exhibitions perfect for aesthetes, says Tessa Dunthorne

FAMILY PHOTO ALBUM

Nick Waplington’s Living Room is an intimate series of photos taken of family, friends and neighbours on the Broxtowe housing estate in Nottingham. Timeless documentary images taken with deliberate care to avoid a voyeuristic gaze and an absolute must-see. Until 25 May, hamiltonsgallery.com

MOVERS, SHAKERS

Featuring groundbreaking modernist art from Ukraine, In e Eye of the Storm explores the works made in the early 20th century of the Balkan state in the wake of collapsing empires, wars and total state upheaval. 29 June to 13 October, royalacademy.org.uk

WILD CHILD

Kew Wakehurst is well worth a day trip this summer – its sunny season art programme, Meadowland, champions one of Britain’s most threatened habitats: the meadow. Colourful art installations take over the landscape here, and, hopefully, so too will a bunch of creepy crawlies and critters. From 14 June, kew.org/wakehurst

CHEETAH GIRLS

Kenyan-born artist Alexandra Spyratos brings her solo show to west London’s Catharine Miller gallery. Exhibiting art inspired by the rich wildlife of Africa, you’d be forgiven for mistaking Chelsea with a sub-Saharan safari. From 25 May, alexandraspyratos.com

FLOWER POWER

Well-heeled folk treading the King’s Road will be sharing the pavement with largerthan-life oral installations, as Chelsea in Bloom returns in all its vibrant glory. ‘Floral Feasts’ is the theme this year – watch you don’t become lunch for one Very Hungry Caterpillar – we hear he’s hardly ever satiated. 20-26 May, chelseainbloom.co.uk

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Meadow Shadow cushion design by Tord Boontje

THE C&TH GUIDE TO…

CHELSEA FLOWER SHOW

Blissful blooms and bio-design. By Wendy Scott

Fl amboyant florals, dandy designs and precious plants from across the world signal in spring with the sensation that is the RHS Chelsea Flower Show. Held annually, the event presents progressive gardens from cutting-edge practitioners that go beyond the decorative and incorporate ecological principles and biodiverse design.

SO WHAT’S IT ALL ABOUT?

Starting as a pre-war gardening show in a mini marquee in 1913 and evolving into a gargantuan and globally revered platform, Chelsea Flower Show is the premier UK extravaganza for plantcentred design and all things horticultural. Vaulting way beyond a mere garden show darling, the event’s eco credentials have risen substantially during the last decade, making it a Mecca for future-forward concepts on sustainability, urban greening and biodiversity.

WHAT’S THERE TO SEE?

As well as the spectacular annual Show and Sanctuary Gardens, Pavilions and Plant Studios, there are several others we won’t be missing:

e Boodles National Gallery Garden celebrates the 200th anniversary of the culture hub, and takes inspiration from paintings there including Seurat, Van Gogh and Monet; a Roman Garden by e Newt in Somerset, honouring ancient gardening traditions with playful and innovative design – fountains, architectural features, frescoes and healing plants, will be on display;

e Bowel Research UK Microbiome Garden looks at the connection between the health of

the soil, wildlife and our microbiome, and features an edible meadow; e Planet Good Earth Garden mimics a natural forest ecosystem; e Water Aid Garden models a future with less reliable weather patterns; and e World Child Cancer’s Nurturing Garden features keyhole gardens saving water/ soil nutrients.

AND WHAT ABOUT REFRESHMENTS?

Created in collaboration with e Dorchester, e Drawing Room o ers oral-inspired champagne afternoon tea, bar bites and chilled drinks, while Spring Garden at Chelsea (for private clients and intimate groups) is a stylish space where guests embrace the simplicity and seasonality of renowned chef Skye Gyngell’s food. ere are also plenty of cafes, food courts and picnic areas, too.

From 21-25 May (21-22 May for RHS members only). From £38.85 for members and £48.85 for non-members. rhs.org.uk

After winning big this awards season, The Bear is back for its third instalment, with Carmy (Jeremy Allen White), Sydney (Ayo Edebiri) and all the others set to return for another dose of high-octane drama. Out June, Disney+

Jeff Nicols’ hotly-anticipated 1960s film The Bikeriders is primed to arrive in cinemas this summer, complete with an all-star cast that features Austin Butler, Jodie Comer and Tom Hardy. Out 21 June

The latest A-lister to join the West End is Tom Holland, starring in Jamie Lloyd’s pulsating adaptation of Romeo & Juliet, at Duke of York’s Theatre. 11 May to 3 Aug

A must for your summer reading list. Three sisters return to their family home following a loss in Blue Sisters, the new novel from Cleopatra and Frankenstein author Coco Mellers. Out 23 May

TV FILM BOOK PLAY The
LIST Watch, read, listen
Critical
PHOTOS: © JOHAN PERSSON & ISAAC ANTHONY May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 77
Spot royals as well as plants at CFS Chelsea Hospital’s resident pensioners

GET IN THE SWING

The ultimate guide to The Boodles Tennis

Returning to the Buckinghamshire countryside from 25 June to 29 June 2024 is the 20th edition of The Boodles Tennis, one of the highlights of the British social season. A five-day tennis event featuring the world’s leading tennis professionals from around the world, it takes place in the magnificent grounds of the beautiful Stoke Park, acting as an intimate warm up to the Wimbledon Championships.

THE VENUE

Situated only 35 minutes from central London, Stoke Park has been the host venue of The Boodles since the event was created by organisers ACE Group International in 2002. With over 1,000 years of history and a star of the silver screen having appeared in many movies over the years (including 007’s Goldfinger, which celebrates its 60th anniversary this year) the iconic Stoke Park exemplifies luxury and world class hospitality.

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Picturesque Stoke Park is home to the annual Boodles Tennis championship

THE EVENT

The Boodles is truly a unique event and the most lavish warm-up for The Championships at Wimbledon – truly a one-of-a-kind entertainment experience. It is a heady mix of high calibre tennis featuring Wimbledon stars, combined with a day of unmatched hospitality on the manicured lawns of Stoke Park.

The Boodles has the feel of an English garden party, with a relaxed atmosphere where champagne flows and tennis stars mingle with guests in intimate and beautiful surroundings. The purpose-built stadium fits just 2,000 people, and no seats are further than ten metres from the grass court, giving visitors a front row seat to the action.

With an exclusive list of official sponsors, such as Patek Philippe and the established status of their title sponsor, Boodles, guests will experience the luxury and service that has become so synonymous with these brands of excellence.

The gates open at 11.30am daily, and the tennis starts at 2.30pm, with close of play expected at around 6.30pm (though the duration of matches varies). Opening hours are extended on Thursday, Friday and Saturday.

While the appearance of specific players can’t be guaranteed, the 2024 event is primed to showcase some of the world’s top male tennis players.

To give you an idea, in previous years the event has attracted the world’s top tennis stars such as Novak Djokovic, Stefanos Tsitsipas and Rafa Nadal to name a few.

THE FOOD AND DRINK

A wide range of food and drink will be on offer for guests, with a full selection of exquisite public catering on offer.

Hospitality packages are also available in both the Legends’ Enclosure and the Players’ Enclosure.

The Legends’ Enclosure package includes food and wine plus reserved court-side seats offering unparalleled views of the tennis. You’ll also be treated to afternoon tea in your private area.

Even more lavish is the Players’ Enclosure package. Your day will kick off with a champagne reception while you browse the Boodles jewels on display, followed by a gourmet threecourse lunch, plus a chance to watch interviews with the tennis stars before they take to the court. You can then enjoy the matches from your private court-side box. Afternoon tea is then served.

THE DRESS CODE

The dress code is ‘smart casual’, with guests invited to dress for a ‘glamorous summer party’.

theboodles.com
BOOK IT: Tickets available now from £105.
May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 79 PROMOTION
Over the years, The Boodles Tennis has welcomed superstar players like Novak Djokovic (above)

PREVIEW

Ellie Smith gets access all areas to the Princess Diana photo archive

We ’ve all seen countless images of Princess Diana – but do we know the stories behind them?

A new exhibition will o er fresh insight into one of the world’s most famous royals, o ering a behind-the-lens look at a selection of images taken by her o cial photographers, Anwar Hussein and his two sons Samir and Zak.

Opening this May at St Katharine Docks in London, Princess Diana – Accredited Access will showcase 75 photographs taken by the Hussein family over the course of Diana’s lifetime, alongside rst-hand accounts of the stories behind them. e Husseins had special access to the Princess and her family, spending over four decades working alongside them, meaning they were able to capture numerous signi cant moments – both public and private.

Photographs on display will

include Diana sitting alone outside the Taj Mahal, the ‘revenge dress’ that she wore to a dinner in 1994, and the handshake she shared with a HIV patient – an instrumental moment in ending the stigma surrounding the virus.

e exhibition is arriving in London following successful runs in the US, Canada and Australia.

‘I am honoured and humbled to have been given the opportunity to photograph Princess Diana so extensively and to have had the pleasure of having many friendly and insightful conversations with her,’ said Anwar. ‘I am delighted that the images captured, as well as those of my sons, are coming home to London to recognise and memorialise such a remarkable woman and her sons.’

25 May to 2 September, princessdianaexhibit.com

MY Cultural Life

The Famous Five actor

Ann Akinjirin is nostalgic for Sweet Valley High

I didn’t read The Famous Five when I was young… I was obsessed with Sweet Valley High! I think because it featured young people. I liked the on-screen portrayal of it, found the stories fascinating, loved the dialogue and the way the books were written. It gripped me.

This version of The Famous Five isn’t… infantilising. ey’re not spoon feeding the story to viewers. If you were a fan of the books as a child, you’ll be surprised by how they’ve brought it to the screen this time around. Child or not, you’ll enjoy it.

A moment on screen that forever changed me… is in the nal season of Breaking Bad. Walt’s brother-in-law, the cop, sits on the toilet and ve seasons suddenly click.

The best book I’ve read recently is… Cleopatra and Frankenstein. I loved that the characters were awed and messy. And I really love the way people write New York in books.

My ultimate London weekend is… A hot weekend consisting of a long, aimless stroll along a canal. en to a gallery – the National Portrait Gallery is my favourite – before lunch or dinner at a tapas restaurant. After that – sitting and giggling on the sofa with my love.

My top painting of all time is… e Negro Scipion, a painting by Paul Cézanne. It was at the Tate Modern last year.

An actor we should all watch out for… I recently saw Anatomy of a Fall. e kid in that [Milo Machado-Graner] is exceptional.

In the final part of The Famous Five… You can expect the troop to really come into their own. It’s faster, more intense and hair raising than what has come before, with great performances from new ensemble cast members.

e Famous Five returns to BBC in May. bbc.co.uk/iplayer

PHOTOS: © ANWAR HUSSEIN
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The exhibition offers an all-new insight into the princess’s life

1DO YOU REMEMBER?

Richard Hopton reviews three books that mine a deep seam of memoir

COLD KITCHEN,

In her beautifully written, evocative book Caroline Eden relives her travels by cooking in her basement kitchen in Edinburgh. She is certainly well travelled: Uzbekistan, Russia, Istanbul, Georgia, the Baltic states, Poland, Armenia, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Ukraine all feature in this book. By cooking its food, she conjures up memories of each far- ung place: ‘a kitchen,’ she writes, ‘is a portal... providing unlikely paths out of the ordinary.’ We hear, for example, of her stay in Gyumri in Armenia and her brush with a populist anti-government rising in Bishkek, Tajikistan’s capital. At the same time, she delights in many di erent regional delicacies: Uzbek melons, Russian meat pies, or Latvian bread-and-beer pudding, among many others. is is a book which takes itself seriously – food is no laughing matter, after all – but an engaging one. Bloomsbury, £18.99

2 WAYFARER,

Walking is for many people a liberation. e metronomic act of putting one foot in front of the other, mile after mile, frees the mind. Phoebe Smith, already an inveterate adventurer, took it a step further by walking some of the pilgrim routes that have been revived in recent years in Britain and Ireland: St Columba’s Way, St Hilda’s Way and many others. ‘I know,’ she writes, ‘that I had to walk old paths in order to discover new trails.’ She might have added that walking these pilgrim trails, imbued with ancient religious signi cance, gave her the time, space and inspiration to come to terms with her troubled background, her mother’s death, and abusive, coercive relationships. As she walks, Smith reveals her love of nature and the countryside in poignant, nely observed prose. HarperNorth, £16.99

3 MY FAMILY AND OTHER SEEDLINGS,

In a previous life, Lalage Snow was a photojournalist covering the world’s war zones, living for a while in Kabul. In My Family she tells of her attempts to cultivate an allotment in a Dorset village. She ghts weeds and slugs, plants, hoes and, eventually, harvests while looking after two young children and a baby. As the year progresses, we learn much about the history of vegetables – more interesting than you might think – and, at intervals, she delves back into her journalistic experiences, especially once the Russians invade Ukraine. e allotment helped rationalise the world: ‘When events seemed to spiral beyond comprehension I found a sense of stillness,’ she writes. It’s no mean feat to turn a tale about allotments and young children into an enjoyable, informative and charming book. Quercus Books, £22

Books | CULTURE
May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 81

BIBLIOFILE

Belinda Bamber talks queerness and the apocalypse with Julia Armfield

Private Rites shows three sisters navigating love, life, work and their tyrannical father, in the face of apocalyptic floods. What did you enjoy about writing it? Exploring the way banality and dailiness always assert themselves no matter the extremes people face – it shows their adaptability, but also their apathy and powerlessness. Writing this novel was partly confronting that apathy – by considering what will persist when everything else falls apart (work, commuting to work, complaining about work etc) and what a waste of time that all is.

You’ve called it ‘King Lear with lesbians at the end of the world’. What does the sisters’ queerness bring to the story? I think it is the story – when I was mapping out the arc of this novel, I became very interested in the way that disaster epics and apocalypse narratives in lm and literature tend to ring fence the importance of the traditional nuclear family. In an emergency, the priority is to get your family into the bunker. I wanted to deconstruct that a little from a queer perspective and consider what would happen if your nuclear family was not safe, or worth keeping safe, and how your disaster narrative would unfold.

Do you see yourself in a tradition of queer writers? We’re all just writing in the moment, and it can only really do you harm to zoom out and try to see yourself as something larger. However, I’m inspired by Andrea Lawlor and Sarah Waters and Alison Rum tt and people making incredible queer cinema like Charlotte Wells and Rose Glass and Luca Guadagnino, and old horror auteurs like James Whale. I love the way you can scratch my favourite genre –horror – and nd queer writers and artists and lmmakers everywhere.

Why are there eyes on every page?

As a child, the realisation the world isn’t a safe place shaped my interest in horror as a genre.

pull o this balance to perfection – something terrible is happening, but you recognise yourself within the lightness.

It’s a novel about watching and being watched and about the sensational of powerlessness that can accompany seeing things unfold in front of your eyes.

It’s foreboding yet funny: did you conceive the story as tragic or comic? I wanted the relationships to be as realistic as possible despite the extreme setting, so I tried to blend comedy and tragedy. I like to mix horror and genre elements with really mundane realism, which is sort of a tragicomic balance. Some of my favourite novels, like Ira Levin’s Rosemary’s Baby,

Why is water central to your work – it’s also the medium of your debut, Our Wives Under the Sea? I don’t think it was conscious until I realised water/the ocean is a trope in a lot of formative lesbian media: movies like Portrait of a Lady on Fire, Ammonite and Water Lilies, novels like Sara Ja e’s Dryland , and Kirsty Logan’s e Gloaming ere’s something in the image of water that speaks to duality – the idea of being one thing on the surface and another beneath, which can be so key to the queer experience. Proximity to water somehow goes hand-in-hand with the concept of coming out or coming into oneself more fully, the idea of an odyssey or a baptism, of moving through water to become more fully yourself.

Do you have ‘private rites’ around writing? ere’s a fallacy that writing has to take place in this rari ed space, and I think this myth allows writing to become an elitist pursuit, only open to those with time and means. In reality, you write whenever you can: I have a full-time job so getting it done is, to me, the only point. Can we learn about love from books?

Great question – I’d recommend Geek Love (Katherine Dunn), e Age of Innocence (Edith Wharton), Happy All e Time (Laurie Colwin), America is Not e Heart (Elaine Castillo), It (Stephen King), and Greta & Valdin (Rebecca K Reilly) – all di erent kinds of love and all equally formative.

Dystopian novel you’re reading? Land of Milk and Honey by C Pam Zhang.

Do you hope the end will come with a bang or a warning? A warning, so I can build an ark and take my wife and our cat and our friends and their cat, mostly just to see what the cats would do.

Private Rites by Julia Arm eld (Fourth Estate, £16.99). Read the full interview at countryandtownhouse.com/culture/cth-book-club

EXTRAORDINARY WOME N

Portals between past and future lead to a cross-century LOVE STORY in The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley (Hodder & Stoughton, £16.99); a MURDER at Carnival on a Caribbean island opens Monique Roffey’s feministrallying Passiontide (Vintage, £18.99); Ruth Ivo whirls through Soho in he burlesque MEMOIR Performance (Hodder & Stoughton, £18.99); a carousel of EXISTENTIAL thinking spins Rachel Cusk’s Parade (Faber, £16.99); interwar society SCANDAL drives Vanessa Beaumont’s debut The Other Side of Paradise (Magpie, £16.99) n

PHOTOS: © AVERY CURRAN 82 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 CULTURE | Books

THE SCENT OF HOME

The story behind Jo Malone London’s new Townhouse collection

We sat down with Celine Roux, Jo Malone London’s Global Head of Fragrance, to talk about the inspiration behind its dreamy new Townhouse collection...

C&TH: Tell us all about the gorgeous new Townhouse range of candles and diffuser oils?

CELINE ROUX: With this collection we wanted to design scents that are specifically for the home. Each one has its own specific mood, unique design and enchanting story to tell. All the scents were inspired by the home itself: the Jo Malone London Townhouse – a classic Georgian residence built 200 years ago. It is my creative hub, the home of Jo Malone London and a beautiful British building full of history. Taking inspiration from the Townhouse theme felt so simple yet so powerful; that is how it all started.

C&TH: Take us on a sensory journey around the Jo Malone London townhouse. How did it inspire each scent in the collection?

CR: Before we explore the house itself you need to experience the courtyard. The scent for this is Fresh Fig & Cassis. It’s a beautiful sunlit morning with a freshness on the breeze and you are sitting in the courtyard having a leisurely breakfast with friends under a fig tree. It’s very uplifting: we have juicy cassis, ripe purple figs and moss. The wet soil brings an earthiness that makes it quite addictive.

Then you have Green Tomato Vine, which transports you to a greenhouse on a warm afternoon with colourful, tender vines all around you. It’s leafy green with an earthy tang, vibrant and crisp: a scent that makes you feel safe.

Next, you head inside the house and into your bedroom with Lilac Lavender & Lovage. The windows are

open and there are fresh sheets on the bed. The aroma of lavender and the herbs from your window box float into the room. This calm and serene moment is what we wanted to capture with this candle.

Then it’s time for high tea! The Pastel Macaroons candle was inspired by the very British tradition of afternoon tea, with its comforting sweet almond and vanilla notes. I love the idea that you can share this tea-time moment with other people and this scent instantly makes you feel connected to friends and family, even if you’re not together. It’s very indulgent and luxurious.

The day draws to a close with Glowing Embers: the scent of a cosy night in, in front of the fireplace, in your favourite room of the house. It’s a room to retreat to after the last guests have gone. Throw a log onto the fire and relax into your favourite chair, while flames crackle and pages turn. It sets a very contemplative and comforting mood. During the development phase we pushed the ambery notes to bring softness and a golden warmth.

C&TH: And how is the new collection different from the rest of Jo Malone London’s creations?

CR: Our candles are usually created following the launch of a cologne, but this time the candles take centre stage. They aren’t replacing our classic candles though, don’t worry! We are so proud of those and they are very important to our world. This collection gave us the chance to explore new olfactive territories. You wouldn’t necessarily want to wear a cologne that smelt like a plate of macaroons or a crackling fire, for instance!

Discover the new Townhouse collection at jomalone.co.uk

The collection’s candles and diffusers are carefully crafted in ceramic and porcelain, inspired by the Georgian architecture of the brand’s London home Golden Amber & Orange Townhouse candle, £100. A new scent for the Jo Malone London collection Golden Amber & Orange Townhouse diffuser oil (comes with diffuser), £148
May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 83 PROMOTION
Wild Berry & Bramble Townhouse candle 3kg, £500. A new scent for the Jo Malone London collection, available exclusively at Harrods

SHOWBIZ, BABY

The Society of London Theatre presented the Olivier Awards 2024 with Mastercard in April – and we were dazzled by all things theatreland

On Sunday 14 April, the most glamorous thesps in the country gathered at the Royal Albert Hall to celebrate all things theatreland.

And like any good show, it was an emotional ride. There were tears – Succession star Sarah Snook appeared genuinely baffled by her Best Actress win for The Picture of Dorian Gray. There were cameos from superstars – Michael Sheen, Anna Maxwell Martin, Brian Cox and Cara Delevingne, to name but a few. There were powerful calls to action – Matilda Feyiṣayọ Ibini championed the work of Black writers in her speech, saying her win proved a hunger for work by underrepresented voices.

And, of course, there were heartstopping performances from several nominated West End companies. Tom Francis sang Sunset Boulevard

What is the Society of London Theatre?

The Society of London Theatre (SOLT) was established in 1908 by Sir Charles Wyndham – today it is the leading membership organisation for theatre producers, managers, owners and operators. But its work reaches far beyond membership.

SOLT is the non-profit organisation investing in the future of British theatre. It not only runs the Olivier Awards, but also Official London Theatre and London’s TKTS booth – meaning it provides unparalleled ticketing access to (and insight into) shows on the West End and beyond.

as he marched the green carpet – relayed live via the technical wizardry Jamie Lloyd has come to be known for – before bursting through audiences to take the stage. (The incredible show then won in an astonishing seven categories.) The cast of Operation Mincemeat had Natasha Hodgson mounting an imaginary horse in comedy number Born To Lead, while the cast of Hadestown hit perfect dissonant harmonies in Wait For Me

The Olivier Awards were established in 1976 by the Society of London Theatre. Originally the ‘Society of West End Theatre Awards’, they were eventually renamed for stage legend Laurence Olivier. Over the years, they’ve grown and grown – from ceremonies at Café Royal to taking over the Royal Albert Hall. Today, they are the most prestigious stage awards in the UK.

84 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024
PHOTOS: PAMELA RAITH
‘SOLT plays a crucial role in championing our vibrant theatre sector. From lobbying government to selling tickets, we’re ensuring the continued success and accessibility of our sector’

BOOK IT: OUR TOP THEATRE PICKS

Four shows you shouldn’t miss

HADESTOWN

GUYS & DOLLS

The Manhattan-set musical is one of the greats –and now immersive at the Bridge Theatre. Gillian Lynne award for best theatre choreography winner. Until 2025, from £22.50, officiallondontheatre.com

NEXT TO NORMAL

The rock musical is an intimate exploration of family, loss and mental health. Mastercard best new musical nominee. Until Sept, from £23, officiallondontheatre.com

STRANGER THINGS: THE FIRST SHADOW

Hawkins, 1959. Stagecraft at another level in the adaptation of the Netflix hit. Noël Coward award for best new entertainment or comedy winner. Until Dec, from £33, officiallondontheatre.com

Transporting the tale of Orpheus and Eurydice to the West End in a pop-folk musical by Anaïs Mitchell. Mastercard best new musical nominee. Until Dec, from £23, officiallondontheatre.com Co-CEOs Claire Walker and Hannah Essex CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT:
May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 85 PROMOTION
The National Theatre 60th anniversary performance; Hannah Waddingham opened with a belting number; the cast of Hadestown performing a medley from the show

And the Winners Are...

A selection of the 26 award wins

SO DARLING

They’re used to being costumed to the nines, and the stars of both stage and screen didn’t disappoint on the Olivier Awards Green Carpet for the 2024 awards. They were decked out in jewels and dresses to die for. So who was there, and what did they wear?

Book tickets for London shows from the people who bring you the awards at officiallondontheatre.com n

PHOTOS: PAMELA RAITH
SARAH SNOOK Best Actress for The Picture Of Dorian Gray MARG HORWELL Mithridate Award for Best Costume Design for The Picture Of Dorian Gray AMY TRIGGS Best Actress in a Supporting Role in a Musical for The Little Big Things JADE LEWIS AND MATILDA FEYIṢAYỌ IBINI Unusual Rigging Award for Outstanding Achievement in Affiliate Theatre for Sleepova Nicole Scherzinger wore a strappy backless dress Cara Delevingne wears a custom Gucci gown Cedric Neal (Guys & Dolls) wears a Ferentino tux Left to right: Bonnie Langford, Joanna Riding and Janie Dee James Norton (A Little Life) wears Bottega Veneta Marisha Wallace (Guys & Dolls) wears Alex Perry Michelle Visage (RuPaul’s Drag Race) John McCrea (Everybody’s Talking About Jamie) Left to right: Natasha Hodgson, Zoë Roberts and David Cumming, from Operation Mincemeat Georgina Onuorah (Hamilton) wears Mithridate Denise Gough (People, Places & Things)
86 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 PROMOTION

SOPHIE CHARALAMBOUS

Caiti Grove

discusses painting and partition with the visual artist

‘P

ainting from lm is my theme this term,’ visual artist Sophie Charalambous tells me of her role at the Royal Drawing School, where she teaches teenagers and postgraduate students. ‘We’ve been working from a lm, turning it into monoprint, cutting up the prints and making collages, and then painting from those,’ she explains.

In her East London studio, plants sit on a windowsill and work waits for attention on a vast table crammed with of paint brushes, pots and photographs. As she prepares tea, she explains her view of inspiration – it does not dazzle in a lightning bolt moment, but is generated by the process of making and doing. ‘“Le Quattro Volte” is my latest project –there’s no dialogue, just sounds, it’s wonderful. It’s about the Italian idea of the four stages of life told through events in a little village. e whole cycle of life from the human being to the animal and then the mineral, and how it’s all connected.’

A slow, rural life is part of Charalambous’s heritage. Her father is Greek Cypriot, a strong thread that weaves through her work. ‘My Dad, he always talked about his village where they farmed the land for generations,’ she says. e family lost their farm in the Turkish invasion of Cyprus in August 1974. ‘Fifty years later, there’s still no solution. It’s a trauma for people to lose their land, overnight. It’s all gone and then you’re displaced. You have to somehow emerge from that and carry on.’

Her recent exhibition, Pear, Fig, Pomegranate, focused on lost land and migration. ‘It was about trees and Cyprus and culture and landscape,’ she says slowly. A g tree drawn in Regent’s Park represented the transplanting of culture. ‘My parents were refugees, so it was about the future being here, rather than Cyprus.’ In the foreground of other work, a chainlink fence separates the viewer from the scene, referring to the political situation in the island riven between Greeks and Turks. ‘ ere’s a lot of visual language of partition,’ she explains. Her childhood memories formed under a southern Mediterranean sun also continue to in uence

her work, ‘not just the landscape and the plants and the animals and owers, but also the church, the shadows, the goat herder bringing the goats up to the pasture in the afternoon.’

At university in Brighton, Sophie’s contemporaries developed conceptual ideas inspired by Damien Hirst’s oeuvre while she ran down research rabbit holes in the library’s Egyptian section. She discovered encaustic, painting with a combination of wax, and pigment, which was used in Ancient Egypt for the Fayum portraits, which show what each person inside Egyptian mummies look like. She used it successfully in her own work while studying. ‘I was doing gurative, large gures from imagination, with mythical references. ey were very textural.’

After university, Sophie studied set design at Motley College. Her rst project on graduation being a magical realist piece with a £50 budget. e second was for dance company e Fabulous Beast with a half a million pound budget. ‘It’s a real grafting job,’ Sophie remembers of that period of her career. ‘You work with so many people: actors, producers, directors, the writer if they’re still alive. It’s really being a jack of all trades.’ After ve years, her focus shifted back to her art. ese days, she works both en plein air and in the studio. ‘It’s working in front of the motif and then bringing it inside and working from my imagination,’ she explains of her process. e relationship between paper and object evolves. ‘When I bring it [the artwork] back to the studio, it’s very quick – it changes pace because it is no longer beholden to whatever it was inspired by, it just becomes something that you’re having a relationship with, and you’re trying to make it work,’ she says.

With the wisdom of experience and the curiosity of an inquisitive student, Sophie and her work are a joy to be around. Both genuine, complex and articulate, I look forward to her next project. @charalamboussophie

@rebeccahossackartgallery n
PHOTOS: © CAITI GROVE May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 87 Art | CULTURE
Sophie often captures her subject in situ
first, before working on it in her studio

The EXHIBITIONIST

Ed Vaizey celebrates the women artists who have shaped British cultural history

Qu ite rightly, women artists continue to be at the forefront of many exhibitions, redressing an imbalance that has existed in our national institutions for many years. As well as the National Portrait Gallery doing an amazing job in displaying many more women artists and sitters, the Royal Academy currently has an outstanding show about Angelica Kau man.

Kau man, working in Rome and London in the second half of the 18th century, became one of the founding patrons of the Royal Academy and a close friend of Joshua Reynolds. Her exhibition at the RA runs until the end of June, but versatile artist that she is, she is also now appearing simultaneously at Tate Britain in an exhibition called Now You See Us: Women Artists in Britain 1520-1920 – I think you get the point of what the curators are seeking to achieve.

Spanning 400 years, this exhibition focuses on how these women became artists – because of course, there was no formal training available for the majority of this time. Interestingly, at least from the 18th century onwards, the test of female equality seems almost to have been whether these artists ended up having a relationship with the Royal Academy.

ere are over 150 works, and many by artists that were well-known in their day, but some of whom are less resonant today.

Mary Beale, who painted in the 17th century, received no formal training in becoming an artist – it was inconceivable that a woman should be so trained at that time. It is likely she learned from her father’s friends, who included the painter Sir Peter Lely. She ended up becoming a professional artist and being the main breadwinner for her family, with her devoted husband recording her work and practice in meticulous detail in more than 30 journals. Despite her lack of training she ended up painting the nobility.

Elizabeth Butler, by contrast, who painted in the 19th century, was able to receive instruction at

a female artists’ school in South Kensington. Her paintings, depicting war scenes both heroic and melancholy, proved hugely popular – one had to be guarded by a police man at the Royal Academy summer exhibition. Many of them when you see them will be familiar to you. But, even so, Elizabeth failed to get elected to the Royal Academy, which at that point had not had a female member since Kau man’s day.

Also on display are works by Laura Knight, who painted in the rst half of the 20th century and was elected to the Royal Academy – only the third woman to be so, and the rst woman to have an exhibition at the Academy.

ese are just three artists among many but together illustrate the slow but steady progress women were able to make in a world dominated by male artists. eir stories shed light on the attitudes of their times, but also o er new perspectives and remind us that every age had its nuances.

Angelica Kau man, until 30 June (royalacademy.org. uk). Now You See Us: Women Artists in Britain 1520-1920, 16 May to 13 October (tate.org.uk). n

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88 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 CULTURE | Art
FROM ABOVE: Angelica Kauffman, Portraits of Domenica Morghen and Maddalena Volpato as Muses of Tragedy and Comedy (1791); Laura Knight, A Dark Pool ( 1917); Elizabeth Butler, The Roll Call (1874) IMAGES: © COLLECTION OF NATIONAL MUSEUM IN WARSAW
PIOTR LIGIER;
ESTATE OF DAME LAURA KNIGHT.
RIGHTS RESERVED 2024 BRIDGEMAN IMAGES; ROYAL COLLECTION TRUST
HIS MAJESTY KING
CHARLES
III 2024

26-29

26 JUNE BY

GARRISON CHAPEL
SW1W
LONDON,
8BG
JUNE
2024
INVITATION DISCOVER MORE eyeofthecollector.com
Joseph Lacasse, Méditation (Dia no. 100), 1974 courtesy of Whitford Fine Art Othello Credenza, 2017 courtesy of Zelouf & Bell Image courtesy of Adam Parker

GOOD NEWS

Tessa Dunthorne has the feel-good stories to brighten your day

BOTTOM FEEDERS

No more bottom trawling in Greece’s marine parks – that’s not an innuendo, it’s a new law put in place by its government to prevent the harmful shing practice that drags a net along the ocean oor. By 2026 and 2030 respectively, national parks and marine protected areas will ban this act – enforcing it with state-of-the-art surveillance – in a bid to protect biodiversity in marine ecosystems. Source: Guardian

NEW STARTS

A new partnership between Saira Hospitality, the Hotels With Heart foundation, Camden and Westminster Council launched in March, offering 20 rough sleepers a roof overhead and hospitality training to get themselves back on their feet. The partnership guarantees job interviews for candidates at the end of a four-week programme. They’re looking for further partners to support the rough sleepers in their next steps, too – be it via work experience or funds. Get in touch at sairahospitality.com

WILD LANDS

Over two percent of Scottish land is currently rewilding, says the Scottish Rewilding Alliance. e charity has launched a ‘Rewilding Nation Charter’ in the hopes that Scotland will declare itself the world’s rst rewilding nation; it’s currently one of the most nature-depleted nations on earth. e charter asks the Scottish government to commit to nature recovery across 30 percent of land and sea. Not a wee target (but certainly a bonnie one). rewild.scot

LAY DOWN THE LAW-N

A farm near Salisbury plans to establish the biggest natural grassland in southern Europe. Why’s this good? Lower Pertwood Farm says that, by doing so, they can hopefully restore declining plants, insects and endangered species, including turtle doves and cuckoos.

Source: Guardian

PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES; PEXELS; © RICARDO ROCHA
90 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 CULTURE | News

SPEEDY SCAN

A streamlined prostate cancer test is being rolled out – a clinical trial involving patients in 12 countries has determined that quicker, cheaper scans for the disease are as accurate as the current standard. The new test removes one step from the three-part MRI diagnosis, making it speedier and more accessible. There’s talk of a potential national rollout from next year.

Source: Medical Express

HOT WHEELS

Volvo has produced its nal diesel car. Yes, it’s very last. is nal vehicle? An XC90, which rolled out of its plant in Torslanda, Sweden, in March this year. Bravo, Volvo, now one step closer to its goal to be a fully electric vehicle manufacturer. It’s a short drive here on out.

MONIED MEN – AND WOMEN

The gender pay gap in the UK is at its lowest level in seven years, as revealed by the latest surveys. There’s still a way to go, nonetheless – women earn 91p to every £1 a man makes (meaning, from 29 November, women ‘start working for free’).

Source: Positive News

ANIMAL CROSSING

17 May is Endangered Species Day

BOOHOO-HOO, INDEED

ASOS, Boohoo and George at Asda now need to revamp their green messaging – aka any products presented as eco-friendly must be backed up with further information plus ‘accurate and clear’ claims. is includes a ban on using ‘natural’ imagery – like leaves – that implies a level of sustainability through association. A big win from the Competition and Markets Authority in the crackdown on greenwashing.

SPREAD YOUR WINGS

Mashpi Lodge, a hotel and nature reserve in the Ecuadorian rainforest, has discovered a new species of butterfly – the Argyrogrammana cana, the 18th new species it has discovered. The hotel has spent 12 years pouring resources into rainforest conservation, battling a dramatic decline in Latin American wildlife population. And it’s a neat little space to stay. Exactly the kind of holiday digs we can get behind. mashpilodge.com

IN A WHILE, CROCODILE

In Cambodia, conservationists have successfully released 50 captive-bred Siamese crocodiles into the wild – these crocs are one of the world’s rarest due to hunting and habitat loss. Half of this number now carry acoustic tags to help Fauna & Flora conservationists (alongside the Cambodian Forestry Administration) track the movements of the reptiles as they continue on their journeys. Source: Fauna & Flora

BATS FOR THE RIGHT TEAM

A new study coauthored by the University of Oxford reveals that island-dwelling bats might be an unexpected ally for farmers in Portugal. By studying the droppings of over 100 individuals bats, scientists discovered for the first time that nearly half of what Madeiran bats eat is made up of agricultural pests. Among these were two types of moths that damage vegetables and cereals.

May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 91

The POSITIVE DISRUPTOR

Are you ready for a wet and wild future? asks James Wallace

February, 2014. My now-deceased wife, Becca, lies in ICU recovering from 14 hours of cancer surgery. My phone vibrates. It’s our neighbour Lynn Davies, ‘James, you thought things couldn’t get worse. ey have. Your house is ooded.’

For two months, as Becca recovered from her op, we endured a relentless ow of lthy water rushing past our home in Wiltshire, laden with raw sewage and sanitary products. We weren’t alone. e Aldersgate Group of sustainability leaders estimated that ‘once in a hundred years’ ood could cost the UK economy £14 billion.

As I write ten years later, our village has been inundated again, as have communities across the country. People talk about climate change (aka climate breakdown) as some future, foreign thing. Extreme weather is now the norm. Everywhere. As Jocelyn nipped at the winged heels of Isha, we’ve had 10 named storms in the winter. Remnant hurricanes, warmed by the Gulf Stream, are migrating en masse to Britain, rocking small boats, and big.

We are woefully under-prepared. Over ve and a half million properties – one in six – are at risk of ooding. e National Audit O ce has warned that the number of homes that should be better protected by 2027 has been cut by 40 percent, and 500 of the 2,000 promised ood defence projects have been abandoned. Apparently, in ation is to blame, not this wet fart of a Government. ese biblical deluges damage more than buildings. Roads are crumbling, bridges and railways wash away, transportation hubs grind to a halt. While staring out the window with tidemarks creeping up the car

door, we witness whole harvests of wheat drowning, and livestock swimming for their lives. Our already vulnerable national food security cannot cope with perpetual ooding.

All of the above is avoidable. But still housing estates pop up overnight along rivers like spots on a lanky spread-eagled teenager. Waterways are canalised and dredged, racing fertile soil and insurance policies o to the sea. So much ignorance pervades, from minds as narrow as ditches.

What if we actually valued rain? Rather than legions of concrete, paving, tarmac and plastic lawns, permeable, natural surfaces would soak up water locally. Rainwater could be harvested in tanks and wetlands, saved for those equally extreme and frequent droughts. Rivers could be rewiggled and bifurcated, allowed to breathe across the natural oodplain, bu ered by the thirsty roots of marsh, woodland and scrub.

Imagine investing in future-proof climate adaptation rather than Victorian engineering. Imagine sponge cities, lush with the blood of life and vibrant valleys going with nature’s ow. Imagine elected politicians delivering on their manifestos. Imagine a nation beavering together as if our lives and livelihoods depend on it. Imagine recharged aquifers and water butts abounding. Imagine the subsiding fears of all those millions of webbedfooters, welly-warers and baler-outers.

Imagine welcoming the coming storms with open arms, thanking the small gods that lurk between whispering rushes for the rain that sustains us.

NATURAL

PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES; UNSPLASH THINK DIFFERENTLY, ACT NOW Prepare yourself for a wetter future
PADDLE Get out on the water, learn to canoe and make the most of our rivers with British Canoeing. paddleuk.org.uk INSURE
Sleep
peacefully with the security of Flood Re insurance. floodre.co.uk
Learn
about natural flood management locally, like the North West Flood Hub.
thefloodhub.co.uk/nfm
BE PREPARED
Keep
a weather-eye on marauding storms with the Met Office metoffice.gov.uk SUPPORT Join one of 300 communities offering support to people at risk of flooding. nationalfloodforum.org.uk
92 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 CULTURE | Conservation
Floods like this one in Dorset have become a more regular occurance in the UK

MEDITATIONS ON REPETITION

AN EXHIBITION BY RICHARD NOTT AT THE REBECCA HOSSACK ART GALLERY

8 May - 4 June 2024

Richard Nott is the founder of the iconic British fashion label, Workers for Freedom. Over recent years, he has built a career in painting.

This May, The Rebecca Hossack Art Gallery presents an exhibition of the artist’s latest series of paintings, Meditations on Repetition.

"I realised when listening to music whilst painting that my playlist contains a majority of tracks with repetitive themes: Philip Glass, Nils Frahm, and so on. Then I thought of the pleasure repetitive planting brings. A tapestry of tulips. A woodland of bluebells. Endless snowdrops in a country park.

I find all this transporting. Stabilising. Shutting out the shouty, divisive and rather ugly world we find ourselves in at the moment. I realise, given my many years of looking, and many years of confronting diverse wonders, all I want at this stage is to make a rectangle of modest, lasting, and quiet beauty.

Rebecca Hossack Art Gallery 2a Conway Street, Fitzroy Square London, W1T 6BA

Richard Nott, Red, 2024, oil on canvas, 155 x 145 cm Richard Nott wearing Workers for Freedom,1987

The SOLUTIONISTS

Matilda Cox introduces three tech start ups hoping to transform the way we travel

THE PROBLEM

Despite a Covid-induced dip, the travel industry is well and truly back, with last year’s air travel rates almost matching pre-pandemic levels. But although we might have missed jetting o to somewhere new and exciting in the holidays, with travel and tourism responsible for around ten percent of the world’s total greenhouse gas emissions, the climate certainly didn’t.

It’s now impossible to ignore the impact that travelling has on the environment, and customers are responding accordingly.

According to Booking.com’s 2023 Sustainable Travel Report, three-quarters of travellers said they want to travel more sustainably. It might be what consumers are demanding, but is it possible for travel to ever be sustainable? ese startups certainly think so.

Matilda Cox is an editorial assistant at Springwise, the leading innovation intelligence platform. springwise.com

THE SOLUTIONS

1It can be overwhelming to know where to start when planning a trip – especially for those wanting an eco-friendly experience. Viatu curates positive-impact holidays across destinations like Namibia, South Africa and Botswana, o ering a choice of luxury or budgetfriendly packages. Notably, Viatu only picks partners with hotels and organisations that work to protect the culture, biodiversity, and resources of local communities.

e platform also provides carbon calculations for all activities involved in a trip, enabling Viatu to make climate contributions or o set the emissions generated by a user’s holiday. viatu.com

2

When it comes to where you stay, hotels often aren’t the most sustainable choice, wasting huge volumes of water, energy, and food in the name of customer comfort. Startup Raus believes that it’ll be far better for the planet – and, to boot, your mental health – to have your stay out in nature instead. The company offers customdesigned, o -grid cabin getaways across Germany and Austria that are completely self-contained and equipped with cooking facilities, tools, water tanks, and solar power. When booking through Raus, customers can also choose to spend a little extra to fund essential soil regeneration. raus.life

3

W hen you think of the harbingers of polluting travel, you probably think of planes. Hoping to provide a more sustainable (even comfortable) alternative to short haul ights is Midnight Trains, which is connecting popular locations with its ‘hotel on rails’.

Customers can book private cabins of varying sizes, as well as order room service, at a fraction of the carbon cost of travelling by air. Although plans to connect the UK may have been tabled for now, in 2025 Midnight Trains still hopes to launch its rst journeys from Paris to cities like Barcelona, Rome, and Venice. midnighttrains.com. n

1 2 3
94 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 THE GUIDE | Innovation
A Tradition of Safari since 1812. Explore our bespoke sporting arms, artisanal leather goods & outdoor clothing collections. westleyrichards.com

The GREEN LANE

Is the new Corsa Electric worth the extra spend over cheaper petrol versions? Jeremy Taylor plugs in

Vauxhall has been making superminis for 40 years – the original, no-nonsense Nova proved a sales sensation and was a budget favourite with learner drivers too. Today, the new Corsa is still one of Britain’s best-selling cars.

New to the current model line-up is Corsa Electric, a replacement for the Corsa-e and as smart-looking, user-friendly a small EV as anything on the road. Buyers bene t from emission-free motoring, cool styling and generous levels of equipment but does it warrant the hefty price tag?

Remodelled with Vauxhall’s latest ‘Vizor’ face, the Electric doesn’t bamboozle owners with technology and features a battery capable of well in excess of 200 miles. anks to a fast-charging system, the battery will power up to 80 per cent in just 30 minutes on a 100kW fast charger, or under eight hours using a 7kW home system.

e Vauxhall may not have the urban chic of a Mini Electric or the funky Honda e but Corsa Electric is still a supremely competent and enjoyable drive. at’s especially true if you make use of the drive mode button – Sport really livens up performance on a twisty A-road road. On the motorway, switch to Eco for maximum miles.

Gearless and silent like all electric cars, the Corsa is e ortless motoring. Despite a rather rm ride, on longer journeys it performs well and easily keeps up with tra c. anks to an Extended Range battery in the Ultimate model I drove, there’s less worry about nding a charging station too.

Inside, the Vauxhall’s understated interior is a bit soulless, with too many

RANGE Up to 246 miles

PRICE £38,585

POWER 154hp

0-62mph 8.2 seconds

TOP SPEED 93mph

STREAMING

Vauxhall and I – Morrissey

hard plastic surfaces. At least the top speci cation Ultimate keeps you warm in the morning with heated seats and steering wheel, while Alcantara trim, LED mood lighting and a black headliner add some sporty nesse. Drivers can also relax on a massaging seat – that’s proper, limo luxury!

Unfortunately, understanding the ten-inch infotainment screen can be time-consuming. e menu system isn’t intuitive, so many owners will likely just link up to their smartphone with Apple CarPlay or Android Auto instead. Otherwise, the Corsa is straightforward enough – thankfully it has simple, physical controls for the heating system which are much easier to use that a touchscreen.

Corsa Electric is equipped with all manner of safety systems, like most modern cars. Side blind-spot alert, lane position alert, forward collision alert – as least the Vauxhall doesn’t bombard the driver with endless audible warnings. However, perhaps there should be a warning about the price.

e entry-level Corsa Electric Design starts at £32,445, while my Ultimate version is a hefty £38,585! at seems expensive, especially as a petrol Corsa is priced from £19,625, rising to £28,385 for the sporty Turbo Ultimate model.

Even with the stylish facelift and lashings of equipment on board, owners need to be passionate about their Corsa to pay that sort of money for an electric supermini.

RATING: ★★★

Vauxhall Corsa Electric Ultimate BATTERY 51kW
96 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024

THE DRIVE

Destination: Henry’s Townhouse, London

Fancy a utter in a coquettish EV convertible? Jeremy Taylor and Jessica Talbot-Ponsonby drive and discuss a darling of English literature

JT: It isn’t what we say or think that de nes us, but what we drive.

JT-P: Oh, you’ve gone all Sense & Sensibility on me – although I’m certain the motor car wasn’t invented in Jane Austen’s era

JT: at’s why I was bu ng my barouche, in readiness for your trip to Henry’s Townhouse, the one-time abode of Austen’s brother of the same moniker.

JT: A barouche, Mr Darcy, what are you suggesting?

JT-P: An open-roof luxury carriage – or in this case a Fiat 500! A barouche was the equivalent of a convertible Rolls-Royce 200 years ago and has featured in many an Austen novel. She also wrote a letter on ‘parading about London in a barouche’.

JT: Well, I wasn’t expecting a modest Fiat 500 convertible to protect my bonnet but let’s come back to that later. Indeed, my fan was all a utter when we arrived at this handsome Georgian pad in Upper Berkeley Street.

JT-P: A riot of velvet and silk, the six themed bedrooms are also equipped with discreet mod cons to comfort the weary traveller. Henry’s was lovingly restored a few years back by property power couple, Jane and Steven Collins. An homage to all things Austen, it now doubles as an upmarket B&B, or whole house rental.

JT: Yes, it seemed almost insensitive using the Dyson hairdryer and Nespresso machine in such gilt-framed surroundings. Our room, Eliza, was named after Austen’s sister-in-law, complete with frilled fourposter and squidgy chaise longue. Downstairs, the communal areas are packed with curated antiques, while a sumptuous breakfast is served beside the cosy Aga. So, why choose the compact and bijou Fiat for this literary trip down Marylebone way?

JT-P: You will have noticed Marylebone is within the Congestion Charge Zone – so battery power was required. Minus an open-roof barouche of my own, the 500C is remarkable one of only a handful of suitable EV soft-tops on sale at the moment.

JT: Do you think Jane Austen would have been tickled by a little dolce vita in her life?

e 500C is charmingly disarming – especially the fabric roof that slides back in stages to let in the sunshine. Did you note that fully open, all rear visibility is then totally obliterated?

JT-P: e boot is hardly big enough for your smallest hat box either, which means the small back seat becomes the luggage shelf. Still, the Fiat is perfect for the gad-about town, simple to park, or weave through tra c at modest speeds.

JT: More pride than prejudice then?

FAST LANE

JT-P: Indeed, although as you know, pride, where there is a real superiority of mind, pride will be always under good regulation…

JT: I couldn’t have put it better myself. Delightful.

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Fiat 500C BATTERY 42Kw RANGE 199 miles PRICE £34,195 POWER 118hp 0-62MPH 4.5 seconds TOP SPEED 93mph STREAMING Emma – The Talking Book
FIRST PAST THE POST Bentley is celebrating the centenary of its first victory at Le Mans in 2024. The world’s most iconic endurance race takes place in France from 1216 June. 24h-lemans.com
May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 97 Motoring | CULTURE
Henry's Townhouse riffs on Regency splendour
Co-artistic directors at the RSC, Tamara Harvey and Daniel Evans, tell Charlotte Metcalf why the company is getting double bang for its buck
PORTRAIT BY ALEXANDRA DAO

Though it is the very rst time in over six years that I am in conversation with two people in Scarfes Bar, Daniel Evans and Tamara Harvey point out that their joint creative leadership of the Royal Shakespeare Company is not unprecedented. Between 1978 and 1986, Trevor Nunn and Terry Hands were at the helm together, just as Glen Byam Shaw and Anthony Quayle were during the Fifties.

I ask how they manage to collaborate on what is essentially a dictatorial creative role demanding a clear, strong vision. Don’t they ever ght? ‘No, it’s in the debating where the really interesting stu happens,’ grins Tamara. ‘And I enjoy ghting my corner.’ ‘Arguing with someone throws light on whether I really believe in something or not,’ adds Daniel. ey appear so in tune with each other that they even nish each other’s sentences, while always leaving a respectful pause and never interrupting. ey are in need of co ee, as they were up late at the Olivier Awards, celebrating the wins of some of the designers and directors they are set to work with. Yet they exhibit nothing but energy, and full-throttle enthusiasm and delight in their new job.

Tamara became aware of Daniel when she directed Pride and Prejudice at She eld eatre under Daniel’s artistic directorship. ‘I popped into wardrobe and everyone was waxing lyrical about how very present Daniel was,’ she says. Daniel then advised her when she was applying to be eatr Clwyd’s artistic director, a role she held for eight years till 2023.

Daniel grew up in Wales and was a professional child actor before studying at London’s Guildhall. He worked successfully as an award-winning actor as well as taking up his role at She eld in 2009 and then becoming artistic director at Chichester Festival eatre in 2016 till last year.

Unlike Daniel, Tamara wanted to direct rather than act, falling in love with theatre aged 11. ‘At my Brighton school, younger children weren’t allowed to be in the school play,’ she says. ‘But a maths teacher let me paint scenery, so I watched the last act of West Side Story from the wings. I was instantly entranced. is was the place I truly belonged.’

I was at the Royal Society for Arts in January when Daniel and Tamara unveiled their new season, and was excited to hear them broadening the RSC’s remit together. ey laugh delightedly when I describe some of the new plays as ‘not very RSC’. ‘ at’s great, because audiences love being surprised and being part of something new,’ says Tamara. ‘One of our challenges was nding a wider range of writers,’ continues Daniel ‘and that goes back to Peter Hall bringing in new writers in the sixties. Don’t forget Pinter’s e Homecoming premiered at the RSC.’

For purists, there will still be plenty of Shakespeare across four

theatres, including e Holloway Garden eatre, reopening to o er shorter productions (at just £20 for adults and £10 for children) of

e Two Gentlemen of Verona by e Next Generation Act, the RSC’s company of young people, and As You Like It. Across the other three theatres, Tamara makes her directing debut at the RSC with Pericles, Rupert Goold directs Hamlet and there are productions of Love’s Labour’s Lost, e Merry Wives of Windsor, Twelfth Night and Othello. e Other Place hosts a performance of King Lear, created by the Uzhhorod eatre Company in western Ukraine during the Russia-Ukraine con ict. ere’s also Northern Ballet’s Romeo and Juliet, particularly championed by Tamara who grew up loving ballet and dancing herself.

Emma Rice directs Wise Children, a new adaptation of Hanif Kureishi’s e Buddha of Suburbia. ‘We’re thrilled to have Emma as she’s a wonderful, chaotic creative and her work just explodes onto the stage,’ e uses Daniel. en there’s Sanaz Toossi’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play, English, in collaboration with Kiln eatre. ‘It’s part of Indhu Rubasingham’s nal season before she leaves for the National,’ says Tamara. ‘It’s set in a TEFAL class in Iran where four adults are learning English. It’s stealthily and politically about identity…’, ‘and very, very funny,’ adds Daniel. ‘We devoured it and battled for the rights.’ Finally, Daniel takes the lead role in Christopher Marlowe’s Edward II and winces mischievously when I ask him how he will cope with the notorious death scene involving a red-hot poker. ‘It’s nding time to learn the lines I worry about,’ he says.

We reminisce about how much we enjoyed e Jungle, the play by Good Chance that recreated the notorious refugee encampment in Calais. Now the RSC is staging Good Chance’s new political thriller, Kyoto, set at the 1997 climate change summit, directed by Stephen Daldry and Justin Martin. ‘We can’t say too much yet but it will de nitely be immersive,’ says Tamara, ‘and it’s going to be absolutely amazing,’ adds Daniel.

‘ e arts have such an important role to play,’ says Daniel, ‘and,’ adds Tamara, ‘we’re determined to use the company to reach out across borders, especially when so many are closed or closing.’

I am struck by how coherent and united their vision is, as a veritable double-act, almost morphing into one person. As Daniel puts it, ‘the RSC’s getting double bang for its buck.’ So, what would they like their legacy to be? ‘To make the RSC a place for absolutely everyone,’ says Daniel. ‘And somewhere all artists from everywhere can call home and create work that’s “not very RSC”,’ Tamara says grinning, perfectly rounding o Daniel’s sentence. n

98 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 CULTURE | Interview
The dynamic duo is ushering in an exciting new era at the RSC Bodysuit and skirt Hermès Shoes Malone Souliers x Philosophy di Lorenzo Serafini

High KICKS

Punchy patterns and curious colours for a summer of style

FASHION DIRECTOR NICOLE SMALLWOOD
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PHOTOGRAPHER CARLA GULER Top and skirt Emilia Wickstead 18ct yellow gold diamond quiver drop earrings Theo Fennell Shoes Manolo Blahnik Dress Philosophy di Lorenzo Serafini Shoes Roger Vivier Lavender amethyst and pink tourmaline bracelet Kiki McDonough Hat boxes, brief case and luggage case MCM Shirt and skirt Michael Kors Collection Shoes Manolo Blahnik Dress Huishan Zhang Earrings Alessandra Rich Dress Simone Rocha Signatures green amethyst oval necklace and Signatures green amethyst and diamond earrings Kiki McDonough

Dress and cape

Giorgio Armani

Signatures blue topaz and diamond earrings

Kiki Mcdonough

TEAM

Make-up: Joe Pickering

@ Arch The Agency using Dior Forever Foundation and Capture Totale Le Sérum

Hair: Joe Pickering @ Arch The Agency using Hair Ritual by SISLEY

Photographer’s Assistant: Barney Arthur

Fashion Assistant: April McCarthy

Video: Carl Wilson @ Adrenalin Management

Model: Gia Tang @ Milk

LOCATION

Sage green and candy cane stripes are not necessarily the colours and patterns you conjure when you think of a country house. Yet it’s with this palette that interior designer Nicola Harding has sprinkled her colourful magic over the Dower House, which has freshly emerged on the Beaverbrook Estate. Built as a one-of-a-kind for those looking for a bucolic yet stylishly beautiful rental with everything you could possibly need – including helipad and access to the first-class facilities of Beaverbrook Hotel – the Dower House’s attraction lies in its exclusivity. With its own private entrance and walled garden, guests will feel completely at ease, whether in the swimming pool, the spa room or the yoga studio. Sleeps ten. beaverbrook.co.uk

SUMMER YOUR Starts Here

TESSA DUNTHORNE uncovers the best events to make the most of the sunnier months

108 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024

SUMMER FESTIVALS

1

BST HYDE PARK

London, 29 June to 14 July

BST Hyde Park’s line-up this year promises sizzle factor – Stevie Nicks, Kings of Leon and Shania Twain are among the big hitters, and Stray Kids will lure in those fans of K-pop or converts following last year’s Blackpink headline. bst-hydepark.com

2

GLYNDEBOURNE FESTIVAL

East Sussex, 16 May to 25 August is year, your summer season doesn’t start until the fat lady sings. Expect big voices at Glyndebourne, and even bigger shows: Carmen, Die Zauber öte and e Merry Widow glyndebourne.com

3 SOUTHBANK MELTDOWN FESTIVAL

London, 14-23 June

e Queen of Funk Chaka Khan curates this year’s Southbank Meltdown festival – the longest running artist-curated music festival in the UK. southbankcentre.co.uk

SUNNY PERFORMANCES

4 THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST

Manchester, 14 June to 20 July

e Royal Exchange Manchester sees its programming getting a little Wilde. e Importance of Being Earnest looks at how we curate ourselves – a prescient comedy from the 19th-century writer. royalexchange.co.uk

5 SWAN LAKE BY THE STATE BALLET OF GEORGIA

London, 28 August to 8 September

e State Ballet of Georgia brings a star-studded cast of dancers to London’s Coliseum under the direction of Nina Ananiashvili – a twinkly night to remember. londoncoliseum.org

6 RSC SHAKESPEARE AT THE HOLLOWAY GARDEN THEATRE

Warwickshire, 18 July to 1 September

It would be a shame to see Shakespeare inside at this time of year. Luckily, director Brendan O’Hea has an answer to that, presenting As You Like It in the RSC’s purpose-built garden theatre. rsc.org.uk

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ARTY VOYAGES & FORAYS

10

WOW!HOUSE

London, 4 June to 4 July

Step inside a fantastical house curated by the world’s best interior designers. Whether you’re seeking a visual spectacle that’s somewhere between a living exhibition and your Pinterest dream boards, WOW!house is one of London’s biggest annual design events. dcch.co.uk

11

SCOUR THE COUNTRY FOR NATIONAL TREASURES

UK-wide, from 10 May

Twelve exhibitions will open simultaneously at 12 museums and galleries around the country, each centred around a di erent ‘national treasure’. nationalgallery.org.uk

12

EYE OF THE COLLECTOR

London, 27-29 June

A ttingly aesthetic venue will this year host the fourth edition of the collectible design festival: Chelsea Barracks’ Byzantine-style Garrison Chapel. Perhaps you’ll nd the perfect piece to take home tucked in a bay. eyeofthecollector.com

OPEN-AIR DELIGHTS

7 SUMMER SOLSTICE AT STONEHENGE

Wiltshire, 21 June

Gather at sunrise to greet the summer solstice at ancient Stonehenge. e beauty of this event is seeing the morning rays splash the Heel Stone, marking the astrological midpoint of the year. stonehenge-tour.com

8

HENRY MOORE STUDIOS & GARDENS

Hertfordshire, all summer

Explore 70 acres of mostly-grazed lands containing Henry Moore’s huge metalcast sculptures that practically cut through the treeline. henry-moore.org

9 WILD FEASTS AT OXMOOR FARM

Buckinghamshire, all summer

Enjoy an al fresco feast prepared by celeb chefs at Oxmoor Farm. You’ll be one of 50 served up bountiful plates by the likes of Amber Francis and Michelle Trusselle in the rolling Chiltern Hills. oxmoorfarm.co.uk

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PORTRAIT AT THE AGE OF 34, 1640, OIL ON CANVAS, 91 X 75 CM, © THE NATIONAL GALLERY, LONDON.  7 9 12 11 110 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024
PHOTOS:
NG672, REMBRANDT (1606
1669), SELF

13

BARBIE: THE EXHIBITION

London, from 5 July

Proving dolls aren’t just for kids, the Design Museum’s Barbie exhibition is a blockbuster exploration of 250 remarkable objects that built a following of all ages. But good for the little’uns, too. designmuseum.org

14

PARK FAIR

Oxfordshire, 21-23 June

Unlimited rides for the kiddies, wellness and shopping for the grown-ups, and then live music for absolutely everyone… Park Fair is a summer do for the whole tribe. parkfair.uk

15

REGENT’S PARK OPEN AIR THEATRE - THE ENORMOUS CROCODILE

London , 17 May to 8 June

Roald Dahl’s picture book comes to life – all singing and dancing. e enormous crocodile is wriggling through the jungle in search of naughty nibbles to eat… Larger-than-life puppetry in a fabulous open-air venue. openairtheatre.com

SPORTING EVENTS

16 ROYAL ASCOT

Berkshire, 18-22 June

Ascot promises to draw racing devotees and novices alike this summer. e royal meeting kicks o with seven races on the card for day one before galloping into a packed week of equine action. Remember the dress code and be sure to place your bets. ascot.com

17 IT’S A (T20 VITALITY) BLAST

UK-wide, from May

A cricket late promises unparalleled drama squeezed into a single innings – these are speedy matches to whet your wicket. Hosted at Lord ’s and the country over at county cricket venues. ecb.co.uk

18 HENLEY ROYAL REGATTA

Oxfordshire, 2-7 July

Splash around to cool down at the most prestigious regatta in the world. Henley’s 300 races take place over a serene six days along a picturesque stretch of the River ames. Expect festival vibes with music and food, too. hrr.co.uk n

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FAMILY FRIENDLY

TON MAN about

Luke Thompson is best known as a Bridgerton boy. But as an actor he’s navigating fame on his own terms and staying true to his compass, finds TESSA DUNTHORNE

May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 113
From Bridgerton to Shakespeare, Luke is ushering in a summer of love stories for our cultural calendar

nd Luke ompson in Hopper Co ee House in Clapham. Or actually, I don’t –at least initially. I sit next to him for ten minutes before I realise who he is. For one, he’s not dressed in the breeches and oppy shirts we’ve come to recognise him for, as artist Benedict in Net ix hit Bridgerton. In real life, the 35-year-old actor dons a much more casual annel shirt on top of a grey tee.

Secondly, he manages almost completely to blend into the background of the café, not quite becoming a wall ower, but attracting no attention. Surreptitious. Over the course of an hour’s chat, no one interrupts us for a sel e or to gush over the actor. Given Bridgerton ranks as Net ix’s fourth most popular show of all time, this must be rare. ‘ I’m not recognised particularly,’ he shrugs. ‘I manage to go about my life.’

Luke’s currently in rehearsals for the Royal Shakespeare Company’s production of Love’s Labour’s Lost is adaptation, he says, has a ‘really fresh energy’. Punters can expect to see the story – which follows the King of Navarre imposing a no women, no booze, no fun isolation on his court in the pursuit of self-growth – jettisoned to the modern day, and also Silicon Valley.

‘It’s not necessarily the most well-known play,’ he says, ‘which is a good thing. You do sometimes feel that, with Shakespeare, you’re performing to the ve percent of people who’ve seen 58 Macbeth s.’ e director, Emily Burns, has taken a utilitarian approach to the original material, cutting and shaping it to t her vision – an approach that may shock traditionalists. ‘ ere’s some stu that just won’t work, and you’ve got to cut it,’ Luke maintains. ‘Because it’s not a museum piece. It’s not a lecture; it’s a play.’

He continues: ‘I think there’s a weird hang up around Shakespeare – they’re not perfect plays, and you can cut quite a lot. But I do happen to love them. ey’re endlessly rewarding and endlessly complex.’

You can tell he loves them. After leaving RADA, he scooped up award nominations for his rst professional role, playing Lysander in A Midsummer Night’s Dream. en he was Laertes in Hamlet under director Robert Icke. Casting directors obviously think him the perfect t for e Bard.

‘ I’ve always found that historical world easier to inhabit,’ Luke says. ‘I think for most people, they’re like, “modern – easy; classical – ahh, a bit tricky”. For me, it’s always been the other way around. I think it’s that I enjoy playing the slightly imagined [world] – a bit like Bridgerton.’

On Bridgerton, he is clear about a few things. Firstly, that it’s very ‘locked up’ – media training is extensive, promotional junkets are more akin to ‘long pieces of performance art’ and ‘season three is season three’, the only detail I can elicit from him on the plot about the latest instalment of the hit show, landing on Net ix on 16 May. Secondly, though, is that we can expect a season of growth for Benedict.

‘He’s so open for lots of new experiences, but it can be slightly paralysing, because it means he doesn’t really know where he ts in,’ Luke explains. ‘And that’s where we nd Benedict this season – pushed a bit further on.’ irdly (and this might surprise some Bridgerton devotees), he’s not looking ahead to a Benedictfocused season – at least imminently. ‘It’d be nice to give the character a full exploration, that’d be really fun, but the way the show runs – it’s a big ensemble show. As long as I’m given interesting things to do, I don’t really mind.’

Nor is he expecting an extreme makeover anytime soon, although he

does give some credit to the idea that male leads go through a pretty intense glow-up prior to their moment in the sun – see Jonathan Bailey’s de-sideburning between seasons one and two. Is there much pressure to look a certain way for the show? He did, he con rms, work with a personal trainer. ‘ e way I approach it is that I wouldn’t do it for any part,’ Luke says. ‘It can feel really odd when people [on screen] are supposed to be playing normal people and then suddenly they have nine packs. But I think that with Bridgerton, because it’s based on a romance novel, it’s important – because that’s the world. Within reason, it’s part of it.’ roughout our conversation, there are several times when the actor stops and pauses to gather his thoughts. Sentences are dropped halfway through, consternation etched on his face, as he decides how to answer a question. I get the impression that he takes words very seriously – this man does not hand them out willy-nilly. And this seems true of his approach to his career – he is undoubtedly someone who’s in it for the art. A proper thesp, who sounds as though he’d prefer the baggage of fame didn’t come with his line of work.

‘I don’t really nd [fame] weird. I think it can be,’ Luke says. ‘I feel it’s more of a choice than people make it out to be. I think if you want to stay private, you can do it.’

He continues: ‘ It’s a trade o , though. It does mean you have to turn down some things you’d maybe quite like to do. But I don’t buy that it’s something you’re subjected to.’

Is the reason he’s not on social media a deliberate choice not to be ‘famous’, then? ‘ at’s a bit of a myth,’ he says, ‘the reason I’m not on social media is that it plays into my addictive behaviours. It worries me, what it does to your attention span – I’m worried that I haven’t read a book in a long time, and that I nd it di cult to focus on a lm.

‘But maybe partly I think I’m not capable of dealing with it. And it doesn’t quite square with my vision of this job. But, you know, people have di erent visions of the job.’

Here and there, he grows quiet. ere’s a point at the end of the interview where I ask him what he’s nding challenging at the moment. He meets this with a smile and a shrug – but he’s got an edge now. He starts to speak and then stops, several times.

‘ is,’ he says. e Shakespeare play or this interview? ‘ ese are always really challenging, I think. My relationship with this stu . ere’s fun to be had with it, and I don’t not enjoy doing it, but I nd it quite challenging.’

He talks about being shy as a child. ‘One of the reasons I took up acting in the rst place is that I grew up quite self-conscious. I’ve always slightly spectated on myself, which is not very pleasant when you’re just living! But on stage, it’s like I’ve outsourced it.

‘Other people are watching me, so I don’t have to. I can relax. I’m probably so attracted to the [acting] because that part of my brain just shuts up.

‘I don’t think it [acting] is a cerebral process,’ he continues. ‘I’m allergic to any sort of method. What’s in nitely more interesting is what happens to you – this idea of acting as some kind of sacri ce, in the Greek sense – you’re going out to go through something.’

And if he weren’t an actor, he says, he’d be a pianist: ‘But I think it would’ve been a bit lonely. ere’s a bit more freedom and it’s a bit more sociable to be an actor. Over the course of this career, though, [piano] has become a really useful thing – it’s something that’s just mine, that no one can say I can’t do. Which is useful in a job where you’re spending most of your time like, “do you want me?”’

When we wrap up, he gets up and shakes my hand farewell. He o ers to grab the bill – a true-blue Regency man – and then o he goes, into a rehearsal room to lose himself in Shakespeare, where I imagine he is happiest. n

I
114 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024
PHOTOGRAPHER: ALEX INGRAM; STYLIST: GRACE GILFEATHER; GROOMING: ALEXIS DAY USING THE ORDINARY AND DIOR BACKSTAGE BEAUTÉ

Moving MOUNTAINS

LISA GRAINGER meets Shoshana Stewart to talk rebuilding Afghanistan, preserving craftsmanship, and falling for Rory

Sitting in her Georgian drawing room, Shoshana Stewart looks every inch the sort of lady that John Singer Sargent might have painted in the 19th century: a green crushed velvet dress with high neck and voluminous sleeves shimmering on her slim body, and a string of pale gems dripping from each earlobe, offsetting her glossy hair.Like many of the women captured by the artist, the 44-year-old is an American in London. But she’s emphatically no socialite lady-who-lunches. As I join her upstairs, surrounded by exquisite carpets and ne marquetry, it soon become very clear that she’s every bit as smart as her more famous husband, the former politician, adventurer, writer and now podcaster Rory Stewart. She is an astrophysics graduate, with a master’s degree in education and an MBA from the London Business School, and a Senior Fellow at the Yale Jackson School for Global A airs. Not only that, but she is president of a non-governmental organisation (NGO) with more than 500 sta , whose roots extend around the world, linking craftspeople whose heritage is under threat with consumers wanting to buy beautiful handmade objects.  Turquoise Mountain was the idea of King Charles, then Prince of Wales, during a visit to Britain of Afghanistan’s then-president, Hamid Karzai. After 30 years of war, the president had explained, his country’s cultural heritage was at risk of disappearing. What the country needed was something akin to e Prince’s Foundation School of Traditional Arts to help preserve its history.

having got him to tutor Princes William and Harry one summer. Rory Stewart loved the idea of the challenge and moved there to start work. When Shoshana (named after her great-grandmother, and meaning ‘rose’ in Hebrew) arrived in Kabul with her then husband, Noah Coburn, an archaeologist, she hadn’t travelled much internationally. Until she was 20 she hadn’t had a passport, and after that had left her New York home only to go to places such as Harlem, Boston and, brie y, Honduras, to teach science in tough schools, and to Zambia to see a solar eclipse. When Noah suggested they go to live in Afghanistan in 2006 to do research, ‘it was totally random’, she says. ‘I’d never been, I’d never studied it. I just decided to take a year o and have an adventure.’

Within a day of arriving, though, she says, ‘I found what I love to do.’ Rory Stewart had been there about six months, setting up Turquoise Mountain, and needed volunteers. ‘It was madness, abject chaos,’ she says, shaking her head while describing how a driver dropped her o in Kabul at a fort called Qala-eNoborja, on the top of which Rory was standing in a suit covered in mud. It was soon clear, she says, they needed her organisational skills. ‘ e rst weekend, they put on a calligraphy exhibition – but none of the computers were linked.

In 2006, the King dispatched to Afghanistan the one Brit he knew who’d not only walked across the country on his own, but he trusted,

So Aziz, the o ce manager and I did that… Soon, at the age of 26, I was managing a building project with a 55-year-old Pashtun man – and, against all the odds, we restored 150 historic buildings: an amazing project.’

When she talks about ‘a building project’, this wasn’t a lick-ofpaint job. An entire district of Kabul, one of the oldest in the city, had fallen down, its inhabitants living in rubble: ‘ e neighbourhood was six feet deep in rubbish – earth and plastic bags.’

To start with, she says, ‘Rory bought 200 spades and wheelbarrows,

116 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024
Rory and Shoshana Stewart in Amman, Jordan
May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 117
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: Shoshana Stewart; woodwork in the King’s Lodge, a suite in The Connaught created by Turquoise Mountain craftspeople; examples of Palestinian Phoenician glass; Khin Da Lin, a weaver in Myanmar

to treat people fairly, how to be smart about money.’

As a result, Turquoise Mountain has expanded into ve other countries, employing nearly 500 sta and 10,000 male and female artisans in Myanmar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Jordan and Palestine. In Myanmar, where they’ve worked since 2014, their artisans include marginalised Chin and Kachin communities who have held on to their traditions of hand-weaving embroidered wedding blankets. In Jordan, where many refugees from across the Levant have ed, there are Syrian wood-carvers who ‘are at the very top of their game’. From Palestine there are ‘spectacular glassblowers’ who make clear and Phoenician-style glass. And in Saudi Arabia, she says proudly, they have an 82-year-old student of jewellery who has opened her own business and employed other women. When the jeweller got her rst order, Stewart says with delight: ‘She got one of the women to write a note to me to say, “ ank you for making the rst money I have made in my life”.’

‘Everyone is PROUD of seeing their HERITAGE shown around the world’

and hired every man who wanted work. We dropped street level by six feet and got rid of 30,000 truck-loads of rubbish.’ Next, he set about nding skilled tradesmen to create new infrastructure, and put in water and electricity. And nally, they built a school and created a curriculum, so that the skills could be passed on to future generations.

Since the Institute for Afghan Arts and Architecture opened in 2011, she says, beaming and showing me exquisite boxes inlaid with marquetry, mirrors embellished with ne mother of pearl and an ornately carved co ee table, nearly a thousand students have graduated from the threeyear course. Accredited by the City and Guilds, it o ers four subjects: woodwork, jewellery, calligraphy and miniatures, and ceramics.

What brings her particular joy, she says, is that many of those graduates now run their own businesses. When the Taliban took over the country, she admits, no one was sure what would happen. ‘It was such a monumental change… But the sta there kept going, and brought it back in a way that they felt proud of and was defensible. I remember the rst time I went back, maybe six months after the takeover, and people taking me around, showing me their stu . I’d been to half of their weddings when I lived there and they were so proud… I’ve never felt so happy in my life.’

In the same year that the school opened, another major change happened. During her time in Afghanistan, her marriage to Noah broke down. And having been ‘each other’s best friends’, dodging bullets and learning the Afghan language Dari together, she and Rory realised ‘that we were something else’.

‘My guy…’ she says, clearly wishing that he wasn’t away for six weeks teaching at Yale, ‘is the most remarkable person I have met in my life. I love being around him. I love Turquoise Mountain, and am so proud of what we do and what we made together. I might be the president now, but he taught me how to do it: how to make sense of a chaotic system, how

While many of the craftspeople are women, Shoshana insists the focus is preserving artisan heritage, ‘which is gender irrespective. ere is something wonderful about working in cultural heritage as it’s an asset, which is not something that’s normally discussed in international development. Usually it’s about poverty, water, education – helping people x things. Whereas with cultural heritage, we can say, “Your heritage is amazing and we can bring money to your community based on it.” It’s a fun way to approach it as you’re looking at things that are going right, not wrong.’

e organisation is clearly doing something very right. So far, it has made more than $17m in sales, channelling money into the pockets of craftspeople, funded healthcare to more than 200,000 and given customers opportunities to invest in exquisite crafts that might otherwise have vanished. In Afghanistan, she says, there are now more than a million carpet-weavers, thanks in part to the demise of Iranian carpet-making, and the mechanisation of the industry in India and Turkey. Christopher Farr in London, for instance, gets his handmade rugs from Turquoise Mountain. ‘And everyone there is proud of seeing their heritage and culture shown around the world,’ continues Shoshana.

Since e Connaught hotel in London used the NGO’s craftsmen to create the Prince’s Lodge in 2010 (which ‘was wonderful as it allowed us to showcase what we could do’), followed this year by the King’s Lodge, other hotels have followed suit. In Riyadh, the Four Seasons ordered hundreds of trays, amenity kits and bowls, and a Radisson bought something for every single room in the building. e Anjum Hotel in Mecca ordered $500,000worth of products: the largest order Turquoise Mountain has ever had.

e size of the orders, she says, shows ‘the lightning speed in which Saudi is changing. I love working there as it is such an important place. Its people are very interested in cultural heritage, and have the money and will to support it: both citizens and government.’

Not that she wants to talk politics. When her husband ran to be leader of the Conservative Party in 2019, she took six weeks o to help run his campaign – and that was enough for her. ‘I love my job and want to do this ten years from now,’ she says rmly. ‘Rory and I will always talk about everything. But I’ve realised what I love is learning about other people’s cultures, and languages, and food – and understanding why things don’t translate, or do. And bringing bene t to people. And that’s what I do.’

turquoisemountain.org n PHOTOS: © KEVIN MORAN
Shoshana with King Charles, who founded Turquoise Mountain back in 2006
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dubarry.com

Can the Law Drag FOSSIL FUELS

As lawyers in courts around the world battle it out over the future of fossil fuels – not to mention the future of the planet – RACHEL DONALD asks whether it is time for the legal industry to face up to its own oily ethics?

120 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024

into GREENER PASTURES?

‘Find the dirt, nd the damage, and nd the right legal strategy,’ says Ben Franta, founder of the Climate Litigation Lab at Oxford University. He was enjoying a quiet Sunday evening before I called to ask exactly how – and if – the legal industry can stop the fossil fuel industry heating the planet beyond a survivable limit. But Ben doesn’t mind – he gave up another life as an archaeologist on a quiet Greek island to tackle these questions.

He is one of many throwing themselves at what is commonly described as an existential crisis. e planet is in the throes of the sixth mass extinction event, we broke past the 1.5C degree heating limit set by the Paris Agreement last year, our waterways are either choking with plastic or drying up, crop

yields are down across the world, wars are being fought over resources, our oceans are acidifying and our geopolitical world order is reshu ing, with both East and West embracing totalitarianism. is is a world in crisis and its roots began thousands of years ago with our rst political hierarchies. ere’s a lot we must x. For now, though, we need to stop putting fuel on the re. e political strategy around the world is the opposite of that very sensible suggestion. Fossil fuel production is at an all-time high and private energy companies are planning on extracting even more in the future. Governments in the Global North, like our own, are still dramatically subsidising the world’s most polluting industry to the tune of trillions of dollars and petrostates are planning to get entire continents hooked on fossil fuels. Rather than transitioning away from oil and gas, we’re using more than

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ever, and renewable energy is merely adding to the total energy production.

‘Fossil fuel companies have a lot of political power,’ says Nine de Pater, one of the lawyers for Milieudefensie who successfully sued Shell in 2021 in the Netherlands. e legal team, which included scientists, showed that Shell’s climate policies did not align with climate science, and argued that the company is knowingly causing danger by contributing signi cantly to the climate crisis with its CO2 emissions. e court agreed and ordered Shell to reduce its emissions by 45 percent compared to its original 2019 target, starting immediately. But just last year Shell, along with most companies in the fossil fuel industry, threw out its pledges and declared it is no longer planning on cutting oil production.

‘Shell is taking steps backwards,’ Nine tells me. ‘ at’s very worrying and should not be accepted.’ But even though Shell is not complying, nothing can be done until the 2030 deadline, at which point the damage to the climate and planetary stability will be baked in. Shell faces heavy nes if – when – it fails to comply with the court’s orders. Paying damages won’t, of course, undo harm caused by its emissions, but it would ricochet through the nances of its shareholders. ‘ ere can be very serious nancial consequences,’ says Nine. ‘It’s important for shareholders and stakeholders to know the risk that Shell is taking by not complying to this verdict.’

e energy giant has been ghting legal battles on multiple fronts. In the UK, a team from ClientEarth took Shell’s board to court as concerned shareholders. ey argued that Shell was threatening the company’s future by not moving away from fossil fuels fast enough and were backed by major institutional investors, including the largest workplace pension scheme in the UK – an excellent ex ample of shareholders who are at major risk by Shell not complying with the Dutch court verdict. e legal team targeted the company directors who are ‘legally obliged to ensure that their actions today do not compromise the nancial stability of their companies tomorrow’.

terrorists in the press, Rishi Sunak’s government has deliberately targeted citizens while handing out more licences for oil and gas exploration in the North Sea. e public prosecutor is lining up hundreds of citizens for their day in court while criminals engaging in ecocide walk free. In response, some lawyers are refusing to both prosecute these activists and work for fossil fuel companies. e group, Lawyers Are Responsible, is quick to point out the complicity of the legal industry, without whom the fossil fuel industry could not function. Between 2017 and 2023, leading law rms globally facilitated $1.63 trillion in fossil fuel transactions. ‘It’s just a scienti c fact that those fossil fuel companies are doing huge amounts of damage to the planet and to all the people and nature on it,’ says Ben. ‘And more lawyers are helping the industry than suing the industry.’

‘The public prosecutor is lining up hundreds of CITIZENS for their day in court while criminals engaging in ECOCIDE walk free’

‘ e writing is on the wall for fossil fuels,’ says Connor ompson, a lawyer on the case. ‘As global demand for oil and gas diminishes, companies reliant solely on fossil fuels face an uncertain future.’ But the British court didn’t agree, instead saying that ClientEarth was not taking into consideration the range of ‘competing considerations’ Shell’s directors take into account. ClientEarth, of course, does not agree: ‘ e law must allow for directors to be held to account when their actions put their own company, let alone the planet, at risk.’

e judge’s ruling is emblematic of the legal climate in the UK, where it is easier to prosecute a climate activist than sue a fossil fuel company. anks to the policy recommendations of a shadowy collective of global think tanks called the Atlas Network, which are behind the sweeping trend to criminalise activism around the world and brand activists as

It’s disappointing – although perhaps not surprising at this stage – that the responsibility for a brighter future is falling to selforganised groups of concerned citizens. ankfully, the historical precedent for acting against harmful industries lies in civil courts rather than criminal ones, Ben says. Still, it begs the question of exactly how much we can expect from the legal industry if its power is so closely tied up with state power, which is so closely tied up with fossil fuel power. Who will the state side with if these cases threaten their fuel source? What would that do to the law itself? Will states ever sue the source of their own power?

‘Great question,’ laughs Ben. ‘Probably not – but that doesn’t mean it’s impossible.’ Indeed, there are two dozen government-led suits against the fossil fuel industry in the United States. One of the most high-pro le cases is the State of California vs Exxon Mobil, Shell, BP, ConocoPhillips, Chevron, as well as the domestic oil industry’s biggest lobby, the American Petroleum Institute. However, Nine warns that – unlike the Dutch suit, which sought to reduce emissions –California is seeking financial damages from these fossil fuel companies: ‘It shows the two sides of it, the dependency on fossil fuels on one side and also that fossil fuels cause problems.’

is, ultimately, is the crux of the problem. We need to stop burning fossil fuels immediately. We cannot do so immediately. ere is no debate, but the discussion is complex. Tackling the problem demands every tool available to us and law is just one of them. ‘ e legal system can really enforce change, but it is not accessible to everyone as it is expensive and takes a lot of time,’ says Ben. ‘We don’t have a lot of time. We can use it as an accelerator of change but it is not the silver bullet.’

Ultimately, challenging the fossil fuel industry is a reckoning for the legal industry, whose murky ethics have facilitated trillions of dollars of planetary damage. ‘Everyone deserves representation,’ says Ben. ‘But not everyone deserves a co-conspirator.’ n

PHOTOS: UNSPLASH
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Activists are more likely to be prosecuted than fossil fuel companies
03330113333

FROM THE GROUND UP

AMY WAKEHAM meets Georgia Scott, co-founder and CEO of Groundtruth, the innovative British bag brand with a purpose

124 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024
Georgia Scott (left) with her sisters and co-founders, Sophia and Nina

‘I

t ’s been a long journey to get to where we are today. Honestly, I feel like I’ve lived a thousand lives.’ I’m speaking to Georgia Scott over Zoom on a gloomy winter’s day. As grey as it is outside, though, I’m entranced by her fascinating, colourful story of how she got to where she is today – and how she came to found innovative bag brand Groundtruth with her two sisters. e Scott siblings had quite an ‘unconventional upbringing’, travelling across Europe following their parents, who worked in theatre.

In her early 20s, Georgia worked with her older sister, Sophia, a documentary lmmaker. Together, they started their own company, Groundtruth Productions, ‘with the aim of telling people’s stories from the ground, and doing it in a very authentic and organic way’.

For 12 or 13 years, lming took the two sisters all over the world, capturing stories of people a ected by con ict. eir experience led them to realise several things: ‘ at pointing a camera and capturing something was not enough anymore, to try and do our part in helping better this planet,’ explains Georgia. ‘And, also, how climate change was really fuelling people having to ee their homes.’

She continues: ‘I remember reading this news report from the UN, where it said that the number of people eeing their homes due to climate change is going to surpass the people eeing their homes due to con ict. Having lived in refugee camps for many years, I wouldn’t wish that upon anybody.’

In their travels, they also saw the impact plastic pollution was having on even the world’s most remote locations, and the ethical and environmental impacts of the fashion manufacturing industries. e sisters decided, in their own way, to do something about it.

‘We thought to ourselves, we need to have really cool bags that can transit between di erent worlds. One minute we’re in a high rise in New York pitching a new lm idea; the next minute, we’re on the borders of Syria, or in the jungles of Sierra Leone. And we needed a bag that could live with us and travel with us, and at the same time be made from the plastic pollution we were seeing in the environment.’

So, in 2017, Georgia and Sophia enlisted their third sister, Nina – who, handily, was working in the textiles industry – to start Groundtruth and create practical, long-lasting bags from innovative recycled materials. Georgia’s husband, Obaida Fahed, a Syrian refugee she met in a camp in Lebanon, came on board as chief operating o cer.

e priority of the business was building an ethical, transparent network of suppliers. ‘We went about building our supply chain the same way we would build a lm: by talking to people on the ground,’ says Georgia. However, that was easier said than done.

‘We did a big tour of Asia and felt quite disillusioned by the issues that we came across out there, in terms of the conditions for workers. I’ve seen some shocking things.’

At the time there were a very limited amount of good, durable, sustainable materials. So, the sisters innovated their own out of 100 percent recycled plastic.

is is a contentious issue in the environmental world – in 2023, Greenpeace released a report declaring that recycled plastic is more toxic for the environment than its virgin counterpart,

Groundtruth 10L Tote Pack, £135 May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 125

releases microplastics into the environment, and is inherently incompatible with creating a circular economy. How does Groundtruth square that with its sustainability mission and use of recycled plastics?

‘ ere’s been this explosion of people using recycled materials,’ Georgia acknowledges. ‘And I think it absolutely can cause more harm than good. We don’t know where the plastic is coming from and what coatings are being used – our coating is VOC [volatile organic compounds, which include a variety of chemicals that may have short- and long-term adverse health e ects]-free.’

She continues: ‘We’re currently making a lm in Hawaii, where they’ve just discovered seven times more microplastics in the nursery grounds for the baby sh than sh. We are repurposing plastic to create materials, but we’re doing it in the most thoroughly researched way possible. And at the same time trying to highlight the issue of plastic pollution in our environment to encourage a lifestyle where you start to remove that single-use plastic.’

Groundtruth uses Global Recycling Standard plastic, which comes from waterways, land ll, and oceans, and is collected by a big company in Asia, before being taken to Taiwan where it’s made into pellets and then yarn.

‘It’s very important for Groundtruth to work with partners who share our philosophy, and have open reporting, and who don’t mind us walking up with our cameras at any given day to lm in the factories. If we can’t have that, then we don’t work with them,’ says Georgia.

After making ‘13 or 14’ di erent prototypes, Groundtruth put its bags through perhaps the most rigorous eld testing of all: trekking in Antarctica with explorer Robert Swan, the rst person to walk to both poles.

Groundtruth has also been working for three years on carbon capture technology, and embedding CO2 emissions within its bags’ recycled polypropylene hardware. Remarkably, it’s found that, by adding the carbon, it improves the mechanical performance to be 40 percent stronger than virgin plastic. ‘It feeds into that philosophy of trying to build something that’s

going to last a very long time,’ says Georgia. ‘We’re not just designing bags, but we’re actively, with our partners, innovating new materials that can potentially be a solution for a problem. at’s our mission.’ e brand recently won the iF Design Award for its hardware with embedded CO2 emissions.

Groundtruth plans to introduce a lifetime warranty, and start a repairs hub in London, as well as an exchange programme if a customer becomes tired of their bag and fancies swapping it in return for a voucher for a new one. ‘We’re going to create a cycle where no Groundtruth product ever ends up in land ll,’ says Georgia. e brand has just kitted out an all-female team of explorers and scientists trekking to the North Pole with sledge covers, and Georgia is working on the lm on microplastics in Hawaii, working with sportspeople to try to raise awareness and tackle the ‘compassion fatigue’ she worries is a ecting citizens in the UK and US.

‘I can easily feel disillusioned by the state of the world,’ she says. ‘I think we have done horrendous things to our planet. We’ve done horrendous things to each other. And I would love to see a more united front on our climate problems.

‘Because at the end of the day, we are all connected, and the planet is connected: what happens in the US;  what happens in Mozambique; we will feel it here – it’s all connected.’

groundtruth.global n

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FROM TOP: The Scott siblings check out a factory; sorting plastic bottles for recycling into yarn; explorer Robert Swan in Antarctica with a Groundtruth bag
charity

The CHYPRÉ FragranceFamily

A look at longevity

THE AESTHETIC GUIDE

PHOTO: MATEUSZ SITEK; ART URSULA LAKE

WHAT’S HOT?

The latest aesthetic news and the newest clinic openings

THE LAST DIET

Diary of an Ozempic user, by Fiona Golfar

THE LONGEVITY PLATE

Why have we made eating so complicated?

TOUCH POINT

Tightening and brightening without injecting? Welcome to the super facial, says Rebecca Newman

SLEEP ON IT

Insomnia is said to affect one in three people. Here’s how Annabel Jones overcame hers

GET HACKED

Alice Hart-Davis gives the skinny on exosomes

A CUT ABOVE

Annabel Jones on the rise of the mid-life facelift

TRIED & VERIFIED

Our beauty team put ten treatments to the test

ON CALL

Doctors’ directory

Editor’s LETTER

Greetings from the front lines of aesthetic medicine, where our team of experts have been hard at work to bring to life the fourth edition of the Country & Town House Aesthetic Guide. This issue explores the intersection where beauty and wellness meet and the impact the convergence of procedures, skin health and lifestyle improvements can have on longevity and what it truly means to age well.

To kick things o on page 136, Fiona Golfar shares her real life account of, for better or worse, what it’s like to be on weight-loss medication for the long term. Meanwhile, leading longevity experts are calling for an end to diet culture and asking that we switch our focus away from quick xes towards eating for long-term health by following the simple principles outlined in e Longevity Plate (p140).

In her feature Touch Point, Rebecca Newman has taken a look at the surge in power facials; those that lift and sculpt by combining sci- devices with ancient protocols like acupuncture and lymphatic massage (p142).

Elsewhere, I recount my two-year battle with insomnia and the extreme measures I’ve taken to solve it (p146).

Back to skin and Alice Hart-Davis decodes the emerging science of exosomes and how they can biohack your skin’s age (p150).

And, of course, it wouldn’t be the Aesthetic Guide if we didn’t probe into the newest surgical interventions. In A Cut Above on page 154, we investigate the rise of the midlife facelift and whether or not it’s a smarter way to halt the hallmarks of facial ageing than certain non-surgical alternatives. As has become tradition, we have also tried out ten treatments that we’ve reviewed with honest appraisal on page 161. And last but not least, should you be considering a tweak we’ve updated our annual aesthetic doctors’ directory with some new and approved entries.

I hope you enjoy it!

132 136 140 142 146 150 154 161 173 Contents
On Cover: Haute Joaillerie earrings with pear-shaped morganites Chopard Art Director: Ursula Lake. Photography: Mateusz Sitek. Hair: Craig Taylor using Hair by Sam Knight. Make-up: Marco Antonio using CHANEL Jardin Imaginaire and No. 1 de CHANEL Eye Serum. Nails: Nicole Williams at Stella Creative Artists using CHANEL Le Vernis in Rouge Noir and CHANEL La Crème Main. Photo Assistant: Zach Clapham. Model: Natalie at Established
PHOTOS: MATEUSZ SITEK; STYLING: URSULA LAKE 130 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 AESTHETIC GUIDE

WHAT’S HOT?

This season’s latest and greatest

HEALTHY HAIR ON TAP

We are in the midst of a healthy hair revolution. In tech, Dyson is at the forefront of innovation with its new wet-to-dry Airstrait Straightener, £499 (boots.com), which like its curl-giving equivalent, Airwrap, straightens and dries all textures of hair with air alone. We’ve tried it and like it. Elsewhere, Kerastase has brought out Premiere, with the kinds of ingredients you’d expect in high-performance skincare.

With actress Sydney Sweeney (right) as the brand’s new ambassador, it’s hard not to be tempted. We’re betting she uses Premiere’s Intensive Shine Repairing Oil, £41.95, to restore shine (lookfantastic.com).

LIFE IMITATING ART

Artist Marina Abramović’s Longevity Method was created to help counterbalance the rise in technology and embrace the simplicity of life, the idea being to rediscover forgotten rituals and focus on living in the present. ere are four products in the range including a face lotion and three longevity drops: Energy, Anti-Allergy and (our favourite) Immune (£99 each) consisting of fresh garlic, lemon, hawthorn berry, calamus root, mumie, and ower pollen. Or get all four in the set box for £459. abramoviclongevity.com

STAR-SPANGLED SKINCARE

Alastin Skincare is the latest scienti cally advanced brand to cross the Atlantic. Featuring patented TriHex Technology (a blend of skinrming peptides to support the removal of aged collagen and elastin), it includes both post-procedure products and daily skincare heroes. We’re superfans of the Restorative Skin Complex, £180, that brightens and lifts and the HA Immerse Serum, £100, which increases the skin’s own hyaluronic acid, naturally. skinpharmacy. co.uk

BEST NEW BEAUTY BUYS

1 Neurae Harmonie Serum

The skincare line from the brother and sister whose family started Sisley, taps into the emerging field of neurocosmetics – the brain-skinconnection. £135, neurae.com

2 The Sarah Chapman Clinic Range Clinical excellence in a bottle, with two concentrated serums and a recovery cream – coming soon. sarahchapman.com

3 Rhode’s Peptide Lip Tint in Toast

A warm nude-ish brown that gives a sheer non-sticky finish thanks to its addition of shea butter and peptides. £16, rhodeskin.com

4 La Roche-Posay Mela B3

The wisdom was that age spots are too heavy a task for skincare to tackle on its own is blasted by 18 years of research by La Roche-Posay. £48, boots.com

5 Armani Beauty’s Luminous Silk Sunlit Creamy Bronzing Powder Contains skin-gliding oils and microfine pigments in believable tones that gives skin an unrivalled radiance. £46, johnlewis.com

132 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 AESTHETIC GUIDE
Discover Ouronyx, the destination for Mindful Aesthetics, where beauty is a testament to our inner health and happiness 20 St James's St, St. James's, London SW1A 1ES | 020 4542 1697 | www.ouronyx.com

1

NEW FACES & SPACES

You couldn’t ask for a more beautiful bunch. Introducing the newest clinics and spas to hit the country and town

CHELSEA DENTAL CLINIC, CHELSEA, LONDON

Practice owner and respected cosmetic dentist, Dr Rhona Eskander, has created a whole new genre of dental practice, one that combines cutting-edge procedures in a chic and relaxing setting. Enlisting the help of her sister, Tanya, an architectural designer who graduated from the Royal College of Art as a master of Architecture, together the Eskander sisters have brought the cocooning environment of an upscale wellness spa to dentistry. ink pale wooden oors and nude textured walls with a living grass installation surrounding the walls of the reception. It’s so shoulder-droppingly chill, you’ll forget why you’re there. chelseadentalclinic.co.uk

2

DR SONI RESIDENCY AT THE LANGHAM

With its own private entrance, take the stairs down to the Chu a n Spa, and enter a plush reception area where you’ll be given your own locker space to leave your things and all-day access to the private gym – all before your treatment with Dr Ashwin Soni, an aesthetic doctor and GMC licensed surgeon practising in subtle injectables. langhamhotels.com

3

MONTROSE LONDON, BELGRAVIA, LONDON

Montrose London combines medical excellence (it’s founded by three renowned plastic surgeons) with the cosiness of a luxury boutique hotel. Nestled behind its own private entrance in the heart of Belgravia, the upscale maximalist decor makes you feel instantly at home, while the treatments that range from aesthetic injectables and non-surgical energy devices to medical dermatology and surgery, are at the cutting edge. montroseclinics.com

4

EYNSHAM BATHS, ESTELLE MANOR, OXFORDSHIRE

A 3,000 sq/m Romaninspired spa within the grounds of Estelle Manor o ers a sanctuary for guests to fully detach. Take a dip in the marble carved bathing hall including ve thermal pools, or indulge in one of the ancient healing rituals inspired by Indian Tibetan or Chinese traditions. estellemanor.com/eynsham-baths

5SURRENNE, BELGRAVIA, LONDON

Be still our beating hearts, this longevity members’ club is unlike any other. Merging the latest protocols created with an advisory board that includes longevity experts like neuroscientist Andrew Huberman and author of Lifespan, David Sinclair, with modern wellness rituals, the club is set over four oors and includes a swimming pool integrated with a sound system for in-water meditations. Members can take fitness classes in Tracy Anderson’s G- oor studio, go wild swimming and have facials by Dr Lara Devgan, followed by a bite from the micronutrient rich café menu designed by Rosemary Ferguson. Contact membership@ surrenne.com

6 DR DAVID JACK EDINBURGH

Dr David Jack has returned to his Scottish roots and opened up in picturesque Howe Street in the heart of Edinburgh’s New Town. A budding interior designer, Jack’s latest space is as you’d expect: decadent and welcoming. Treatments include a spot-on mix of injectables, bespoke facials, and energy treatments like Morpheus8. drdavidjack.com n

1 5
134 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 AESTHETIC GUIDE

AESTHETICS, SKIN &SURGERY

An all-encompassing luxury clinic for your health, beauty and body needs.

Our acclaimed clinic ‘attracts the glitterati’ with its ‘discretion and professionalism’ - Tatler.

•Botox®

‘A secluded space where you can come and have everything to do with beauty. If you are having your Botox but are worried about a mole, then you can have it looked at by a consultant dermatologist.’

•Dermal/Lip Fillers

•Hydrafacial®

•Morpheus 8®

•Emsculpt Neo®

•Emtone®

•Mole Removal

•Mole Mapping

•Thermage®

•Aesthetic Surgery

•Body Contouring

•IPL and Lasers

•Skin Surgery

United through a love of beauty, art, plastic surgery and aesthetics, Montrose London was founded by three plastic and re-constructive surgeons; Dr Georgina Williams, Dr Jonathan Dunne & Dr Shaimaa Jamshidi

London’s Best Skin and Aesthetics Address MONTROSE LONDON, 19 WEST EATON PLACE, LONDON, SW1 X 8LT www.montroseclinics.com | +44 20 7112 8298 | bookings@montroselondon.com
Book Now WhatsApp
From Oprah to Sharon and Kelly Osbourne, Hollywood is coming clean about weight loss medication. But would you do it? Fiona Golfar has – this is her story, one year on

o, how long are you going to stay on it?’ It’s a question I’ve got used to hearing over the past year. It’s nearly always accompanied by a raised eyebrow. I’ve been on weight-loss medication for a year. It’s changed my body, my mental health and my life. My answer to that question is, never; I have no intention of stopping anytime soon.

When I rst heard about the ‘miracle’ drug Ozempic –designed for type-2 diabetes – which works by mimicking the action of a naturally occurring hormone, GLP-1 (glucagon-like peptide 1), to delay the digestion process and thereby manage hunger, I was curious to know if this could work for me, someone who has struggled with weight issues

DIET? LAST The  ‘S

for years, even more so after hitting menopause.

I was hearing from friends that people were seeing startling results on it, but I hadn’t thought it was something I could even consider taking, until I spoke to my gynaecologist who con rmed that she felt it was a wonder drug for women struggling with menopausal weight gain.

I wasn’t obese, but was easily carrying 15 to 20lbs more than I should. I had worked for a fashion magazine for years and loved clothes, and was having to make decisions about what to wear based on what would t rather than what I wanted. I felt heavy and sluggish; my thighs rubbed together, I had back boobs and wide hips, chubby arms, and my face was pu y. Getting dressed had become a mine eld. Still, I didn’t get rid of any of my clothes because I held on to the dream that one day I’d diet myself back into them. I’m 62 and although I live in the era of body positivity, I saw nothing to celebrate about my extra pounds. I didn’t feel myself in my pu y body.

PHOTO RIGHT: MATEUSZ SITEK; STYLING: URSULA LAKE; PHOTO LEFT: SHUTTERSTOCK
136 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 AESTHETIC GUIDE
Oprah is one of the Hollywood set who has taken Ozempic for weightloss reasons

‘Ventaglio’ ring in 18ct white gold set with diamonds and ‘Palais des vents’ bracelet in 18ct white gold set with diamonds Adler ‘Peggy’ swimsuit

Second Summer

I started the course in December 2022, injecting the ‘pen’ into my stomach once a week as instructed (at rst, I was so nervous I didn’t take the plastic nozzle o the top of the tiny needle and wasted a dose). I took 0.25mg and built to 1mg over several months, increasing the dose very slowly. I had looked into the side e ects – nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea and constipation –and the possible health risks, but my rationale was they were risks worth taking. I made sure I was taking a good probiotic, Symprove, and magnesium citrate, which takes good care of my colon. I sometimes had a little nausea, but it came in waves and it was not violent and would pass like mild car sickness. My appetite decreased; I ate the same foods but in smaller quantities. I stopped thinking about controlling my food all the time.

I had a mixed reaction from my friends about my weight loss. Some were thrilled for me, knowing it had always been a struggle. Some were very judgemental because of the shortages and the muchpublicised di culty for diabetics to obtain it. Others cheerfully listed the possible health risks. I often wonder why they suddenly felt the need to become health experts. Sometimes I think there was a touch of jealousy involved. But really, most of the raised eyebrows were about the idea that weight loss was something I was not disciplined enough to do without sticking a needle (albeit a tiny one) into myself. I can’t deny the truth in that. But it wasn’t for lack of trying every diet on the planet over the years. Peer-group judgement is something I have no problem with – I can laugh it o – but I do have friends who take Ozempic and keep it a secret.

One morning, I was sitting up in bed and my husband said, ‘Oh my God! Your back has lost so much weight. Your waist is back!’ He has been trained never to comment on my weight and I realised he was thrilled for me – his judgement came from the heart.

As for the pounds I lost? I don’t ever weigh myself. It’s the path to madness. However, I let my clothes tell me how I’m doing and they gave me a resounding ‘Welcome back’ as I slipped into pencil skirts I bought in the early 2000s.

Ozempic melts muscle as well as fat, and it is highly recommended to add weights to training. I tailored my exercise to include more high-intensity resistance, which paid o because, as I became leaner,

KNOW YOUR OZEMPIC FACTS

1

In the US, the FDA approved Ozempic in 2017 to help control blood sugar in type-2 diabetes. In the UK, Ozempic is available only on prescription, to be administered once-weekly.

2

Ozempic is a trade name of the medication semaglutide. It stimulates the release of insulin, lowers blood sugar and slows stomach emptying. Under the trade name Wegovy and made by Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk, semaglutide was approved by the FDA for weight management in June 2021. In clinical studies, the average patient lost 15 percent of their body weight.

3

In March 2023, Wegovy was approved for NHS use for patients with a BMI that puts them near the top of the obese range, as well as those with at least one weightrelated health condition. There is a two-year maximum limit for the prescription. According to an August 2022 study, after coming off semaglutide, patients on average put back two-thirds of the weight they lost within a year. Possible side effects are listed as pancreatitis, changes in vision, kidney failure, and ‘possible thyroid tumours, including cancer.

4

In October 2022, the European Medicines Agency reported ‘an increase in demand for Ozempic, which has led to intermittent supply shortages that are ongoing’.

5

The average cost of one month of Ozempic 1ml is £199. If you include the ongoing blood tests and doctor’s appointments, it’s not a cheap option.

6

7

Doctors recommend regular blood tests and putting the work in with exercise and a healthy diet, and not just counting on the drug.

Most doctors recommend starting on 0.25 ml of semaglutide, graduating to 0.5ml and after about four months to 1 ml. Side effects can include nausea, which will usually pass after a few minutes.

8

London Medical (london medical.co.uk) offers holistic programme Smartweight, which includes a consultation with a medical doctor, blood tests and, for suitable candidates, a monitored prescription for Ozempic alongside a nutrition coach.

my body started to look de ned. My selfesteem sent me trotting to the gym with a spring in my step, which was never the case before.  My diet is essentially Mediterranean, including a lot of meat, sh and bre-rich vegetables. I didn’t just change into a healthy eater overnight. I still crave the foods I love –Chinese and ai – but I eat much smaller portions.

Sugar was the biggest hurdle. I craved it and heard from other ‘Ozempic’ friends who did too. It took a year for me to nally give it up; I’m amazed that after ten days without it I felt so much clearer in my head.

People warned me that ‘Ozempic face’ is a thing. It is. I lost a lot of volume in mine and I saw my aesthetic guru, Dr Maryam Zamani, who put gentle amounts of dermal ller into my cheeks, which had hollowed and made me look a bit gaunt. ‘I have also seen a loss of volume in the face from patients who are on Ozempic,’ she says. ‘I tend to use gentle llers like hyaluronic acid along with biostimulation that helps the skin regenerate.’ Dr Zamani also sometimes uses lasers to tighten the skin. e results of the gentle amount of ller she used on me were amazing and I will refresh that about once a year.

I saw a slight loosening of the skin on my thighs, my breasts and underarms, but at my age, frankly, that’s the deal with skin and I’ll take it. ere are options but they involve surgery and I don’t want that.

Taking Ozempic has freed me from constant anxiety about my weight and given my health a boost. I have much more energy and have regular blood tests to ensure everything is functioning well – it is.

I think far less about things I can do to make myself feel better. I tweak less, I work out more and I shop less, as I am getting such a kick out of wearing all my old favourite things. I got a pair of new hips last year and started to dance again, slipping into a pair of leggings and a black T-shirt and going to a class where I could bear to look at myself in the mirror. All these things I would never have dreamt of doing before.

Studies show that if you stop taking Ozempic then you’re likely to regain some of the weight. I think that happens with any of the gazillion diets I’ve been on. But although I am no longer shedding pounds, I have plateaued at a weight I am happy with and plan to stay this way. If that means staying on what I consider a wonder drug, I will. I no longer worry about other people’s judgement. n

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LASER FOCUSED

Want clinical-grade results without having to wait for an appointment? The new LYMA Laser Pro is a uniquely professional device that’s safe enough to use at home

While most at-home energy devices are a mild imitation of the ones professionals use in their expert clinics, the new LYMA Laser Pro device is as close to surgery as it gets, and yet it’s as safe to use as a sheet mask.

Three times more powerful than LYMA’s original laser, and popular with A-listers, the LYMA Laser Pro, which took four years for the brand to develop, is even bigger and more powerful than its iconic predecessor.

Allowing the user to treat a wider surface area of 33 sq/cm with even more powerful results, the LYMA Laser Pro harnesses 1450mw of continuous, ultra-diffused low level laser light that penetrates up to 10cm below the skin’s surface to remodel skin from the muscle tissue upwards, without pain or downtime.

Designed for professionals to use in their clinic settings but easy enough for novices to master at home, the second generation of LYMA Laser Pro addresses not only fine lines and wrinkles, pigmentation, blemishes, but also has been shown in clinical trials to have truly transformative results, tightening crepey skin on knees and bingo wings –

and even transforming cellulite.

With non-invasive aesthetic treatments projected to grow globally by 15.4 percent by 2030, recent research by the University College London found that two-thirds of cosmetic injections are not done by qualified doctors, making the case for valid alternatives to surgical procedures that carry zero risk of harm.

Dr Graeme E Glass PhD, Plastic Surgeon, Associate Professor of Clinical Surgery at Weill Cornell Medical College says: ‘As a leading plastic surgeon, it’s fair to say that all surgery comes with some degree of pain and downtime and this doesn’t suit everyone. The LYMA Laser Pro is the closest thing you’ll get to surgery without any of the pain or downtime and that makes it an attractive option for everyone.’

At £5,000, the LYMA Laser Pro is by no means an insignificant investment, and yet it pales in significance to the cost of a facelift. Both are guaranteed to last ten years and both yield transformative results – but one comes with zero pain or downtime. Which would you choose?

For more information head to lyma.life
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The Longevity PLATE  L

Ozempic may help with weight loss but what about proper nutrition? asks Annabel Jones

ow fat, low cal, keto, paleo, vegan: the diets many of us grew up following and, as diets go, failing at, have been replaced by a simple mantra: healthy eating. But in an era of overcomplicated messages that dial-in on the details (such as the quality of one’s oat milk) instead of the fundamentals, most people have lost sight of what healthy eating means, says medical research scientist and nutritionist Dr Federica Amati.

In her new book Every Body Should Know is: e Science of Eating for a Lifetime of Health (Michael Joseph, £22), Dr Amati outlines the evidencebased guidelines for eating well, highlighting speci c junctions in life when our nutrition may need re-evaluating – such as adolescence and menopause.

Six Longevity Supplements

‘ e best way to think about longevity is to ask yourself, “What do I want my life to look like when I’m 85? Do I want to get out of bed unassisted and be able to feed myself well? en what are the habits I need to instil in my 30s, 40s, 50s to get there,’ says Dr Amati, adding that to live a long and healthy life you need to eat to mitigate the ve main health risks: heart disease, cancer, metabolic obesity, type 2 diabetes and cognitive decline.

THE DIETARY PATTERN WITH THE BEST HEALTH OUTCOMES

Along with forsaking smoking (‘no amount of red light therapy is going to undo the damage that smoking causes,’ says Dr Amati) and reducing alcohol, which she stresses is a carcinogen that harms your health, ‘a Mediterranean style dietary pattern has been proven across millions of people to improve most health outcomes, including frailty, fertility and disease.’

times a week as opposed to red meat. ‘ e evidence is clear, meat intake is linked to a higher risk of disease,’ she says. On top of these fundamental principles, Dr Amati suggests experimenting with supplementation ‘if it helps you feel better’, but doesn’t recommend expensive vitamin infusions.

NAD: WHAT IS IT, AND DO WE ACTUALLY NEED IT?

NA D is the supplement of the moment but is it a valid addition to a longevity protocol or just another hot trend destined to zzle out? NAD stands for nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide and is a natural coenzyme with about 300 functions that are hugely important for energy production, says longevity expert Dr Sabine Donnai

Our NAD production reduces over time, hence why supplement companies are keen to sell it to us. However, Dr Donnai has only found one that works: Accuri NAD+ Optimisation Dietary Supplement by Jin niti Precision Medicine, which she stocks at her London clinic Viavi.

‘We’ve tested plenty of NAD supplements including infusions and it’s the only one that we’ve seen improve all the chemical processes we look for, such as mitochondria function, methylation, detoxi cation,’ Dr Donnai says. Most good NAD supplements are expensive and come courtesy of longevity practitioners such as Dr Donnai, thus aren’t available to the general public.

e main pillar, says Dr Amati, is plants.

‘A plant-led diet consisting of legumes, beans, greens, and seasonal fruits and vegetables with some animal protein should form the foundation of any longevity diet,’ she recommends, warning that meat should complement – not be the mainstay of – our diets.

‘You can get all 20 amino acids found in protein from plants – including the nine essential ones,’ adds Amati who recommends opting for fatty sh rich in omega 3 fatty acids (mackerel, sardines, wild salmon) three

1. Wiley’s Finest Wild Alaskan Fish Oil Omega 3, £17.99. planetorganic.com

2. Pure Encapsulations B-Complex Plus, £29. healf.com

3. Artah Enhanced NAD+ Complex Food Supplement, £65. artah.co

4. Nutri ADVANCED MegaMag Magnesium Powder, £38. johnbellcroyden.co.uk

5. NaturesPlus Vitamin D3 1000 IU, £13.95. naturesplus.co.uk

6. Jolt Ultimate Age Blocker, £69.99. joltmyworld.com

However, Rhian Stephenson, a leading nutritional therapist and naturopath, has just launched one under her wellness brand, Artah. ‘NAD in uences every hallmark of ageing. By the time we’re 40, NAD levels have dropped by 50 percent and by 60 they’ve halved again,’ says Stephenson who explains that it’s not only biological ageing that impacts NAD levels but how much sleep and stress we’re under, hence why lifestyle protocols such as mindfulness can boost energy.

Artah ’s supplements use standardised extracts of herbs and compounds with medicinal properties, which Stephenson likens to eating organic fruits and vegetables compared to those sprayed with pesticides.

THE FOUR SUPPLEMENTS EVERYONE NEEDS

‘We all have very individual needs but after decades of measuring people’s nutrient status there are four supplements that people tend to lack: omega 3 sh oil, magnesium, B vitamins and vitamin D,’ says Dr Donnai.

B vitamins are key for cell function and metabolism, magnesium with sleep and relaxation (Dr Donnai prefers magnesium glycinate), vitamin D3 is crucial for immunity and omega 3s (from sh oil) help with heart health and curb in ammation by balancing omega 6.

Dr Donnai says there are a few tips for making sure you are paying for a supplement that’s bioavailable. ‘Many supplements are made from petrochemicals, which can be harmful and not helpful,’ she says, adding: ‘Look for ones that say food grown or food state (with a shelf life) in an opaque or dark glass bottle to keep the ingredients stable,’ she says. n

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TOUCH POINT

A facial isn’t just a facial anymore – the newest ones come with lifting, tightening powers that could rival a cosmetic procedure, says Rebecca Newman
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omething happened at the Oscars. And I don’t mean the Ken dance. Rather, the fully edged articulation of the ‘snatched face’, the look that’s taken Hollywood by storm. ink skin that is dewy, bouncy – naturally tight jaw-lines and de ned cheekbones – and so healthy it gleams. e secret? Emma Stone, Margot Robbie and co are heading to a new breed of skin guru: luminaries with global followings, such as Ivan Pol or Fabricio Ormonde. ese uberfacialists blend multiple modalities into newly powerful, bespoke facials. Could

these hybrid treatments promise results that could equal, or even surpass, a reliance on injectables? Do they mark a pivot toward treatments that work on a profound level to make our ‘snatched’ skins act and look better than ever? Here’s hoping. Welcome to the new age of the super facial.

Time was that facials were simple. A couple of masks, some products layered on and o with uninteresting sweeping motions. ey equated to a pleasant lie down with some u y towels, and results that were ne, but neither lasting nor epic.

‘Facials have evolved tremendously,’ says

Keren Bartov (kerenbartov.co.uk), one of the UK’s leading lights who treats Bar Refaeli and Isla Fisher. ey can profoundly alter the cellular health of the skin.

Further, these treatments come at a time when people are realising the limits of Botox and ller. Courtney Cox has been candid about how she overdid things, and ‘messed up a lot’. Alongside the likes of Kylie Jenner, she’s had her llers dissolved. Instead, Cox now sees Bartov, who continues: ‘I never judge anyone who does choose to have these treatments. But yes, if you want to avoid more invasive treatments like Botox then

S
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facials can give exceptional results.’

It’s not only, continues super facialist Sarah Bradden (sarahbradden.com), that too much Botox and ller can make a face look fake, ‘ ey are both quick xes. ey don’t address the health of the skin’. Moreover, injectables lack the sense of ritual, of looking after oneself. Of self-care as well as skincare.

MANUAL POWER LIFTERS

Kat harine Mackenzie Paterson (katharinepaterson.com) is celebrated as a specialist ‘where tech meets touch’. From her

her elegant rooms in a Georgian townhouse, she deploys everything from LED therapy to microcurrents that lift and tone. However, the secret sauce is her signature, muscle-melting massage – sculpting the muscle, stimulating blood ow and with lymphatic drainage.

South Korean facialist Mina Lee’s (minalee.london) method also hinges on touch, and may begin with legs being pulled, hard, and shaken; then rm manipulation of the face with some combination of cupping, acupuncture and Korean massage techniques to release any ‘stuck energy’.

‘To treat the skin, you must treat the body too, and taking care of the skin can recharge your mental and physical wellbeing.’ She stops after having done only one side of your face to show you the improvement – an astonishing, instant lift. is holistic method is then coupled with state-of-the-art Korean products, as well as mesotherapy and LEDs.

Sessions with Bradden start with acupuncture on the ears and face, while lying on a bed with an Infrared Pulsed Electromagnetic Field Mat (emanating healing electromagnetic waves). ‘It’s all about freeing the energy from within,’ she says: ‘to sculpt, lift and boost circulation and collagen.’

Fas cial release massage may be followed with LED light therapy. It’s a transformative facial: it washes o lines and the fatigue from your complexion, and restores a vastly better-looking version of yourself; it also renders you somehow internally – even spiritually – rejuvenated.

Giselle Som m erville (info@ gisellesommerville.com) also starts from within: clients are given antioxidant supplements to lower in ammation. Like Lee, she uses deep massage, and Korean innovations such as Cellt weet (topical exosomes, messengers that encourage skin cells to behave optimally, which can ‘reverse the biological age of the tissue’ to make your skin behave – and look – freshly hatched.

COLD SNATCH

At the new Chelsea agship Eudelo clinic (eudelo.com), Dr Stefanie Williams is a fan of the cold, creating the inaugural facial with cryostimulation ( ring precision CO2 at the skin) – as well as LED lights to prompt the broblasts to bring more elastin to the skin, along with reducing in ammation, to boost the function of what Williams calls ‘ t skin’. She’s long had a holistic approach too, evidenced by her o ering oxygen therapies, and using binaural sounds in many treatments (to promote the healing, resting state), telling me: ‘Skin health is good health.’

TECHNOLOGY HEAVY

Shane Cooper (shanecooperclinic.com) and Keren Bartov are particularly known for their high-tech wizardry. From her fourstorey clinic in Notting Hill, Bartov o ers some 50 di erent modalities. ere’s a bushel of lasers, lights, radio frequencies, ultrasound and collagen-stimulating cold plasma. ‘Our speciality is how in one treatment we combine perhaps ve machines,’ she says. e lifting and rming e ects are su ciently potent that results can last up to two years.

ere’s a similar array in Cooper’s arsenal, beloved by ‘snatched’ stars including Cara Delevingne and Sienna Miller. ‘My toolkit includes an army of medical grade machines, which can be tailored for muscle lifting and skin tightening,’ he tells me. Again, he builds them, using up to six in a single session to maximise the e ect.

Victoria Beckham’s facialist Sarah Chapman (sarahchapman.com) was one of the earlier facialists to move into these kinds of devices – at the same time, she continues to emphasise the holistic component.

‘We all feel the damaging e ects of everyday stress. It can be worth investing in treatments not only to improve the skin, but also it’s important they have a positive e ect on the mind.’ Hence, she continues to champion her ‘gymnastic’ massage techniques, as well as treatments such as ultrasound, cell therapy and microneedling, and is a strong ‘advocate of regular phototherapy’, expounding on the bene ts of using the clinic-grade Dermalux Flex to be used at home to deepen the results, especially reducing in ammation.

All these are a far cry from the u y dressing gowns and cucumber eye-patches of yore. Will they replace Botox or ller entirely? Likely not – yet. But it’s hard not to be drawn toward the bouncy, biologically youthful e ect of a ‘snatched’ face. And after all, says says Dr Surbhi Virmani, whose Exosomes on Ice Facial is particularly high-tech, t hese next-gen approaches radically ‘improve skin health, texture and appearance. Once you create luminous skin, once skin is brightened, tightened and hydrated then people often only want very minimal [surgical or injectable intervention].’

In lieu of a megawatt facial, there is a tool you can use at home to lift droopy jowls and smooth away crinkles - not just on the face but from bingo wings and saggy knees too. ree times more powerful than its predecessor, the Lyma Laser Pro tightens crepey skin, clears blemishes and reduces pigmentation with no pain or downtime. It costs an eye-watering £4,995, but then on a cost-per-wear basis, it’s practically a bargain. n

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On It SLEEP

Good-quality sleep is fundamental to ageing well. But why is it so hard to come by in middle age? Annabel Jones investigates

It’s hard to know when or why it started. For most of my life I’ve slept like a baby. at all changed two-ish years ago – I’ve barely slept through the night since.

When you wake up each morning feeling like you’ve been burning the candles at both ends when you haven’t had a drop of alcohol in months and go to bed at 8pm most nights, it’s a mild form of torture. But while our parents’ generation would have su ered in silence, there’s now emerging science that’s inspiring a new genre of sleep-hacking advice from tech to habit shifts to help us get the quality of sleep our bodies need for longevity.

Not only is sleep more studied than it’s ever been, Western culture has become obsessed with wellness, making rock stars of experts such as Matthew Walker, professor of neuroscience and psychology at the University of California, Berkeley, who is the founder of the Center for Human Sleep Science. His work examines the impact of sleep on human health and disease (he’s published in more than 100 scienti c research studies on the science of sleep), the highlights of which he’s promoted on popular podcasts such as neuroscientist Andrew Huberman’s wildly successful health pod, Huberman Lab. Whereas physician and author of Outlive: e Science & Art of Longevity Peter Attia regularly extols the virtues of ‘good sleep’, insisting it’s critical to our innate physiological repair processes, while poor sleep ‘triggers a cascade of negative downstream e ects from insulin resistance to cognitive decline, as well as mental health issues’. We’re turning into a society of longevity nerds – and sleep is at the cornerstone of it.

Nowadays, it’s as common to discuss how many hours REM (rapid eye movement) you got last night as it is to talk about the weather. Indeed, most midlifers I know are well-versed in the nuances between melatonin, magnesium, ashwagandha and CBD drops as an aid to sleepiness.

But getting lost in the minutiae can only make things worse if you don’t know the root cause of why you’re not sleeping in the rst

place – one of social media’s less admirable qualities is its tendency to disseminate health in binary soundbites. Hence why specialist consultants such as Dr Matthew Hind, consultant respiratory physician at the Royal Brompton Hospital London and an honorary senior lecturer for the National Heart and Lung Institute, prefers to rely on medically recognised sleep studies to determine causality. When he’s not doing life-saving work (such as researching how to grow new lungs for patients with lung disease), he is one of the leading consultants at OneWelbeck’s sleep clinic, which is where our paths rst crossed.

RESTLESS LEG SYNDROME

I was not only sleeping poorly, I was experiencing curious involuntary leg movements that prevented me from getting to sleep, alongside tingling in my hands and feet that was so distracting I couldn’t relax. By the time I reached Dr Hind, I was at my wits’ end. A consultation determined it was likely I had something called restless leg syndrome that results in periodic limb movements at night, a condition that can often be caused by low ferritin (iron stores). While my blood tests revealed my ferritin was within the ‘normal range’, it was at the thin wedge of a large spectrum – not low enough to necessitate an iron infusion but not high enough for someone with my symptoms. In other words, my body’s iron stores were far from optimum, Hind explained, and suggested I take ferrous sulphate (an iron supplement) until my ferritin levels, which were 30ug/L, reached at least 100 ug/L. is would take up to three months.

THE IMPORTANCE OF A SLEEP STUDY

While we waited for my iron to improve, Dr Hind issued a sleep study. At OneWelbeck, you have several options. ese include a DIY sleep device called Sunrise that you can use at home. From £550,

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this includes diagnostic blood tests, the Sunrise sleep study and results that are determined at a medical consultation with a respiratory sleep doctor. As my symptoms weren’t straightforward, Dr Hind suggested I try a more detailed study called the NOX T3. After a quick demonstration, I was sent home with the sleep device that was set to begin recording at a predetermined bedtime of my choice. e T3 involves attaching a heart monitor via a chest strap and sticking numerous electrodes on various parts of the body, which record how many leg movements are made throughout the night, whether snoring or sleep apnoea (a condition in which patients stop breathing for short periods) is detected – and if so, how many times and in what position.

In suspected parasomnias such as narcolepsy, sleepwalking or rarer types such as sexomnia whereby patients unknowingly act out sexual behaviours in their sleep, there’s the third option of staying overnight at a sleep laboratory to be monitored by a clinician.

I was found to have, as suspected, a number of periodic leg movements throughout the night that did improve gradually in alignment with elevated iron stores. ough iron isn’t the only factor; restless leg syndrome can be in uenced by certain medications such as antidepressants.

A diagnosis of restless legs didn’t surprise me. What did come as a shock was the mild sleep apnoea, which was found in my case to happen mostly during periods when I was sleeping on my back, known as positional sleep apnoea. Such back sleeping causes the jaw to drop backwards and the windpipe to narrow, leading to snoring and a lack of oxygen, which puts a strain on the heart by not allowing blood pressure to fall as much as it ideally should during the night. In severe cases, sleep apnoea can lead to an increased risk of a stroke or heart attack.

Moreover, signs of mild sleep apnoea may involve waking up to go to the loo more often than usual as higher blood pressure puts more strain on the kidneys. And more generally, waking up feeling unrefreshed despite being asleep for a su cient number of hours. Positional sleep apnoea can be caused by a few reasons: being overweight is the obvious cause as a thicker neck circumference is linked to a reduction in the airway at the back of the throat. However, it’s not the only cause, particularly in women over 40, says orthodontist Emma Laing (emmalaing.com), who ts patients with a mandibular advancement splint, a fancy name for a custom- t mouth guard by Sleepwell that gently pries the airways open by positioning the bottom jaw forward. ‘ ere are generally two cohorts for sleep apnoea: men who are overweight with a shirt collar of 17.5 or over, and women, usually over 40, with a petite jaw that naturally sits backwards – a lot of my patients t into this category,’ she explains.  e downsides of the device are jaw ache (TMJ), which can be apparent the morning after, and hypersalivation, which causes a dry mouth, though these are usually teething problems that are outweighed by the improvement in sleep. Another option being bandied about online is wearing mouth tape (available

SLEEP TIGHT

OTO SLEEP DROPS WITH 10% CBD

High-grade CBD has been shown to help with sleep and relaxation. This one is blended with MCT, lavender oil, butterfly pea flower extract, spearmint and liquorice for a natural form of sleep meds. £69, otowellbeing.com

NUROSYM

This bioelectric wearable helps to calm your autonomic nervous system via the vagus nerve. £599, nurosym.com

ALPHA-STIM

Twenty minutes a day creates a similar effect to meditation. Leading brain and longevity expert Dr Sabine Donnai is regularly recommending this device to her clients. From £599, alpha-stim.co.uk

SLIP SLEEP MASK

The best quality silk, this eye mask is gentle on the delicate skin around the eyes while blocking out light. £50, cultbeauty.co.uk

LUMIE BODYCLOCK

LUXE 700FM

Get your morning rhythm back on track without relying on HEV-emitting smartphones for an alarm clock. £199, lumie.com

on Amazon) at night to encourage nose breathing. Dr Hind suggests some simple tips instead: for positional sleep apnoea, he recommends tucking a tennis ball in the back of a bra or snug sport top, which helps prevent you from rolling onto the back; and placing a brick or books underneath the head of the bed to lift the position of your head marginally upwards, thus encouraging the jaw to stay forward.

Of course, more serious sleep apnoea requires more strident protocols such as wearing a CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure) device.

ARE HORMONES TO BLAME?

For women, menopause can be blamed for changes in sleep patterns as a drop in oestrogen and progesterone can contribute to insomnia, therefore it’s worth asking your GP to have your hormones checked. If you nd you’re somewhere in the menopause transition then seeing a gynaecologist who specialises in menopause and HRT (hormone replacement therapy) is a good place to start, as balancing sex hormones can be all that’s required to get your sleep back on track, should that be an option for you.

DIET AND SLEEP

Another thing to consider, says Hind, is acid re ux, which can accompany sleep apnoea, and be reduced by not eating two to four hours before bed and avoiding zzy drinks and sugary, fatty or fried foods. Dialling in one’s nutrition is the obvious answer but, in the meantime, drinking Gaviscon Advance, an unpleasant-tasting gooey liquid made from seaweed, before bed is another as it creates adequate throat slip and helps to ease symptoms. Extra weight in and of itself is a lead cause of sleep apnoea, including mild positional kinds, says Dr Laing. ‘Often it’s in midlife when it’s more common to gain weight, particularly during the menopause transition, that the tipping point occurs.’

ADULTS NEED BEDTIME ROUTINES TOO

Blackout blinds or curtains, and a reduction in HEV light (high energy visible light, from phones etc) an hour or two before bed can help ease insomnia if you keep to a strict habit. I now charge my phone in a di erent room and have bought a Lumie alarm clock ,which emits a gentle light gradually over 15 to 90 minutes to wake me. Wearing a silk eye mask and blacking-out windows has also been shown to help with insomnia. One of the best ways to correct a dysfunctional circadian rhythm, however, is to stick to a strict bedtime practice that involves going to bed and waking at the same time each day and unwinding a good hour or two before bed. ‘We give our children strict bedtime routines but, as adults, we tend to neglect this principle and go to bed at erratic times, which shows up in poor-quality sleep,’ says Hind. n

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Subtle Natural Results

Discover Atelier: Where Artistry Meets Wellness

Led by the unique vision of founder Dr. Aggie Zatonska, a former ENT surgeon with over 15 years of experience, our award-winning clinic, registered with the Care Quality Commission (CQC), offers a range of cutting-edge aesthetic procedures, holistic body treatments, and energy based devices, including Sofwave Morpheus8.

Our services are designed to help patients enhance and sustain their natural beauty and overall wellbeing. We leverage an expertly trained team, using gold-standard aesthetic and regenerative medical treatments, including Polynucleotides, within a highly regulated yet friendly environment to achieve the best possible results, every time.

Egham

+44 (0)1784 431 745

76 High Street, TW20 9HE

www.atelier.clinic
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Dr. Aggie Zatonska

HACKED GET

Alice Hart-Davis lifts the lids on the smart new cell messaging ingredient that claims to biohack your skin’s age

Among all the fascinating tweakments that aim to turn back the clock and trick our skin into acting younger there’s one word that comes up again and again: exosomes. ‘Biohacking is optimising your biology,’ says Dr Sophie Shotter, medical director of Illuminate Skin Clinics, ‘and getting the most out of your body that you possibly can. ere are so many simple things that we can do to biohack our skin by improving our lifestyles and using great skincare,’ says Dr Shotter. But, she adds: ‘ ere are also high-tech treatments –and exosomes are among the most exciting.’

So what are these wonder-workers?

Exosomes are minute ‘vesicles’, nanosized bubbles released by cells in order to communicate with other cells, wake them up and get them working. ey’re not living cells (like, say, stem cells) but they act as transporters, carrying proteins and genetic material between cells. In the skin, they reduce in ammation and kickstart rejuvenation which is why the world of aesthetic medicine is so interested in them, and why ‘exo’ procedures are popping up on treatment menus everywhere.

If you’re wondering where exosomes come from and which type is best – well, that’s where the arguments start. You can extract them from plants, you can gather them from bovine or marine sources, and clinics that use these say they are more e ective than plant-based products, because there are more synergies between the exosomes and human skin. And then there are human-derived

exosomes, which – obviously – have the greatest impact on our skin and which are perfectly legal to use in Korea, where most of them are made, but which are illegal in the UK. [Plenty of UK practitioners tell me that as long as they’re just applying them topically, as opposed to injecting them into the skin, that’s ne, but UK and European regulations are quite clear that human-derived products can’t be used as cosmetic ingredients. Just so you know.]

Back to what exosomes can do. Because they are so e ective at reducing in ammation, accelerating healing and amplifying the production of collagen and elastin, practitioners are using them as an add-on to existing treatments to create bouncy, glowing, stronger skin.

Applying a liquid serum of exosomes after a plain microneedling treatment bombs the exosomes into the skin through myriad tiny punctures that the needling has created, where they can enhance skin-regeneration while speeding up recovery time – they can be particularly e ective around the eyes, strengthening the skin enough to reduce the look of dark circles.

Facial aesthetics doctor Dr Maryam Zamani o ers an exosome treatment on top of procedures such as laser and radiofrequencing needling (from £350, drmaryamzamani. com). ‘Cutting-edge exosome technology is set to transform treatment results as it revives and repairs skin at a deep cellular level and enhances treatment results,’ says Dr Zamani. ‘By stimulating cell di erentiation

and regeneration, exosomes can amplify collagen and elastin production, reduce the appearance of pigmentation, accelerate wound healing, strengthen the skin barrier, promote facial rejuvenation, and help regulate melanin production for a rm, even-toned and hydrated complexion.’

Leading aesthetic practitioner, Dr JeanLouis Sebagh, never one to miss a trick to amp up his o ering for his elite clientele, has chosen to use EXO|E plant-derived exosomes to stimulate his patients’ skin cells to function at optimum levels and will apply the product as a face cocktail after Meso Rejuvenation with PRP (where platelet-rich plasma, extracted from your own blood, is injected into the top layers of the skin; £700; three to four sessions are recommended, a month or two apart, (drsebagh.com). e results? Added glow and minimal downtime. He also uses exosomes after PRP for hair restoration, and says the results are great.

I’ve tried a couple of exosome procedures and absolutely get the point of them. I only had one session of Purasomes (microneedling, with Dr Anoob Pakkar-Hull, who uses bovinederived exosomes, from £500, dranoob.co.uk), but it was enough to appreciate how quickly the exosomes helped calm down my skin after the microneedling, and how much brighter and smoother my skin looked afterwards. How much of that was due to the skin-reviving e ects of the needling and how much was down to the exosomes is hard to tell, but the treatments work hand in hand.

en there was Dr Surbhi Virmani’s

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‘Exosomes on Ice’ treatment, in which marine-derived exosomes are blasted into the skin on a pressurised jet of supercooled oxygen. I had this done after a fearsome lip-reconditioning treatment where PRP, taken from my blood, was injected into my lips, to prompt them to produce more of their own collagen and become rmer without injections of lip ller, then quickly followed with microneedling (ow ow) to layer the remaining PRP into the surface of my lips and all around my mouth. e icy exosomes act as a chaser to all this, to supercharge all that collagen boosting, and to speed up the recovery (yes it has helped, thank goodness, as my lips swelled hugely after treatment, but were back to normal after a day or two (Exosomes on Ice, from £500, the whole Lip Service treatment is £700, cosderm.co.uk).

I’ve also had a go at rming up my ageing hairline by needling Calecim, a serum containing growth-factors and exosomes, into my scalp. Calecim is wellproven (with clinical trials published in peer-reviewed journals) to revive the growth of thinning hair, so it’s worth the ouch-factor of having to microneedle your

own head. I had my rst treatment in clinic to get the idea (from £250 per session, phiclinic.com) then followed up needling the receding patches around my temples at home and yes, I saw new growth, which is all the encouragement you need to keep going (from £300, calecimprofessional.com)

Can exosomes work without all these needles? ‘Yes absolutely,’ says Dr Shotter, who uses EXO|E plant-derived exosomes. ‘We have an exosome facial for people who want the bene ts without the more invasive procedures. e exosomes alone stimulate huge increases in collagen, elastin and hyaluronic acid in the skin. My patients love them.’ (EXO-Equilibrium Facial: £480 at illuminateskinclinic.co.uk)

As for exosome skincare – it’s here already. Dr Tunc Tiryaki, one of London’s best-known facial plastic surgeons and who has a strong interest in regenerative medicine, has launched a product called Morphiya, which is made with ‘hybrosomes’ (exosomes, taken from bovine umbilicalcord blood, fused with liposomes), which appears to have remarkable powers. It’s reassuringly expensive at £196 for a 30ml bottle (morphiya.com) and it’s easy as pie

to use – you just put it on twice a day after cleansing. With my usual skincare actives, I ask? ‘Using this on its own will do your skin more good than any other cream you could nd,’ Dr Tiryaki tells me sternly.

at’s bold, but he has up his sleeve a single-blinded clinical trial on the product (that’s where the testers didn’t know if they were trying the real thing, the half-strength real thing, a 0.2 percent retinol cream or a dummy/control cream, but the researchers did). is showed that his hybrosome cream was 30 percent more e ective in reducing wrinkles when compared to the control cream or the retinol cream. So I followed his advice, and used Morphiya with sunscreen in the morning, and on its own at night for six weeks, and found it reduced my skin age by six years (as measured by a Visia skin imaging device).

Dr Barbara Sturm has exosome products in her skincare line-up too (Exosometic eye cream, £350, and face serum, £450, drsturm.com) and you can bet your bottom dollar more will follow.

e big question is: with this skinbiohacking exosome technology, will we soon be able to go needle-free? Can these magic molecules give us the Benjamin-Button e ect where, in future, no one looks their age but doesn’t look ‘done’ either?

‘We’re on an important journey in regenerative medicine just now,’ says Dr Kate Goldie, a leading aesthetic practitioner who has funded an independent study into exosomes, co-authored with Dr Owen Davies and Soraya Williams. ‘ ere’s no doubt that in not so many years, we will be able to reverse or prevent ageing, and people will not expect to age as they used to –but we need to be careful how we get there. e e ectiveness of exosomes depends on the health of the cell they come from. If they tell a story of youth, then they will get other cells to work in that way, and that’s very attractive. Some companies are very careful on their cell sources, others less so. ere’s a real danger that in the rush for commercial success, companies will damage the reputation of exosomes by using products before they are properly researched.’

So if you fancy biohacking your skin with exosomes, choose a great practitioner and quiz them closely about which products they use, and why – such due diligence is always the way to get the best results.

Alice Hart-Davis is founder of thetweakmentsguide.com n

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SKIN KING

From acne to body sculpting, Dr Ariel Haus is at the forefront of skin longevity

It’s rare to find a centre of excellence for both medical dermatology and the very latest aesthetic treatments under one roof, but Dr Ariel Haus has created exactly that in his Harley Street clinic, which occupies a listed 18th-century townhouse. His combined approach of medical aesthetics with clinical dermatology has made him one of the most sought-after doctors in his field.

Whether you’re concerned about skin cancer, rosacea, teenage acne or are simply curious to discover the very latest non-surgical, skin-tightening and lifting procedures for the face and body, Dr Haus or one of his team of leading dermatologists and nurses are at your disposal. And it’s not only their medical and aesthetic knowledge that stands out, but the warm and welcoming patient experience, from the reception team to aftercare which Dr Haus Dermatology has become known for.

After medical school in his home city of Rio de Janiero, Dr Haus pivoted to dermatology after hearing one of the founding fathers of plastic surgery, Professor Ivo Pitanguy, speak about the positive psychological impact surgery had on burn victims he’d treated. Realising the connection between physical appearance and mental wellbeing, Dr Haus developed a passion for dermatology which led him on a distinguished career path working for the NHS before opening his private practice in London nearly 15 years ago.

‘The buzzword today is longevity,’ says Dr Haus. ‘What I find exciting is the advancements in laser technology and energy treatments like Ultherapy which in the right hands can provide facelift type results.’

The majority of Dr Haus’ Harley Street patients want to look ‘great but not “done”’, which is created by a layered treatment plan combining the very latest lasers to even out skin tone, remove pigmentation and redness

with some clever Ultherapy to sculpt and tighten. The results are impressive.

And with summer approaching there is a rising demand for body concerns like cellulite, which can be treated with a wide range of non-surgical body sculpting treatments such as the new Exion, which uses a combination of monopolar radiofrequency and targeted ultrasound for localised fat reduction and improved skin laxity. It also boosts the production of collagen and elastin.

There’s also a brand new non-surgical double chin treatment available which is proving popular with both male and female patients. It combines radiofrequency with muscle stimulation to reduce double chin fat, giving the jawline a more defined and sculpted look. Dr Haus’ clinic is one of the first in the UK to offer this treatment.

It’s being one of the first to harness the latest technologies for treatments like this with an old school expertise in dermatology that gives Dr Haus’ patients the excellence they expect – optimum skin health with transformative aesthetic treatments.

75 Harley Street, W1. +44 (0)20 7935 6358; drhausdermatology.com; reception@ drhausdermatology.com; @drarielhaus

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Dr Ariel Haus

ABOVE

Annabel Jones reports on the rise in midlife facelifts and asks whether going under the knife is a smarter way to rejuvenate facial ageing after all

honestly think I missed out on the facelift.

Like an old-fashioned good one that you have when you’re like 44,’ actress Sarah Jessica Parker told radio host Howard Stern, joking ‘I’ve heard stories…’

The secrecy shrouding facelifts is something Kshem Yapa (yapaplasticsurgery. com), a GMC-certi ed plastic surgeon specialising in facelifts and rhinoplasty, wants to change. ‘As life expectancy is rising, cosmetic surgery should ideally be one part of a wellness program – rather than this taboo thing that celebrities do under a cloak of secrecy,’ he says.

A point of frustration for surgeons such as Yapa is the unrealistic expectations that come with non-surgical treatments such as dermal ller. ‘You can’t camou age facial laxity by adding more and more ller. It will start to look arti cial,’ he explains.

In some circles, arti cial is the end goal but the over-stu ng now frighteningly common in tribes of young women and men is bringing facial surgery back to the fore for midlifers in search of a more authentic outcome. Even if it means going under the knife.

But then there are facelifts and then there are deep plane facelifts. In 2021, surgeon Anthony Jacono gave Marc Jacobs one which the fashion designer shared openly on social media. Before Jacobs and Jacono popularised it, the deep plane wasn’t common knowledge. Now it’s all anyone can talk about.

Jacobs was 58 at the time of his facial surgery, though scroll Jacono’s Instagram page and a good swathe of his patients are in their 40s. is begs the question: is it better to lift earlier rather than later?

Yapa says you can’t put a number on the appropriate time to get a facelift, pointing out the obvious: ‘Everyone ages di erently depending on their lifestyle and genetics.’

What is clear, says Yapa, is that the deep plane is usually more appropriate for those in midlife compared to the SMAS (super cial musculoaponeurotic system) facelift, which one could argue is the reason why we turned against facial surgery to begin with.

‘In a SMAS facelift, the surgeon dissects under the skin and fat which sits on top of the SMAS layer and then works on the SMAS from above using sutures to pick it up and lift it into a more youthful position.

e skin is then redraped without any tension,’ says Yapa. is requires a level of artistry and taste alongside an understanding of what works on that patient’s anatomy for it to look good. A crude attempt at tightening the SMAS can result in an old-fashioned wind-tunnel look, a tell-tale sign you’ve had a facelift. A bad one at that.

e deep plane lift is more complicated. It entails dissecting the tissue deeper down, where the nerves and muscles lie, releasing the ligaments, then pulling the skin and SMAS in one composite movement. is, explains Yapa, de-tensions the facelift avoiding the telltale tightly pulled look.

Let’s not be naive; such detailed intervention doesn’t come cheap (the New York Times reported in 2022 that a Jacono facelift costs $230,000, a gure that’s rumoured to have doubled since). And that’s not accounting for the maintenance – a facelift can need redoing every decade to maintain the uplift.

Although Yapa is more realistic: ‘Let’s be clear, nobody needs a facelift and patients are certainly not obligated to have it redone in ten years – many clients choose to invest in

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‘I
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‘Mizu’ earrings in 18ct white gold set with pear-shaped diamonds Adler

surgery once and accept the ageing process thereafter,’ he insists. Just as well if yours is costing anything close to Jacono’s.

Consultant plastic surgeon Georgios Orfaniotis (orfaniotis.co.uk), who operates out of the Montrose Clinic in Belgravia, has honed the art of the deep plane and charges a more reasonable fee: ‘I was probably one of the rst to do deep planes in London. When I rst started doing them, everybody was saying: ‘What is this guy doing, this is taking so long.’ Nobody could understand why I was doing this technique at the beginning.’ en, he adds, ‘the Americans started promoting it and took it to the next level to where it now costs these crazy prices.

‘It’s not ethical. To be honest, no plastic surgery should cost that amount,’ says Orfaniotis who charges £29,000 for face and neck, a humble fee in comparison to the hundreds (of thousands) charged in New York and LA. Still, not bad for four hours work (the average time it takes to perform a deep plane facelift).

Orfaniotis isn’t shy to admit he likes to operate on younger people. ‘It can be a challenge, because sometimes the gains are marginal and you have to manage expectations, but in the right case a good, deep plane facelift can slow down the ageing process and

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SWOT UP

If you are considering facelift surgery, be sure to invest in several consultations, which should cost about £200-£300 each. Ask to see before and after pictures and get a sense for the surgeon’s ethics and personality. Word of mouth is a great indicator but always put safety first by opting for surgeons who are members of BAAPS (British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons) and are registered as specialists in cosmetic surgery on the GMC (General Medical Council) website, which means they’ve trained in the UK and completed a senior clinical fellowship scheme approved by the Royal College of Surgeons.

create a nice foundation to age well further down the line.’

ere are, of course, surgeons who believe a facelift should wait until a patient is at least 50, to which Orfaniotis argues: ‘I think a lot of it is the quality of the surgery. If it’s done well, it improves everything: skin quality, collagen, how the face moves, your facial expressions.’

And the subsequent lifts? ‘ e rst facelift is so important to get right. en you can correct a little thing here and there in future without having to redo the whole thing,’ says Orfaniotis.

e investment pays dividends if you have your face tightened at 40, but what if you’re past the age when a deep plane makes sense? ‘A traditional SMAS lift is quicker to perform and is cheaper for the patient – and it’s easier to recover from – for this reason it can be a smarter option for older patients in their 70s and 80s,’ says Yapa, who stresses: ‘you can get good results from a SMAS too.’

Back to llers: the rumour is they are the enemy for plastic surgeons. Not necessarily, Yapa says, but they can be problematic during surgery. ‘When dermal ller is overdone, it tends to sit around the dissection of tissue planes and when it’s injected in the wrong place – close to the nerves where you don’t want it – it takes time to remove, making facelift surgery more di cult.’

Scar tissue, says Yapa, can also be induced by energy treatments such as ultrasound. ‘Everyone wants to avoid general anaesthetic and so they’re looking for alternatives to a surgical facelift but energy treatments can cause fat necrosis leading to scarring.’ He adds: ‘When you dissolve fat with energy the deeper tissues can get lax, which changes the shape of the face.’

Dissolving pockets of fat around the jowls, for instance, may provide some instant grati cation, but it doesn’t x the underlying problem of tissue laxity, which can only be properly addressed with surgery, says Yapa, who prefers super cial treatments such as microneedling and radiofrequency, which rejuvenates the quality and texture of the skin rather than disturbing the structure beneath. ‘Hydrating injectables like Profhilo or precisely controlled lasers are a nice compliment to surgery,’ he suggests.

Orfaniotis is less keen on certain skin-boosting injectables. ‘I think it’s wise to avoid biostimulators. ey create collagen but not the soft collagen that we want – some collagen creates brosis (scar tissue) that makes more work for us.’

Was ller and its co-stars just a momentary obsession we’ve overdosed on, one that’s ultimately led us back to basics – or can the two camps coexist in harmony? ‘In the future, I hope to see specialist injectors and surgeons working on a patient’s longevity plan together – a more holistic approach is de nitely needed,’ says Yapa.

Knife or needle, what remains true is ageing well is never just about one thing. n

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SEALED WITH A KISS

Restylane Kysse: the aesthetic art of natural lip enhancement

As beauty trends come and go, the desire for soft, plump and natural-looking kissable lips is always in demand. With the impact of celebrity looks influencing the popularity of lip fillers in the UK, it is a worry that this may distort the perception of ‘natural’ beauty.

As we age, the changes that can occur to our lips due to natural collagen depletion and lifestyle factors such as smoking include loss of volume and definition, with the fatty tissues beneath the lips diminishing over time to leave lips looking deflated. This causes significant changes in facial symmetry, as symmetrical lips contribute to facial proportion.

The art of aesthetics enhances individual facial features rather than changing them, and with this in mind, Restylane Kysse is designed to preserve individual beauty. It works by naturally enhancing and subtly smoothing lips with an advanced formula that seamlessly integrates for an improved and restored version of your own lips.

FLEXIBILITY MEETS SUPPORT FOR NATURAL RESULTS

It is important to maintain flexibility and movement for natural-looking results. Engineered for contouring and natural expression, Optimal Balance Technology (OBT) is at the heart of Restylane Kysse, with a soft, flexible gel texture to distribute evenly and provide a natural-looking enhancement.

LESS IS MORE

The high performance of Restylane Kysse highlights that less product is needed to achieve optimal lip fullness.* The overall result is desired fullness and volume, with up to 12 months of smooth, plump, naturallooking lips.

IMMEDIATE RESULTS

Restylane Kysse provides immediate results, with lips appearing plumper and more defined after the treatment, which typically takes 15-30 minutes and is

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Treated with Restylane Kysse

performed by a qualified medical professional. Before the procedure, a numbing cream or local anaesthetic can be applied to minimise any potential discomfort. The filler is then injected into specific areas of the lips to achieve the desired outcome. The effects can last for several months, although individual results may vary. Over time, the body gradually breaks down the hyaluronic acid, and additional treatments may be needed to maintain the desired lip fullness.

IN SAFE HANDS

Restylane, a trusted name in aesthetic medicine, has long been renowned for its exceptional quality and effectiveness, with years of research and innovation at the forefront of the brand. Restylane has established itself as the pioneer in dermal fillers, and Restylane Kysse is no exception. Restylane Kysse has undergone extensive clinical studies and gained medical professionals’ trust worldwide. Its proven track record ensures a safe and reliable solution for lip enhancement, providing people with peace of mind during their transformative journey.

Dr Zoya Awan says, ‘Throughout my years of practice, I’ve catered to patients of diverse age groups, each with unique needs when it comes to lip enhancement. In my opinion, with fleeting

trends where dramatic transformations are common, natural-looking lips never go out of style. My experience with Restylane Kysse filler has been truly remarkable. It’s a versatile solution that delivers a natural look whether they’re seeking to enhance youthful fullness or restore subtle volume.’

HIGH PATIENT AND PARTNER SATISFACTION

 100 percent were satisfied or very satisfied with the lip style after treatment

 96 percent agreed that their lips looked natural

 73 percent agree that these lips had a more kissable and natural feel, with high partner satisfaction

Natural-looking lips will always be in trend. With Restylane Kysse, you can confidently embrace your natural beauty, knowing that you have found a solution that delivers the perfect balance of elegance and authenticity.

Dr Zoya Awan is a Galderma Key Opinion Leader. For more information, visit restylaneusa.com and galderma.com

* COMPARED TO JUVEDERM VOLBELLA *REFERENCES AVAILABLE ON REQUEST; GB-RES-2400087 DOP APRIL’2024
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Dr Zoya Awan

TRIED VERIFIED

When considering a tweak or two there’s nothing like word of mouth to put you in the picture. Here, our dedicated team of beauty experts put ten aesthetic treatments on trial

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PBSERUM WITH SKINPEN

What happens: Dr Selena Langdon is one of the first UK aesthetic doctors to o er this revolutionary treatment and she’s very excited having seen the results, ‘especially on di cult to treat areas like stretch marks and acne scars’. In fact, she goes as far as to say it could be an alternative to more aggressive procedures like laser or surgery. Why? Because PBSerum, which has both medical and cosmeceutical applications and is already popular in Europe and South America, is the rst therapeutic system based on recombinant enzymes. When these are targeted e ectively, they can do everything from breaking down fat such as that around the jowl (so remodelling the jawline) to improving scarring and brosis. On the cosmeceutical side, it can o er a souped-up facial, delivered through prickly microneedling with SkinPen or with radiofrequency (whatever system helps it get pushed into the skin most e ciently), with excellent tightening results. But if you have an area of concern, such as pigmentation or ageing hands, these enzymes might become your new best friend – and how fun to say bye-bye, surgery. Ouch factor: e area is numbed before treatment, so tingling on the treatment zone is all that you should expect.

Downtime: All tightness and redness should be relieved after 48 hours, but you’ll have to drink lots, wear full SPF and use minimal products in the meantime to avoid infection.

Results: For an A-class facial with lasting results, it’s an exciting development, but for those with a condition such as acne or even stretchmarks, it’s a game-changer. Book it: £POA. berkshireaesthetics.com

2MESOTOX

What happens: A combo of teeny amounts of Botox plus mesotherapy, this powerful, non-surgical treatment is face genius Vaishaly’s invention. As you lie on a heated couch in Vaishaly’s Marylebone clinic, 20 tiny goldtipped needles attached to a phial of skin boosters are applied to your skin in soft, prickly motions. e bespoke solution includes Botox to smooth ne surface lines with a personalised serum of vitamins, minerals and amino acids selected for your skin type. e whole thing takes about 30

minutes and is perfect for anyone who doesn’t want a full face of Botox or llers. Ouch factor: The sensation feels like someone is gently pricking your face with a pencil nib.

Downtime: Unlike lasers or peels there’s no imperative to keep out of the sun, sea or sauna afterwards, leaving you free to return to work straight away.

Results: Brilliant for loose skin, discolouration, acne, eye bags, scars and for oily, congested areas as pores are dramatically tightened. Skin looks brightened, hydrated and its texture and tone even. An ideal treatment for brides, the glow lasts three to four months.

Book it: From £345. vaishaly.com

3LIP FLIP X PRP

What happens: A subtle enhancement of the lips that uses the patient’s own growth factors to enhance fullness, Dr Lizzie Tuckey is an expert at achieving fuller lips without relying on hyaluronic acid ller. After an

initial consultation, blood is taken from a vein in the arm which is then spun in a centrifuge to separate out the plateletrich plasma that’s steeped in growth factors. is is then injected back into the lips to regenerate collagen (the body’s structural protein) for rmer lip tissue with improved hydration. The second (lip ip) part of treatment is optional and involves a small injection of Botox in the small muscles around the lips that keeps them from turning inwards when smiling, thus reducing a gummy smile and giving a subtle lift to the top lip.

Ouch factor: As local anaesthetic is applied to lips beforehand only mild discomfort is felt during the PRP injections. For the Botox, expect a few short, sharp scratches. Downtime: Some mild swelling occurs for a few hours afterwards along with mild bruising in some that can last a couple of days.

Results: Immediately lips feel smoother and more plump. Optimum results appear after two weeks as the Botox kicks in.

Book It: £795 with Dr Lizzie Tuckey at drmichaelprager.com

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SEE THE LIGHT

myBlend LED Face Mask’s skincare technology takes inspiration from centuries-old wisdom and modern scientific breakthroughs

Throughout history, civilisations have lauded the sun for its therapeutic properties. From ancient Egypt and Greece to China and India, sunlight was considered a source of vitality. But it wasn’t until the 19th century – and the advent of electricity – that scientists discovered the truly remarkable healing potential of light therapy.

Today, myBlend has combined age-old wisdom about the power of light with modern science to create its myLEDmask. The mask, which targets the face and neck, is designed to be used three to four times a week over the course of six to eight weeks, using photobiomodulation technology to prevent the effects of aging. Each myLEDmask uses 144 red LEDs alongside 144 infrared LEDs in intensive preset programmes, depending on your skin type, starting at just five minutes, to stimulate collagen production, improve skin density, smooth wrinkles and firm the skin. The effects are impressive: after one month of use, skin appears three years younger.*

HOW DOES THE LED MASK WORK?

Dr François Michel, dermatologist and expert in laser therapy, sheds the light on how myBlend’s LED Face Mask works.

‘LEDs are small diodes that emit different colours,’ he explains, ‘each colour corresponds to a precise wavelength, with varying penetration into the skin. The myBlend mask uses the colours red and near infrared (630 and 850 nanometres) as

this blend has been proven to increase the effectiveness of results. In fact, unlike red light, invisible infrared exists in pulsed mode and is more comfortable.’

And what of the results? He confirms: ‘Scientists have noticed an improvement in overall skin quality when using red light: texture, firmness, suppleness, radiance were all enhanced, to give the skin a youthful boost.’

But it doesn't stop there. ‘They also observed restorative effects on the skin’s components, and in the skin’s circulation,' continues Dr Michel. ‘Subsequently, infrared was also acknowledged for its ability to further improve the repair effect.’

As for its growing popularity, he says, it’s because, unlike other skincare tech – laser, for example – LED masks are non-intrusive. ‘LED masks offer an extremely gentle and painless technology to improve skin outcomes, with minimal risks,’ he says.

BUY NOW

myBlend LED Facial and Neck Mask uses red and infrared LEDs to stimulate collagen production, improve skin density, smooth wrinkles, improve pigmentation and visibly firm the skin. £1,100, myblend.co.uk and exclusively at Harrods, harrods.com

To try it out in store, visit Harrods 5th Floor Hair & Beauty Salon to discover the brand and speak to a myBlend expert for a full skin diagnosis

* CLINICAL STUDIES, EVALUATION CARRIED OUT ON THE STATE OF THE DERMIS, 31 WOMEN, THREE TO FOUR APPLICATIONS PER WEEK May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 163 PROMOTION

LIFTING STANDARDS

From his invisible scarring techniques to his eye for beauty and over 25 years experience, Mr Alex Karidis is trusted for his natural-looking surgery

The facelift is undoubtedly having a revival. In the UK alone, the number of people choosing to undergo a facelift in the last year has risen by 97 percent. In part, the normalisation of non-invasive cosmetic treatments has helped pave the way for the rise in surgery as consumers are becoming more willing to experiment. At the same time, there is a certain level of fatigue with the limitations of some non-surgical treatments, leading patients to consider surgery as an alternative.

Choosing the right surgeon is, of course, key. Skill and experience are two of the most important factors which is why renowned plastic surgeon Mr Alex Karidis is so sought after.

His experience is based on over 25 years in private practice at his clinic at the Hospital of St John and St Elizabeth in St John’s Wood where he has performed over 20,000 cosmetic operations with nearly 2,000 of those being facial and facelift operations.

When contemplating a facelift, choose an experienced surgeon who will meticulously assess your exact needs, rather than someone who is promoting one particular procedure or approach, says Karidis.

‘There is lots of talk currently about the “cutting-edge” deep plane facelift,’ he

explains. ‘The deep plane facelift is not new. It has been around since the mid-nineties. However, there isn’t a one-size-fits-all facelift, and the technique alone does not guarantee a great result. We are all unique, with different anatomy, tissue characteristics, and ageing concerns. It’s the experience, skill, eye, safety record, and assessment of the surgeon that's critical.’

While trends aren’t important, looks are. Mr Karidis is known for his extremely natural results. 'I absolutely abhor any possibility that a patient of mine could look stretched, pulled or distorted in any way. The aim of surgery is to make people look better, not different. I believe in classic, natural, soft beauty,’ says Karidis who is known for his ‘invisible’ awardwinning techniques which leave minimal scarring post operation.

In addition to facelift surgery, Mr Karidis performs a full range of surgical body contouring and cosmetic breast surgery treatments, and is renowned as one of London’s leading male breast reduction surgeons.

Karidis Clinic, The Hospital of St John and St Elizabeth, 60 Grove End Road, London NW8 9NH; +44 (0)20 7432 8727. @karidis_london; karidis.co.uk

PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES
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Mr Alex Karidis

AMEELA

What happens: If you’ve had Profhilo before you’ll be familiar with the method. But, Dr Ashwin Soni, a GMCregistered plastic surgeon and expert injector, believes Ameela is a superior type of skin booster. Utilising polynucleotides, the solution is rich-in-stem cells thus helps to produce more collagen and elastin for firmer, plumper skin that appears refreshed and rejuvenated. Dr Soni applies numbing cream and massages the area with an ice pack before injecting it into the super cial layers of the skin in strategic areas on both sides of the face. The whole thing takes no more than three minutes before Dr Soni moves on to the under eyes. To ensure safety and protect the delicate skin around the eyes, he inserts a cannula in the top of the cheek, which he uses to safely distribute the formula to the undereye area. is is the moment where you might begin to get tense – but the sensation, while jarring, is quick.

Ouch factor: It’s more cringey than painful, though the face injections are a bit stingy for a second or two.

Downtime: Relatively little. A miniscule bruise might occur in injection sites but it dissipates quickly.

Results: A refreshed radiance is seen immediately afterwards and six to 12 weeks later dark circles are diminished while skin quality appears juicy and youthful – without the super cial look that ller can impart.

Book it: From £600 a session, available at his residency at e Langham Hotel, London and at his agship clinic in Ascot, Berkshire. thesoniclinic.com

5TEETH BONDING

What happens: Dr Tom Crawford-Clarke prides himself on the natural look and is a whizz at composite bonding, a veneer-like coating that turns worn and aged teeth into a youthful-looking smile – without

removing any of the natural tooth underneath. e process begins with facial planning, during which CrawfordClarke takes into account the whole facial anatomy including the width of the nose and the curve of the lips, making note of any asymmetries that need to be accounted for (teeth that are too symmetrical can look ‘o ’ he maintains). A digital mock-up of the end result gives a good metric of how your smile will change, which is followed up with a mock t of the new teeth, which he does by applying a rudimentary application of composite (the same material that’s used in llings) to establish the length and size of your new teeth. Pictures are taken and o you go with time to adjust to your new smile. Crawford-Clarke says this is key to moving ahead as it can take some time to get used to a new look, despite it being an improvement. Once any adjustments have been agreed upon, the actual appointment lasts about four hours. Crawford-Clarke hand paints four or ve di erent shades of the composite material to the teeth making sure to add in subtle nuances such as transparency at the bottom for a natural look that follows the morphology of the original teeth – only ten years younger. While some bonding can appear thick and opaque, Crawford-Clarke’s are no more than 0.7 millimetre thick, reducing the propensity to chip considerably. Ouch factor: No pain, but patience is required as the appointment is long and painstaking.

Downtime: Results are transformative and immediate, and no downtime is necessary.

Results: Composite bonding, when planned meticulously and artfully applied gives a complete smile makeover that looks as good as porcelain veneers. Though, says Crawford-Clarke, the material isn’t as durable and doesn’t last as long. Polishing is required every six to twelve months along with regular hygiene appointments to maintain the original look.

Book it: From £475 per tooth. Four to ten teeth are recommended. luceodental.com

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Earrings from ‘L’Heure Du Diamant’ collection with marquise cut diamonds and brilliant cut diamonds set in 18ct white gold Chopard

THE 8 POINT LIFT

What happens: Targeting eight strategic lifting points including the cheekbones, tear trough, nasolabial folds, mouth corners, pre-jowl area, jawline and lower cheek, Dr Joney

De Souza minimally injects a combination of varying viscosities of ller to achieve a subtle facelift e ect without the need for surgery. De Souza, who counts Cat Deeley as one of his clients, works methodically for around an hour to ensure results are both natural-looking and in harmony with your speci c facial features.

Ouch factor: Dr De Souza uses numbing cream and a cannula with a thin needle which is virtually pain-free, though some discomfort is normal. e dermal ller itself contains a lidocaine which decreases sensitivity further.

Downtime: You can resume normal duties directly afterwards but De Souza advises avoiding makeup around the eyes for a day and applying SPF. Some swelling is usual for up to 24 hours following treatment.

Results: A sculpted face is apparent rst o , while dark circles around eyes are reduced as is hollowness in the temples and cheek area. Overall, skin takes on a rmer more youthful appearance which lasts up to 12 months, after which touch-ups may be required to maintain the status quo.

Book it: From £1,800, priced after consultation. drjoneydesouza.com

7LIP AND CHEEK FILLER

What happens: Dr Ivona Igerc (Dr Ivy) works on her patients while they stand, allowing gravity to dictate the areas she needs to address (every face looks better lying back). is technique, says Dr Ivy, allows her to view the face from all angles giving her more control and a more ‘elegant outcome’. Taking a ‘cephalometric analysis’ which examines the relationship between bone, muscles and fat padding, when static and in motion, she rst determines exactly where to inject. While opera music is playing, Dr Ivy applies a numbing cream and after 20 minutes begins to move ballerina-like around the face to carefully administer the ller in the lips and cheeks. Once nished, she gently massages skin tissue, moulding it with her hands like a sculptor, ensuring the solution is positioned as desired.

Ouch factor: Dr Ivy is a gentle injector but there is some initial swelling with bruising

in some patients, a normal reaction that’s expected to vanish within three days. Results: No pillow face here, lips and cheeks look naturally rejuvenated, not lled. Book it: Priced on consultation. 111harleystreet.com

8EMFACE SUBMENTUM

What happens: Dr Galyna Selezneva is known as the energy device queen and only works with technology that’s scienti cally proven to work. One of the rst to introduce Emface by BTL, the machine that utilises a combination of HIFES (highintensity facial electrical stimulation) and radiofrequency, the machine activates the muscles while tightening the skin with safe levels of radiofrequency. New to the protocol is Emface chin pads that target a wobbly double chin, while helping to snatch the jawline simultaneously. For a

full facial rejuvenation Galyna begins by applying electromagnetic pads onto each cheek, one on the forehead and a small pad (submentum) underneath the chin. While the muscle stimulation is felt (it’s like a workout for the facial muscles), the main sensation is gentle heat. e procedure takes around 30 minutes and you’ll leave with a slight ush that usually subsides within the hour.

Ouch factor: No pain, just a toasty wash of heat that feels no di erent to the warmth of the sun.

Downtime: None, this is non-invasive face lifting at its best.

Results: You’ll start to see more de nition in the jawline immediately but the collagen boosting e ects begin showing one week after and continue to improve over the course of three months.

Book it: Emface submentum with chin pads costs from £2,500 for four sessions, and is available at Rita Rakus clinic. drritarakus.co.uk

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Tuxedo jacket Paul Smith

AWARD-WINNING AESTHETICS

Led by Dr Selena Langdon, Berkshire Aesthetics has won numerous awards for its patient-centred offering

Berkshire Aesthetics was named the UK’s best aesthetic clinic at the Safety in Beauty Diamond Awards 2023, further cementing the clinic’s reputation of offering the best possible aesthetic treatments in a patient-focused environment.

From its purpose-built site on the edge of Pinkneys Green, near Maidenhead, the growing team of medical experts delivers cutting-edge treatments in a discrete and relaxed setting.

Dr Selena Langdon founded Berkshire Aesthetics with a ‘patient first’ approach, which means the patient is at the centre of everything they do. A thorough consultation guarantees that patients' aesthetic concerns are understood, and treatments are aligned with their emotional needs and motivations. The focus is on ensuring the best therapies are offered, which increasingly involves combination treatments and an emphasis on skin health as the basis for achieving optimal in-clinic treatment results.

Supporting Dr Langdon is an exceptional team of aesthetic practitioners and accomplished aesthetic doctors.

Dr Mira Mikhail is a GP and aesthetic doctor who expertly uses dermal fillers to perform incredible patient transformations and more discreet adjustments. Her favourite treatment is filler for the midface, as it supports overall facial structure, reduces tiredness, and restores a youthful appearance.

Dr Dara Suite trained initially in Plastics before specialising in Aesthetic Medicine. She is mainly focused on treating lower facial sagging and skin laxity. Often, this involves small amounts of filler

strategically placed within the face. This approach allows her patients to achieve maximum results from less product.

At Berkshire Aesthetics, the approach is undoubtedly to ‘consult, not sell’, and patient education is vital. Patients are consulted in-depth and allowed to ask questions without pressure, commitment, or judgment. Not only does the clinic offer many of the world’s leading treatments, but it is integrated with a network of local medical professionals, including specialists in Plastic Surgery and Dermatology. The cohesive, medically led approach to patient care ensures that patients can be supported in their aesthetic goals and general health.

Having previously won Aesthetic Doctor of the Year, Dr Langdon’s profile has grown due to her commitment to her patients and the remarkable treatment outcomes she achieves. She is well known for representing the interests of patients and lobbying for change in regulations that promote safe and responsible treatment choices.

Berkshire Aesthetics is an exceptional clinic in a discreet rural location. The highly experienced front-of-house, practitioner, and doctor teams support Dr Langdon in her steadfast belief that aesthetic treatments should be delivered responsibly and with the utmost care for the patient and their physical and emotional wellbeing.

Furze Platt Rd, Maidenhead SL6 6PR; +44 (0)1628 202028; info@berkshireaesthetics.com

Dr Mira Mikhail Selena Langdon Dr Dara Suite
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LAM 7-IN-1 ULTIMATE 360 CELLULAR ACTIVATION FACIAL

What happens: Dr Uliana Gout is a pioneer in aesthetics and her truly bespoke approach to your individual needs is what makes her one of the most sought-after practitioners in the business. Her latest seven-step treatment is based around ‘SkinRegen’ (her aesthetic buzzword for 2024), and concerns itself with targeting individual cells to stimulate them and prompt collagen production. Mixing and matching both product and machine, this turbocharged seven step facial kicks o with radiofrequency (which can heat your face, but she monitors your ability to withstand it closely), after which a layer of rejuvenating exosomes is delivered with a technology called electroporation to drive it deeper. Before another layer of those punchy little protein and bioactives-packed molecules, Dr Gout hyper cleanses the face with exfoliant BHA/ABA for the T-zone and a powerful antioxidant facial which really helps to boost smoothness, depigmentation and radiance and opens it up ready for more, including the delivery of polynucleotides (particularly hydrating) into the exposed pores. Taking down the heat, and including oh-so-moisture-boosting hyaluronic acid, Dr Gout cools the face with a blast of cryotherapy, before nishing up with an LED treatment to boost the e cacy of the treatment, topped o with an oxygen blast for a nal c irculation kick. is is more than just a facial, and two to three sessions are recommended six to eight weeks apart for the full e ects – which are con dence-boosting perkiness and smoothness.

Ouch factor: e only bit that can be slightly painful is the degree of heat used in the radiofrequency.

Downtime: You won’t want to wear makeup for a couple of days but there’s no hiding away needed.

Results: Tighter, brighter skin appears over the weeks to come – and lasts.

Book it: Program of three, £3,384. london-aesthetic-medicine.com 10

MORPHOLIFT

What happens: Dr Dav id Jack is renowned for his subtle work and his new MorphoLift treatment is no exception. A combination of Botox targeting the platysma muscle that spans the neck and jowl area, and dermal llers to support the structure of the jawline is complemented by a session of Morpheus8, the micro-needling and radiofrequency treatment that stimulates collagen production for tighter, brighter skin. You’ll chill in the waiting room accented with Corinthian columns and sip on fresh co ee served in porcelain cups while the numbing cream kicks in. As the treatment gets underway the injections of filler and Botox are quick and efficient while the Morpheus8 device is like a posh staple gun (minus the staples) that

fe els warm on the skin with a slight zapping sensation. e whole thing is over before you know it, but if you check your watch the whole treatment takes around two hours.

Ouch factor: Some people find Morpheus8 painful, others tolerate it without any discomfort. We found it marginally uncomfortable but not at all painful.

Downtime: Skin may look a little red directly afterwards but it soon disappears.

Results: Done over two sessions, neck and jaw look tighter after the rst session, but things get better and better as the months go on, peaking around six months later. Book it: £4,100 over two sessions with Dr Jack and £3,560 with his associates.

SAFETY NOTE: make sure to visit an experienced medical doctor who is pro cient at operating energy devices. n

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‘Mizu’ earrings in 18ct white gold set with pear-shaped diamonds Adler

GetHarley is the rst telehealth platform connecting individuals to experienced practitioners for personalised, inside-andout, skin health advice. Following a consultation, a regime of medical grade skincare products and health supplements is curated by the practitioner, for the individual.

GET MATCHED WITH A PRACTITIONER WHO IS RIGHT FOR YOU

GET PERSONALISED, MEDICAL GRADE SKINCARE AND SUPPLEMENT RECOMMENDATIONS BY YOUR MATCHED PRACTITIONER

GET YOUR SKIN HEALTH REGIME DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR

GET BEAUTIFUL, HEALTHY SKIN

“I give my patients holistic advice when it comes to their skin - it’s the body’s largest organ and needs an inside out approach. That means, not only recommending clinically proven skincare, but also suggesting lifestyle changes and taking the right health supplements to support their skincare journey. I do this with GetHarley. It delivers all the products, directly to my patients’ homes.” – Dr Sophie Shotter

@getharley www.getharley.com/book-now

‘I’ll have what she’s having.’

In the stunning setting of the historic Chandos House, London, cosmetic doctor and trailblazer Dr Sebagh and his team offer tailor-made treatments at the cutting edge of technology.

DR SEBAGH’S TOP TREATMENTS

Dr Sebagh Platinum Polynucleotide Treatment

Experience a tailor-made bespoke protocol designed personally for each patient by Dr Sebagh to achieve that ‘wow’ factor look, with zero downtime. This treatment seamlessly integrates a range of cutting-edge technologies, ingredients and therapies to achieve stunningly beautiful results. Dr Sebagh skillfully combines a mixture of HIFU, Advanced PRP/PRF, polynucleotides, hyaluronic acid and an Exosome Topical Mask, targeting and enhancing numerous micro areas of the face for an all-over, comprehensive improvement. Expect a sculpted, lifted visage with restored volume and dramatically improved skin texture. The best part? Zero downtime ensures you can step out with confidence immediately after treatment.

Regenerative Fat Transfer

Discover an innovative treatment designed to replenish facial volume and address concerns such as hollow eyes and dark circles. Dr Sebagh’s approach combines micro fat injections with nano fat stem cells, delivering a powerful skin-

regenerating therapy. A small amount of fat is meticulously removed from areas like the abdomen or thighs, then carefully processed to create a solution rich in stem cells, growth factors, and wound-healing agents. This potent blend rejuvenates and revitalizes the skin while restoring youthful contours to the face. Experience the transformative effects of this procedure with minimal downtime.

K Thread Lift (3D Thread Lift)

Dr Sebagh’s expertise in thread treatments is renowned, offering a transformative solution to counteract the effects of gravity on our face and neck as we age. This innovative approach replenishes volume and uplifts sagging skin using high quality threads made of polydioxanone (PDO) as well as Poly-L-Lactic Acid (PLLA) and Polycaprolactone (PCA). Once inserted, the threads are delicately lifted upwards to anchor the skin and slight pressure is applied to the skin in order to reshape its surface.

The benefits are twofold: firstly, the mechanics of thread insertion provide an instant lifting effect, as the threads lend support to elevate the skin to its new position. Secondly, the K Thread Lift (3D Thread Lift) promotes cellular renewal by

stimulating collagen production and neovascularization—the body’s natural process of forming new blood vessels. This enhances blood flow, fosters cellular rejuvenation, and improves skin texture, reducing the appearance of fine lines and wrinkles while enhancing skin elasticity.

This technological breakthrough presents a unique opportunity for women seeking a rejuvenated appearace without surgery.

DR MARITON’S TOP TREATMENTS

Fraxel Laser Treatment

Dr Mariton is renowned for her expertise in Fraxel Laser treatment, an innovative fractional skin resurfacing technique known for its transformative effects on pigmentation, pore size, and skin texture, ultimately achieving a flawless complexion. This advanced procedure utilises small beams of laser energy to precisely target sections of the skin. She often combines Fraxel with IPL Therapy to address pigmentation concerns and further enhance skin texture, ensuring remarkable and long-lasting outcomes.

Platelet Rich Plasma (PRP)

One of Dr Mariton’s preferred treatments is Platelet Rich Plasma (PRP) or Platelet

Dr Jean-Louis Sebagh Dr Diana Piana-Mariton
“Pioneering medical cosmetic procedures have helped to make my vision for ‘Ageing-Maintenance’ a reality.”
— Dr Sebagh

Rich Fibrin, renowned for its accelerated recovery time and rejuvenating effects on the skin. PRP/PRF harnesses the potency of growth factors and cells extracted from your blood which are then reintroduced into the skin painlessly via a mesogun, stimulating cell regeneration, and yielding firmer, plumper skin with a visible reduction in fine lines and wrinkles, unveiling a radiant, rosy complexion. This entirely natural and chemical-free substitute can volumise and replump the skin in depth, offering a bio-alternative to synthetic fillers, and effectively leveraging and enhancing the body’s innate healing proteins for enduring, luminous effects.

Rosacea poses a significant challenge for Dr. Mariton’s patients.. Her specialised Rosacea Vascular Laser Treatment effectively targets and improves the appearance of capillaries on the skin. Beyond addressing aesthetic concerns, this treatment also helps alleviate the

sensitivity associated with rosacea, providing comprehensive relief, and restoring comfort to the skin by stopping the inevitable progression to worsening of the condition and subsequent skin changes to more inflammatory rosacea.

DR KOLLI’S TOP TREATMENTS

Botox

Dr Kolli carefully tailors each Botox procedure to enhance the client’s natural beauty while preserving their distinctive features for natural-looking results. Whether softening fine lines, smoothing wrinkles, or rejuvenating the skin, her delicate touch and artful technique consistently deliver results that are refreshingly subtle yet undeniably transformative.

A special Botox technique that Dr Kolli uses is Microtox that achieves flawless, glass-like skin. Also known as Dermatox, it works by placing dilute toxin in tiny papules just under the skin’s surface, rather than into the muscle where it is typically placed, for the most natural-looking results. Microtox has a variety of benefits such as improving skin texture, skin tightening, pore size and fine lines. Botox can also be used to redefine the jawline, targeting sagging jowls by relaxing the muscles of the neck that pull down the jawline, thereby improving the jawline, slimming down the neck and reducing sagging skin, for a more youthful neck contour. This can also be combined with collagenstimulating treatments like Profhilo.

Lip Fillers

Dr Kolli is known for her precise and natural lip enhancement. Giving each patient a bespoke consultation, she uses a variety of techniques to achieve the desired lip shape in a natural, subtle way; for example, Botox applied to the top lip for a gentle lifting effect, Hyaluronic Acid to volumise for pillowy plumpness, or a ‘Lip Flip’ to redefine the shape of the lips.

Combining the multiple injection approach of mesotherapy with botulinum toxin, MesoBotox uses the technique of gently delivering small injections of active ingredients, vitamins and antioxidants plus Botox for a subtle and gentle, yet comprehensive facial rejuvenation treatment. Applied to the surface skin layer, it allows facial mimicry to be preserved, while smoothing out fine wrinkles and making skin glow from within.

ADVERTORIAL FEATURE drsebagh.com Dr Sebagh London Clinic Chandos House Queen Anne Street London W1G 9LQ 020 7637 0548 doctor@chandoshouse.com
Dr Deepti Kolli

SWEET HARMONY

With his artistic flair, surgical expertise and advanced technology, Dr Dean Rhobaye’s full facial harmonisation procedure gives truly transformative results
‘N

eurotoxins and fillers are easy to inject but very difficult to get right,’ says Dr Dean Rhobaye from Sloane Clinic, Harley Street. The world’s best injectors, he continues, come from a facial surgical background. ‘One needs to understand the biomechanics of the tissue and how opposing muscles interplay with one another. Each patient’s anatomy is unique – we all have largely the same muscles but the shape, density and orientation is individual – and how the muscles express themselves is different again,’ he explains. His advanced full facial harmonisation procedure involves a delicate combination of neurotoxin (Botox) and facial filler, injected strategically and sympathetically to optimise features, smooth contours and define facial structure in a natural-looking way so that patients look the best versions of themselves.

Using state-of-the-art 3D and ultrasound imaging technology, Dr Rhobaye carefully plans and monitors his treatments to optimise results and maximise patient safety. For neurotoxins, he uses dynamic mapping to assess each patient, taking precise measurements that inform his injection points, depending on the pattern of wrinkles and bulk and expression of the musculature.

Carried out gradually over multiple sessions to allow for progressive, strategic enhancements, he begins with an initial phase of filler that provides

support and structure, followed by refinements to facial contours and proportions while reducing mild facial sagging and minimising wrinkles.

Taking a holistic, bespoke approach, Dr Rhobaye prides himself on the subtlety of his results which come courtesy of his artistic acumen. A keen sculptor, Dr Rhobaye’s eye for proportion is undoubtedly a differentiating factor in his arsenal of expertise. The best in class in facial harmonisation, Dr Rhobaye is an award winning practitioner having received the highest accolade at the Aesthetic & Anti-aging Medicine World Congress (AMWC) for his work using advanced injectable techniques. But it is his patients who provide him with the most rewarding feedback.

Staving off unnecessary facial surgery for minimallyinvasive techniques that offer exceptional results, his advanced injectable procedures are highly sought after, not least because they last. ‘There is evidence now to suggest that facial filler is more permanent than we first thought, potentially giving long-lasting results that do not need to be continuously topped up. The key is knowing how, where and who to inject and when not to.’

Dr Dean Rhobaye, Sloane Clinic, 10 Harley St, London W1. 020 7340 1488; sloaneclinic.co.uk; @deanrhobaye

Using 3D imaging and ultrasound, Dr Rhobaye can take super-precise measurements
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The harmonisation procedure involves Botox and filler strategically combined

DOCTORS’ GUIDE

A-D

Dr Aggie Zatonska

Known for her undetectable work, it has made Dr Aggie Zatonska one of the most calledfor injectors in Surrey. A former ENT surgeon, Zatonska prefers a 360-degree approach and will combine injectables with newer modalities that deliver exceptional skin quality over the long term. @atelier.dr.aggie; atelier.clinic

Dr Ahmed El Muntasar

Dr Ahmed is an impressive figure within the health industry. The youngest ever medical student at St Andrews University, he completed 12 courses in aesthetics by the time he was 26 and won three awards at the British Aesthetics Awards in 2020. He believes deeply in a patient-centered approach. @theaestheticsdoctor; theaestheticsdoctor.com

Dr Alexis Granite

With a medical degree from the prestigious Weill Cornell Medical School in New York City, Dr Alexis is board-certified in dermatology in the US and a Dermatologist in the UK. Her practice spans skin biopsies to aesthetic injectables and she is one of the most recommended skin doctors in London. @dralexisgranite; dralexisgranite.com

Mr Alex Karidis

Having performed over 20,000 cosmetic operations in the last 27 years, Dr Karidis is an expert at facelifts and facial rejuvenation procedures. He has spent years perfecting an award-winning invisible technique. He also performs body contouring and breast surgery, including male breast reduction.

@karidis_london; karidis.co.uk

Dr Ariel Haus

A genius with lasers, according to online patient reviews, dermatologist Dr Haus and his entire staff are renowned for their professional and welcoming manner at his state-of-the-art clinic on Harley Street. From specific concerns like acne and rosacea to holistic aesthetic treatments, Dr Haus is the king of skin. @drarielhaus; drhausdermatology.com

Dr Ashwin Soni

A GMC registered plastic and reconstructive surgeon, Dr Soni also specialises in injectable procedures like nonsurgical rhinoplasty and cutting-edge skin boosters. He is a trusted name with those in the know for his safe and subtle results.

@thesoniclinic; thesoniclinic.com

Dr Christine Hall

A GMC-registered GP, Hall is also a former pharmacist with a passion for skincare. She makes frequent trips to Seoul where skincare and aesthetics are at the cutting edge and, astonishingly, continues to work as an emergency medicine doctor and GP alongside her aesthetic work. @drchristinehall; drwassimtaktouk.com

Dr David Jack

With his delicate touch, you’ll never look overdone with Dr David Jack’s ‘naturally beautiful’ approach. If you’re nervous about injectables, he’s your go-to guy for natural-looking results. @drdavidjack; drdavidjackclinic.com

Dr Dean Rhobaye

Dr Rhobaye has developed a bespoke method of facial harmonisation using dermal fillers and neurotoxins to achieve beautiful results. Winner of the non-surgical facial beautification category at the annual Aesthetic and Anti-Aging Medicine World Congress awards, Rhobaye is not your average injector. @deanrhobaye; sloaneclinic.co.uk

Dr Deepti Kolli

A cosmetic dermatologist, Dr Kolli is a specialist in injectables and state-ofthe-art treatments such as personalised PRP (platelet-rich plasma) and mesotherapy to enhance and rejuvenate the skin. drsebagh.com

E-IDr Frances Prenna Jones

Known for her red light therapy to give skin an ever-fresh glow, Dr Prenna Jones is rumoured to have treated several high-profile models and celebrities due to her light-handed approach and skincare know-how.

@drfrancesprennajones; drfrancesprennajones.com

Mr Georgios Orfaniotis

Mention the deep plane facelift and Orfaniotis’s name is inevitably mentioned. With a plastic surgery fellowship from the Royal College of Surgeons, Mr Orfaniotis is on the GMC specialist register for plastic surgery. He has over 15 years’ experience in some of the most advanced facial rejuvenation techniques. @dr_georgios_orfaniotis; orfaniotis.co.uk

Dr Georgina Williams

A co-founder of Montrose London, Dr Williams is a consultant plastic surgeon and fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons, specialising in facial and breast plastic surgery and microsurgery. She divides her time between her NHS surgical practice and her private clinic at Montrose where she focuses on non-surgical work such as Botox and fillers. @drgeorginawilliams; montroseclinics.com

Mr Hagen Schumacher

A highly qualified plastic and reconstructive

ON CALL
THE A-Z AESTHETIC
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Find an expert from our vetted list of aesthetic wizards who specialise in everything from non-surgical facial lifting to subtle skin enhancements

surgeon and a wellregarded NHS consultant, Mr Schumacher has private practices in London and Cambridge where his main interest includes breast surgery, rhinoplasty, eyelid surgery, chin alterations and facelifts. Whatever your concern, his guiding principle is to improve the confidence and selfesteem of his patients. @hagenschumacher; adore.life

Dr Galyna Selezneva

A whizz with the world’s leading high-tech machines, Dr Galyna is the beauty insider’s trusted body guru. From firming jowls to sculpting love handles and tightening down there, her expertise and warm bedside manner make her unique. @dr_galyna; ritarakus.co.uk

Dr Ifeoma Ejikeme

Her Instagram feed is a landing place for targeted skincare advice including the lowdown on the mostasked about ingredients, from retinol to pregnancy skincare advice. As founder and medical director of Adonia Medical Clinic, she offers state-of-the-art treatments from PRP for hair loss to microneedling for skin rejuvenation. @dr_ifeoma_ejikeme; adoniamedicalclinic.co.uk

J-LDr Joanna Christou

Being a dual qualified dentist and medical doctor has enabled Dr Christou to pursue a special interest in facial musculature when performing non-surgical procedures and creating

the discrete, holistic results she is renowned for. cosmeticskinclinic.com

Dr Johanna Ward

An award-winning cosmetic doctor, GP and expert in cosmetic laser, Dr Ward is a leading figure in the science of preventative anti-ageing medicine from both a clinical dermatology and nutrition standpoint. @drjohannaward; cosmeticskinclinic.com

Dr Jean-Louis Sebagh

A former surgeon, Dr Sebagh has mastered the art of non-surgical face and neck lifting using cosmetic procedures to achieve naturallooking results. One of his signature treatments includes The Ultralift™ LP, using HIFU technology to help slack skin and facial muscles snap back into shape. @drsebagh; drsebagh.com

Dr Joney De Souza

A pioneer in new technologies, Dr Souza delivers luminous skin quality through his layering of laser modalities to reduce pigmentation, firm facial contours and tighten sagging jaw lines. @drjoneydesouza; drjoneydesouza.com

Dr Joshua Van der Aa

Dr Joshua has honed his skills as an injector by travelling the globe to learn from the best in the field. Known for treating the eye area subtly and precisely he is a master at tricky tear trough filler and non-surgical eye lifts. @drjoshualondon; drjoshuavanderaa.co.uk

Dr Judy Todd

Dr Todd is the expert celebrities trust for a nonsurgical facelift. Renowned for transforming the neck and lower face, she’s a pro with high-tech machines from Morpheus8 to FaceTite and NeoGen Plasma, the device lauded for Shirley Ballas’s facial transformation. @dr_judy_ todd; cadoganclinic.com

Mr Kshem Yapa

A GMC-certified consultant plastic surgeon who works between the NHS and his private practice, Mr Yapa specialises in facelift surgery and rhinoplasty. His Deep Lift and Restore Face Lift incorporates the specialised deep plane lifting technique with fat grafting to replace lost volume.

@yapaplasticsurgery; yapaplasticsurgery.com

Dr Lizzie Tuckey

A member of the Royal College of Medicine and the British college of Aesthetic Medicine, Dr Lizzie’s advanced surgical training has given her an edge in both facial rejuvenation and body contouring with an emphasis on achieving a natural look. @drlizzietuckey; drmichaelprager.com

M-P

Dr Marco Nicoloso

An expert injector, Dr Marco Nicoloso isn’t one for aesthetic trends. He takes a holistic approach to the face, treating it like a piece of fine art that needs gentle restoration rather than reinvention.

He is renowned for creating a subtle look, which has gained him a loyal following of discerning clients.

@drmarconic; @ouronyx; ouronyx.com

Dr Marwa Ali

With a global client base, men and women travel far and wide for Dr Marwa’s expertise. Never one to overdo it, light injectable enhancements are her thing from artful Botox to undetectable tear trough filler. She combines these with HIFU and IPL (intense pulsed light therapy), to give her clients the luminous skin quality they desire. @dr_marwaali; harrods.com

Dr Maryam Zamani

An oculoplastic surgeon, Dr Zamani has a passion for facial aesthetics and works both in the US and UK. With a bestselling skincare line including her sell-out LED facial device, Dr Zamani knows that great skin is all about balance. @drmaryamzamani; drmaryamzamani.com

Dr Michael Prager

Offering what he calls ‘cosmedical wellbeing treatments’ at his Knightsbridge clinic, Dr Prager specialises in natural-looking injectables that boost your confidence without looking as though you’ve had anything done. @dr_michael_prager; drmichaelprager.com

Dr Mitul Shah

A renowned periodontist and implant specialist, Dr Shah is an expert in cosmetic gum improvements such as crown lengthening with

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extensive experience managing complex gum issues including recession. If you’re concerned about a gummy smile, then look no further. @drmitulshah; chelseadentalclinic.co.uk

Dr Nina Bal

Italian-born Bal was a professional skier before she studied to be a dentist, and later an advanced aesthetic doctor specialising in facial sculpting treatments. A TV personality and social media star, Bal’s clients head to her for natural-look injectables and signature sculpting technologies such as Endolift. @drninafacialsculpting; facialsculpting.co.uk

R-TDr Rhona Eskander

Co-founder of Parla and owner of the newly upgraded Chelsea Dental Clinic, Eskander is an award-winning cosmetic dentist who specialises in everything from ultranatural veneers to minimal edge bonding. If you’re looking for a youthful smile enhancement, she is a class above. @drrhonaeskander; chelseadentalclinic.co.uk

Dr Rita Rakus

The indisputable ‘London lip queen’ Dr Rakus is known for creating the perfect pout, while her Knightsbridge clinic houses some of the best cosmetic practitioners and high-tech machines from EMface to Sofwave. @ritarakus_; ritarakus.co.uk

Dr Sabrina Shah-Desai

This oculoplastic aesthetic surgeon is the go-to eye expert if you suffer from hollow, drawn-under eyes. Her signature treatment, the Eye Boost, combines tear trough filler with complementary modalities to refresh the eyes. @drsabrinashahdesai; perfecteyesltd.com

Dr Selena Langdon

A trained plastic surgeon, Dr Selena Langdon is the founder of Berkshire Aesthetics, a patient-focused clinic that specialises in long-term skin health.

A skilled injector and CoolSculpting expert, she is internationally renowned for her body treatments. berkshireaesthetics.com

Dr Sophie Shotter

From face tightening treatment Sofwave to exosomes, Dr Shotter believes all work should look ‘invisible’ to the naked eye. @drsophieshotter; illuminateskinclinic.co.uk

Dr Stefanie Williams

A highly regarded dermatologist, Dr Williams is a genius at correcting all kinds of pigmentation with her medical-grade facials and combination approach of peels, laser, IPL and freezing techniques to achieve clear, even-toned skin. @drstefaniew; eudelo.com

Dr Surbhi Virmani

Having accrued 20 years’ experience in anaesthetics and critical care overseas and within the NHS, Dr Virmani now exclusively practices aesthetics and cosmetic dermatology.

A master at correcting pigmentation, other areas

of expertise include hand and neck treatments and non-surgical facelifts utilising the holy trinity of technology, skincare and injectables. @drsvcosderm; cosderm.co.uk

Dr Tom Crawford-Clarke

Dr Tom’s expertise in smile design sets him apart. Designing each patient’s smile digitally, his eye for facial aesthetics and expertise in cosmetic dentistry makes him a firm favourite for Invisalign and natural-looking veneers and composite bonding. @drtcc.dentist; drtomcrawfordclarke.com

Dr Tracy Mountford

With her bespoke, intuitive approach to rejuvenation, Dr Mountford has decades of experience with injectables and knows how best to treat each face by eye. She combines injections with devices like Ultherapy that target the deeper layers of the skin for longer-lasting results. @the_cosmetic_ skin_clinic; cosmeticskinclinic.com

U-Z

Dr Uliana Gout

As president of the British College of Aesthetic Medicine, Dr Gout’s extensive knowledge has led her to develop her ‘intelligent aesthetic’ technique using complementary procedures that target every layer of the face from the bone to the muscle and the skin surface for the most natural-looking results. @lam__clinic; london-aestheticmedicine.com

Dr Vicky Dondos

Author of The Positive Ageing Plan, unsurprisingly Dr Dondos believes in a gentle insideout approach to natural beauty. Beauty editors prize her injectable skills as being rejuvenating and undetectable. Best for a subtle refresh. @drvickydondos; medicetics.com

Dr Victoria Manning and Dr Charlotte Woodward

Known for a holistic inside out approach including offering nutrition and fitness advice with minimally invasive treatments, Drs Manning and Woodward are leading experts in thread lifts to reduce sagging. @river_aesthetics; riveraesthetics.com

Dr Wassim Taktouk

Dr Wassim Taktouk is the insider’s go-to doctor. A master at subtle facial contouring, he is loved by women and men looking for a subtle tweakment. @drwassimtaktouk; drwassimtaktouk.com

Dr Yusra Al-Mukhtar

A dental surgeon and medical aesthetic clinician, Dr Yusra notched up several years’ experience in maxillofacial and skin cancer surgery before focusing on aesthetic medicine. She is known for her natural, non-surgical facelifts combining dermal filler, thread lifts and advanced devices. @dryusra.almukhtar; dryusra.com n

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INTERIORS

Citrus SPRITZ

Carole Annett tours a zingy Canary Wharf flat

‘ e brief from the client was that he wanted to emulate his grandmother’s apartment, decorated in the 70s, for which he had great admiration,’ says designer Rabih Hage. ‘He has a big collection of vinyl records and loves the city… that was enough for me to reimagine the apartment that I grew up in, in Paris.

An eclectic mix of new and vintage furniture give this home dollops of personality May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 177

veneer cupboards with carved recess handles, the whole encased in an ebony macassar frame, like a thick coating of liquorice. A curved breakfast bar looks like it’s been casually ‘dropped’ to sit against one edge. e aesthetic was universally loved and reproduced by the developer across a further 11 apartments. ‘I love designing kitchens,’ he says, ‘this one is relaxed and understated with a twist of nostalgia’.

Key artworks were commissioned from contemporary British artist Chloë Østmo. ‘She is super talented and I love working with her on special commissions and interiors,’ says Rabih. ‘She inspired me to develop dedicated, site-speci c artworks and installations with up-and-coming artists. ese creative relationships extend the style and possibilities of our interiors, developing into truly varied and happy emotional journeys,’ he explains. And, I suspect, often journeys involving trips down memory lane.

rabih-hage.com n

‘Creative RELATIONSHIPS extend the style and POSSIBILITY of our interiors, developing into truly varied and happy EMOTIONAL journeys’

‘ e furniture was especially fun to source – a mix of new and vintage,’ he continues.

An architect and interior designer dividing his time between London, New York and the South of France, Rabih designs from the inside out, taking inspiration from his clients to create deceptively e ortless spaces su used with warmth and subtle wit. is apartment, on the upper oors of a residential tower in Canary Wharf, was part of a larger project for the studio, to carve 12 dwellings out of the building’s top ve storeys. ‘A big but very exciting challenge,’ he says, ‘the cherry on the cake was being asked to design one for use as a client’s pied-à-terre.’

Airy and light, the apartment has views extending over Canary Wharf, the City and the rest of London to the west. Rabih has combined vibrant shades and strong shapes to give the interior a unique look, a bespoke rug uniting all the elements of the room. ‘I love bright colour,’ he says, ‘as well as adding depth and repetition through pattern. Most clients ask for colour as small accents against a more muted background but when it comes to my personal choice, and here with carteblanche from the client, I went full technicolour on big pieces of furniture as well as wallpaper and accessories’. e seating comprises two sculptural chairs by Pierre Paulin, ‘For me the quintessential 70s designer,’ says Rabih, a red Ribbon and green Mushroom chair, both made by Artifort. e sofa is another notable design, drawn on paper by legendary architect Vico Magistretti for Cassina in 1973, and part of its collection ever since. e console table was spotted in a French ea market while the curtains are from a recent collection by Élitis: ‘ e pattern is pop art, very 70s,’ says Rabih. He is particularly proud of the kitchen design – oak

GRANT FRAZER
PHOTOS:
FROM TOP: The kitchen proudly displays its curved oak breakfast bar; the iconic Ribbon chair in red
178 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 INTERIORS | Case Study
Book an appointment www.cphart.co.uk 0345 600 1950

SLEEP TIGHT

We’re desperate to check into the Corinthia London for a staycation, as the hotel has plumped for Hästens Maranga beds in 35 of its suites. O ering dreamy, cloudlike comfort, they’re liable to tempt you under its covers well past checkout. hastens.com

Design NOTES

What’s caught

Carole

Annett’ s interiors eye this season

GO GLOW

Give your lights a little bit of curvature this spring. Calder by Jamb is a milky white opaline glass globe with an oh-so-strapping belt of brass. £4,000 (exc. VAT), jamb.co.uk

DOLCE VITA

Mind e Gap’s kaleidoscopic wallpaper will brings a lick of Italian sunshine to your living room walls. is serene and lovely Tuscan garden-inspired design is called ‘Fiori in Fiore’. From €229 p/m, mindtheg.com

SPRING DREAMING

1 Fresh thinking in a dressing room 2 Is it a footstool or a place to perch? Who cares, we love it 3 The perfect spot for an al fresco snooze (yours or the pup’s)

1 Hue New Neatsmith's new shade is a hue paying homage to the Scottish wilderness. Highland x green anthracite glass door. From £2,200 p/m, neatsmith.co.uk
2
Hyper Cool Carla stool, £2,050.
samanthatodhunter.com 3
Big Squish The Garret outdoor chair, £4,495. sohohome.com
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TROPICAL SHOWER

While you wish away the months until your sunny summer holidays, bring a dash of Bali to your daily routine – step into this transportive shower clad in tropical wallpaper. Ubud waterproof wallpaper, £270 p/m (glues and sealants included). westonebathrooms.com

ROLL UP, ROLL UP

Cranborne, made from 100 percent traceable wool, is named after Cranborne Chase National Landscape, a quiet Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty overlapping Wiltshire, Hampshire and Somerset. £174.50 p/m, rogeroates.com

OH SO DITSY

Forget cut owers, bring nature inside instead – as inspired by Standen House, West Sussex. Spring owers from the National Trust IV papers at Little Greene, £127 p/roll. littlegreene.com

FLORALS FOR SPRING?

Five groundbreaking fabrics and wallpapers

LINWOOD FABRIC Ashfield linen by Linwood, £73.90 p/m. linwoodfabric.com THE FABRIC COLLECTIVE Hera Amaro linen, £197.40 p/m. thefabriccollective.com SOANE Mawar Wallpaper by Charlotte Johnstone, £480 p/roll. soane.co.uk SANDERSON X GILES DEACON Regency Aperigon, £85 p/m. sandersondesigngroup.com
May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 181 News | INTERIORS
COLEFAX & FOWLER Tiger in charcoal, £142 p/m. colefax.co.uk

All Tied

Up

Coquettish decor and lots of ribbon. By Tessa Dunthorne

Be inspired by the runways – coquette is the trend charming us all. Molly Goddard’s latest collection – all pu , u and extravagant sleeves – has had us dreaming about the aesthetic ever since. So, stock up on cut Britishgrown owers and pretty bouquets, and practise tying the perfect bow; coquette is all about a hint of romance and just a subtle bit of irting, although the Gufram Bocca sofa o ers more than a hint of a kiss. Even the cushion fabrics are getting in on the fun – dress up your boudoir wth intricate, hand-drawn orals from Harlequin. And make sure your art has a bit of pith, too –wit is, after all, the irt’s best tool. And thus, perfected: the coquette-ish interior.

ROMANCE ME
rose
from £245. pulbrookandgould.co.uk LICK, STICK, STAMP Bow card, £4.50. loveandhonor.co.uk IN KNOTS OVER YOU Cocktail glass, £30. thegoto.com APOLOGY NOTE ‘I’m Sorry For Being Awful’, £3,500. countereditions.com NOW KISS Melody Rose London plate, £46 each. wolfandbadger.com YOU SILLY GOOSE Candle snuffer, £65. maisonflaneur.com BE INSPIRED Molly Goddard AW24. mollygoddard.com FLOWER POWER Woodland Floral fabric, £69 p/m. harlequin. sandersondesigngroup.com BUBBLE BAR Bitter orange soap bar, £33. shop. ninacampbell.com PUCKER UP
Blush pink
hatbox,
Unlimited Forest 355 sofa, by
64, £4,410. artmest.com IF CLIPPY WERE CUTER Etsy, by Amelia Anne O’Dequito, £8.83. etsy.com DAVID SHRIGLEY PRINT: I’M SORRY FOR BEING AWFUL (2018), EDITION OF 125, 12 COLOUR SCREENPRINT ON SOMESET TUB SIZED 410GSM, PRINTED BY K2 SCREEN, LONDON. 76X56CM. SIGNED, NUMBERED AND DATED BY ARTIST. COURTSEY OF COUNTER EDITIONS AND THE ARTIST. 182 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 INTERIORS | Trend
Gufram Bocca
Studio

DON’T MISS THE INTERIORS EVENT OF THE SUMMER

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My INTERIOR Life

FIP radio, a PT session and fresh air keeps Martin Kemp

imagination whirring

A typical day at work… I rise around 6.30am and have porridge with spirulina and blueberries. It’s usually quiet, but occasionally I listen to Classic FM for peaceful background noise – and occasionally the news, although it’s a bit more disheartening. I shower, using Atelier Rebul, before dressing. All in 20 minutes (I’m quick) before walking to the o ce. e walk and fresh air wakes me up, allowing me to gather my thoughts and nd inspiration. e day is spent immersed in design and meetings, interspersed with a PT session at the gym, ending in something social or a night on the sofa with a ‘no beat’ playlist. For inspiration at work… e rst thing I do in the o ce is to turn on the bluetooth speaker – we listen to FIP radio from France. I pick it for its eclectic range of (often obscure) music and how it stimulates conversations in my team. Project meetings are daily and these are inspirational, too, seeing the team interpret ideas, challenge thoughts, and explore how we can improve our work and detailing. e people around me are my biggest source of inspiration.

A space that inspires me… I live moments from the Leake Street gra ti tunnel in Waterloo and nd myself in there regularly, admiring the incredible creativity among these artists – it really deserves a wider platform. e work changes regularly; the only protocol is to grant your predecessor a few days of exposure before obliteration. My second home will always be Los Angeles, a city I can never get enough of: peaceful, relaxed, easy-going, fun, creative – and so much more going on behind closed doors, once you know where to look… I’m coveting some art and design objects right now…

Recently I was very lucky to acquire a Paolo Bu a cabinet, which I’d been admiring for some years – it nally made its way into my home and will never leave. I can sit and admire it all day, to me such is the beauty of detail it manifests.

I’d one day soon like to acquire an artwork by Amanda Lear –ideally the self portrait of herself as a queen – and an autographed photo of Sir Roger Moore who was an old school gentleman. Aside from that, perhaps a few items from my own soonto-come furniture and homewares line… Watch this space.

martinkempdesign.com n
Paolo Buffa cabinet. £4,839, 1stdibs.com Amanda Lear Self Portrait as a Queen (courtesy of the artist) Autographed photo of Sir Roger Moore
©
©
© BONDSTARS.COM 184 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 INTERIORS | Interview
PHOTOS: EBAY, AMANDA LEAR;

HOTELS & TRAVEL

Mothers Unarmed

In our Africa Special, Lucy Cleland goes bush in Kruger with the Black Mambas, the world’s first all-female wildlife ranger unit

PHOTOS: DIANA JARVIS FOR INTREPID TRAVEL May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 187

t’s a truth universally acknowledged that it’s not a great idea to spend a night with a Black Mamba. Luckily, my sleep was not blighted by the terror of rubbing up against Africa’s largest poisonous snake. Rather, I could rest easy – apart from the spectacular midnight lightning display – knowing that should any serpent writhe up to me in my tent, one of the highly trained women from the world’s rst o cially recognised all-female wildlife ranger unit, aka the Black Mambas, would be there in a ash.

Not that protecting tourists is their day job, of course. at’s far more interesting and important. ey’re out on bush patrol, nding snares, monitoring wildlife and keeping their eyes peeled for poachers. Also, crucially, they’re educating the youngest members of their community (the ‘bush babies’) that keeping animals alive is both better for them and the wildlife – each group sustaining the other: employment and nancial independence for one; protection and conservation for the other. ey’re also pretty kickass in their army fatigues (the three-month army-style training is ‘brutal’) –yet without a weapon in sight. Critical to this unit is that they are, controversially, armed with nothing more than pepper spray and a pair of handcu s.  anks to a unique partnership with the travel industry’s biggest B Corp, Intrepid Travel, I – and you, if you sign up for one of their trips that includes this one-night-only experience with the Mambas – get to meet and hang out with a handful of them at an overnight stay at their bush training camp.

Leitah Mkhabela, Felicia Mogakane, Cute Mhlongo, Debra Mukanzi and Collet Ngobeni greet us with a range of shy to wide smiles and shu ing black boots at Mambas HQ in the Olifants West Nature Reserve in Greater Kruger Park – where all the Big Five – lion, elephant, rhino, bu alo and leopard – and the odd viper – can be found.  e rst thing you catch sight of outside their modest quarters is a set of rhino skulls on the ground. ese, together with the stacked-up nests of wire snares that the Mambas have found on their daily patrols (in the past six years they have removed more than 1,471), are a stark reminder that poaching – particularly of the highly endangered rhino – is a very real and present danger. Why no weapons is the rst question that springs to mind.

According to the unit’s founder, Craig Spencer, a deeply tanned, sinewy-bodied man in his fties who lives and breathes conservation and is no stranger to the criticism he garners for this novel approach to anti-poaching, the answer to that is that he was keen to ‘break that culture of being militarised in South Africa’.

‘I don’t believe for one moment that with the right kind of training, you still need a weapon to defend yourself against animals,’ he tells us as we chow down vegetable stew and maize meal together round the camp re later. ‘We also realised that poachers are scared of being detected. You can see it in the clothing that they’re wearing, the traditional medicine they carry, the sponges they put under their shoes so they don’t leave tracks… ey want to know how they can get in and out of this place without being caught – it’s a totally di erent set of neural pathways to choose to take another person’s life.’

And what about lions? e Mambas tell us, giggling, that they have had their fair share of animal encounters. Cute recounts the story of coming across a young lion cub who took a particular liking to her, wanting to play until the mother turned up and didn’t seem too keen. Despite this, nobody has yet – to this day –been seriously injured and there’s an armed response unit just a call away.

Craig likens the Mambas – many of whom are mothers to children that they must leave in the care of family members for 21 days at a time – to our British bobbies on the beat. eir omnipresence alone is a deterrent (they patrol both day and night in shifts). And given that traditional gun-carrying male rangers were not dealing with the devastating loss of rhinos in Kruger National Park (according to Helping Rhinos, which is supported by Intrepid Travel’s non-pro t e Intrepid Foundation, in the last ten years close to 10,000 rhinos have been lost to poaching), it was time to rethink the solution: the Mambas, Craig believes, are a part of that answer.

‘I’ve been doing this [conservation] for 30 years now,’ says Craig. ‘And in that time we’d just been getting better guns, better night vision equipment, better helicopters... It was all militarised. And I was just tired of the guns because it literally doesn’t make any di erence. You’re not going to shoot the problem away.’

Leitah concurs: ‘We cherish life,’ she says as we gather around the camp re. ‘We don’t want to live in a village where there are widows and orphans [many poachers live among the local communities from where the Mambas are employed and are just trying to eke out a living]. So that’s why we’re unarmed.’

Since the Mambas rst started patrolling ten years ago, there has been a 63 percent reduction in poaching incidents in their area, so it appears that this female-centric approach is proving that old ways can change.

‘I want to tell my grandchildren one day how I helped to protect the animals,’ continues Leitah, ‘not sad stories about how I killed ve men. I love my earth.’

Leitah’s words linger with me as I pick my way gingerly to my tent alert to snakes in the darkness, guided only by a blister pack of stars in the African sky, and thinking how obvious it is that group of unarmed mothers are helping dial down the violence that has stalked this country for centuries.

BOOK IT: Intrepid Travel o ers trips to South Africa, with the Black Mambas experience included in particular itineraries, starting from £905pp, including accommodation, some meals and activities (intrepidtravel.com). Flights to Johannesburg from Heathrow with British Airways start from around £700 (britishairways.com)

Lucy’s return ights had a carbon footprint of 2,863kg CO2e. ecollectivecarbon.com n

I
188 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 HOTELS & TRAVEL | Africa Special
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: Zebra in Kruger National Park; on patrol with the Mambas; teatime round the camp fire; elephant spotting; Lucy having a joke with Debra Mukanzi and Felicia Mogakane
teatime having May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 189

LEAVE NO TRACE

Stephanie Drax enjoys a safari in Botswana with the lightest of touches

When seen from space, the Okavango Delta bursts across 22,000 sq/km of Africa like a shimmering fountain are, drenching the Kalahari Desert with ten billion cubic metres of fresh water. During the wet season, it trickles a thousand kilometres from the Cuito and Cubango rivers in Angola, gathering charge uninterrupted through Namibia before splaying itself across the swampland of Botswana after austral summer. It’s little wonder that the delta invites the largest – and arguably luckiest – wildlife population on the continent.

I skim above it in a tiny plane, taking in the millennia-forged matrix of grassy oodplains, watery tendrils, and golf-coursegreen islands pitted like lichen on the land. By the time we touch down, I’ve already spotted four of the Big Five. It’s a prelude to what’s on o er at Duba Plains Camp and what its operating company, Great Plains Conservation, works so ercely to protect.

My rst question, though, as my guide, Rapz Samati, drives me to our camou aged micro-camp on the island, is: ‘What’s that smell?’ e scent of wild sage is heavenly. So too, is the enormous suite prepared for my family, one of only six tents at the camp. My two young boys gawp at the vast rooms, copper bath, outdoor shower and mini swimming pool, all elevated on stilts, with a wraparound deck for Attenborough addicts such as us to admire grazing elephants on the largest ‘ atscreen TV’ imaginable.

So far, so safari, you might think. Here’s the di erence: Great Plains pioneered conservation tourism in Africa, setting new standards in sustainability, hospitality and humanity. It all

190 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024
Duba Plains Camp offers a real back-to-nature experience

began here in Botswana in 2006. Founded by Beverly and Dereck Joubert, Emmy Award-winning wildlife lmmakers, Great Plains was conceived to rescue and replenish the creatures and habitats that the couple saw diminishing before their eyes. When the Jouberts were born almost 70 years ago, there were 400,000 lions in the wild; today there are 20,000. Using funds generated from their 15 camps across Botswana, Zimbabwe and Kenya – and they have never themselves taken a dividend – the Jouberts a ect real change, on the ground and in the mind.

On their concessions, all leased from the locals, hunting is banned and human impact is limited. eir camps can all be deconstructed to leave no trace and plastic is virtually non-existent. Duba Plains runs on 100 percent solar power, grey water feeds the environment, andleftover food is converted to biogas that can be cooked with or used as slurry for farming projects Eighty percent of the sta come from the local community and are carefully trained. Tourist dollars spent here lter to the right places, including helping to move rhinos from poaching hotspots to safe havens, training potential poachers to be rangers, building a force of female rangers and rewilding the Sapi reserve in Zimbabwe with species on the brink of extinction.

e bush in the delta thrums with the chirping of reed frogs. Rapz drives us over a log bridge that connects the island camp to the grassy, open plains. Monkeys sound an alarm call in a sausage tree, alerting us to a magni cent lion napping in the shade. For him and his pride, the rhino and red lechwe aquatic antelope, this is country-club living, but they rest on a knife edge: ‘Without tourism, our eyes would be diverted from poaching, the

The Okavango Delta is a sprawling, nature-rich wetland in Botswana
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Expert guides lead guests on bushwalks and safari drives

community might compete with the animals for meat and wild berries, and they might resort to aiding poaching or farm and fence the land,’ warns Rapz, ‘When the oods arrive, they could block the water and disrupt the natural way.’

Great Plains tactically educates local children in sustainability, and they share the knowledge with their parents. We all have our part to play in the delicate balance of the delta, it seems, and as the sky at dusk turns the colour of papaya esh, we watch two wild dogs run down and rip apart a red lechwe. It’s a visceral and poignant moment that serves to remind us that sometimes we must remain silent witnesses.

Dawn brings the second act of our adventure: a water safari at Sitatunga Private Island. We board a small boat and meander our way to the newest Great Plains camp, using channels that can change with the shift of tectonic plates. It’s a deeply soothing journey and the diversity of birds now captures our attention: Goliath heron, malachite king shers and the globally threatened wattled crane take turns outstripping our boat. Using a long lens camera (lent to all Great Plains guests), I capture a sh eagle as it whips a cat sh from the water and feasts on it in the papyrus reeds.

On the far side of a hippo-laden lagoon, the small, raised camp blends into ebony trees. Sta greet us on the pontoon like longlost family – the service at Great Plains is heartfelt – and we settle into our remote Robinson Crusoe chapter. Old treasures breathe life into an eco-salvage aesthetic: railway sleepers from a mine in South Africa line the oor, and shaggy thatch covers canvas roofs and walls. e blonde wooden structures – the heart of each of the three suites - are inspired by local shing baskets that showcase both the culture and craftsmanship of the area. Just like Duba, Sitatunga treads lightly and could be removed with no impact on the environment.

Back on the boat for our aqua game drive, Pat Malatsi, our ranger from the local Beyei tribe, is in synch with our surroundings. When he calls to the birds – a swamp boubou or a little rush warbler – they

call back. We play spot the croc in teeming waters: they grow up to six metres here and might even try their luck with a baby elephant. Pat casually cups his hand in the water and drinks from the delta.

When we venture out at dusk in mekoro (traditional canoes), we come across a pod of 35 bathing hippos, their alpha male baring his eshy, pink mouth at us in warning. Pat stops us still. Our hearts are in our mouths, but Pat allows us to admire them from a safe distance. As we peacefully retreat, I shoot them with my camera, capturing them through my lens. We all breathe calmly together in this verdant piece of Africa, on a speck of sparkling water that can be seen from space.

BOOK IT: Original Travel o ers a ve-night stay in Botswana, based on two adults sharing a pool suite in Duba Plains for two nights, and three nights at a pool suite in Sitatunga Private Island (full-board) with return economy-class ights from London Heathrow, connecting ights, private transfers, and guided tours, from £12,500pp.originaltravel.co.uk

Stephanie’s return ights had a carbon footprint of 2,772kg CO2e. ecollectivecarbon.com n

Sitatunga Private Island is situated in a lagoon filled with hippos
192 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 HOTELS & TR AVEL | Africa special
Spy the Big Five (and many other species) in their own habitats

Choosing the perfect villa for your important holiday is not easy, which is why we are here to help at every step, from our Villa Specialists in the UK to our Destination Experts on hand in location. And with 50 years of experience, we know what makes the perfect villa holiday.

cvvillas.com / 020 3991 2633

Greece / Italy / Spain / Portugal / Croatia / France / Morocco / Caribbean / Turkey / Sri Lanka

DETOX MIND, BODY AND SOUL

Amid a 300-hectare sanctuary of forest, beach and sand dunes on the southern tip of Mozambique’s Benguerra Island, Kisawa Sanctuary is possibly one of the most blissful spots to cleanse your mind, body and soul. So it makes sense that the property has just launched its new Gentle Island Detox Programme at its state-of-the-art Natural Wellness Center. Meticulously crafted and tailored to individual needs, the o ering combines a mix of immersive experiences such as light tness, yoga and meditation, sound healing, infrared sauna sessions, massages and lymphatic treatments. e perfect getaway to discover your inner peace and set you up for continued good habits back at home. From €4,300, kisawasanctuary.com

The ESCAPIST

Lauren Ho has all the latest African travel news

THE FOUR C s

Further boosting its Global Ecosphere Retreat status – one of the highest sustainability standards in the world – e Safari Collection’s Sasaab tented camp in northern Kenya has just launched a new cultural and learning hub. Called the 4C Centre – namely, Conservation, Community, Commerce and Culture – the beautifully curated exhibition space is located next to the main lodge with views across the Ewaso Nyiro River and Laikipia Plateau. Showcasing local geology, Samburu culture and community partnerships, this new addition enhances the guest experience, which also includes activities like visiting the top of the sacred Samburu Mountain for a pre-arrival breakfast with unimaginable views. From £862, thesafaricollection.com

PHOTOS: © BRIAN SIAMBI; © ELSA YOUNG
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PIONEERS OF PURPOSE

Sustainable luxury travel operator, Wilderness, has raised the bar once again with the introduction of a newly enhanced impact strategy. With a focus on hospitality and conservation, the group helps protect 2.3 million hectares of land over eight African countries. e plan is to double this by 2030 and continue doing so in an ongoing cycle of conservation through empowering local communities, educating children, and protecting people and wildlife from threats to their co-existence. Together with NGOs, communities, businesses, and their guests, the group has built a collaborative ecosystem that maximises impact. Aspiring to be the benchmark for conservation tourism, the result so far has seen the Wilderness team of 3,000 people create captivating journeys to more than 60 camps in iconic wild destinations from Rwanda to Zambia for over 40,000 guests annually, changing people’s viewpoints on how they travel and interact with the land they leave behind. wildernesstravel.com

THREE OF THE BEST SUSTAINABLE LODGES

1

LENGISHU

Located on the Borana Conservancy in Northern Kenya, Lengishu has been the go-to luxury retreat for wildlife lovers since it opened its doors in 2019, implementing practices from water sourcing through boreholes with solar power to protecting the endangered black rhino population through investing conservation fees from guests. This steadfast commitment has earned it Global Ecosphere Retreat status, considered the gold standard in sustainability audits for the hospitality industry. It is the only private house – and one of only 12 properties worldwide – to receive this accreditation. From £8,750 per night, lengishu.com

2

MELOTE HOUSE

Lepogo Lodges has unveiled its second property, Melote House, located in South Africa’s Lapalala Wilderness Reserve. A fully non-for-profit venture, Lepogo bestows 100 percent of any financial gains back into the reserve. It also carbon offsets every guest’s flight, with each guest given a choice of one of three conservation projects to support. Elsewhere, initiatives include working with the reserve on projects from the release of wild cheetahs, and the sponsorship of the pangolin rehabilitation centre, which is coming soon. From £12,000 per night, all inclusive, lepogolodges.com

3

ANGAMA AMBOSELI

Tucked in Kenya’s 5,700-acre Kimana Sanctuary, the ten-suite Angama Amboseli is the country’s first community-owned conservancy. The lodge leases the land from the local Maasai community, paying substantial fees – due to reach a minimum of USD $11 million over the next 25 years – back to the 844 family members who own the land. This means the local community also benefits from employment opportunities, tourism revenue, and investments in healthcare and education. All this, plus game drives, walking safaris, hot air ballooning and in-suite massages. From $1,650, angama.com

May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 195 News | HOTELS &TRAVEL

ANCHORS AWAY

e Kenyan Lamu archipelago – a UNESCO Heritage Site – is a cluster of desert islands that have long drawn visitors for its centuries-old Swahili settlements and beguiling sand dune beaches. anks to the launch of NaiSabah Dhow, visitors can island hop with ease. Using the monsoon winds to follow ancient routes, the traditional 75ft wooden sailing yacht comprises three cabins and can sleep up to eight people, making it the perfect base for groups of family and friends to kayak, sh, snorkel and explore the islands’ historic ruins. A conservation fee supports local communities and marine ecosystems preservation through the North Kenya Conservation Trust. From £5,790pp for ve nights sailing, one in Nairobi, theultimatetravelcompany.co.uk

SCHOOL’S OUT

It is one of the most famous game reserves in Africa, with over a million visitors annually. So it’s extraordinary to discover that in the towns surrounding the Kruger National Park, many residents have gone their entire lives without seeing some of the country’s most famous wildlife. Wild Shots Outreach is changing all that. Founded by Mike Kendrick eight years ago, the organisation connects with disadvantaged youths and local schools that border the park, and introduces them to wildlife and conservation through photography. e programme teaches new skills and helps inspire and raise aspirations, resulting in over more than 70 programmes with over 600 student graduates – many of which have gone on to establish successful careers in photography, as nature guides within the park, and even within Wild Shots Outreach itself. Up next, the organisation is looking to expand beyond South Africa, partnering with schools in Kenya, Namibia and Botswana. wildshotsoutreach.org

FIVE HOT NEW OPENINGS

SINGITA MILELE, Tanzania

In the heart of the Serengeti, this five-suite villa offers wellness treatments, fully stocked ‘bar-delis’ and a movie room. From £21,657, singita.com

CAPE GRACE, Cape Town

The iconic property’s much-loved charm has been enhanced with a fresh look, plus four new restaurants to sample. From £756, capegrace.com

LUX* MARIJANI, Zanzibar

On Pwani Mchangani beach, this has Omanistyle architecture, white-washed walls and locally crafted terrazzo tiles. From £280, luxresorts.com

WILDERNESS

An elegant new base to continue Wilderness’s 20-year mission to defend and preserve the black rhino. From $530, wildernessdestinations.com

GREAT PLAINS MARA TOTO TREE CAMP, Kenya

These elevated tree-house tents sleep eight, and are a private haven for families or friends. From $1,920, greatplainsconservation.com n

DESERT RHINO CAMP, Namibia
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Small group travel in more than 100 countries. 2309201615

The TRIP

Is the age of overtourism finally over? asks

The last time I went to Rome, I got smacked in the face at the Vatican. I hadn’t done anything wrong. is was not a matter of moral outrage or religious fervour. But I had committed a tourism crime: I’d visited Rome in early summer. Peak season, when the pavements are clogged, the sites thronged, the restaurants packed to the carbonarascented rafters. It was the worst possible time to go, and entirely my fault that I got whacked around the head with a sel e stick.

Rome, like so many holiday hotspots, is su ering from too much love. Too many visitors, too many cheap ights, too many short-let holiday rentals. Overtourism, in other words, when a destination is so overwhelmed by visitors that it makes both the lives of residents and the experience for travellers pretty miserable. Paris will be undergoing just that this summer, with around 16 million visitors streaming in for the Olympic and Paralympic Games. Compare that to the 9.9 million they had in total from June to August last year. e games might be fun, but getting around the city? Or into a restaurant? Or, indeed, living there day to day? Pretty miserable.

Tourism, in its starkest, most unsustainable form, is only about growth. A ‘successful’ year means an increase in visitors – never mind if those visitors are disgorged in their thousands from a cruise ship, there for a few hours, spending no money locally or connecting in any meaningful way with a destination. Too often, the results are overloaded infrastructure, overused transport systems, rising house prices and, ultimately, a breakdown in local communities. Add to that the degradation of the environment – from pollution to the damage of historical sites – and you’ve got a perfect storm: disa ected, pissed-o communities, and tourists destroying the very places they’ve come to enjoy.

But it’s not all bleak. ‘I feel like perhaps we’ve passed peak overtourism,’ omas Power, the founder of B Corp-certi ed Pura Aventura, tells me. ‘Overtourism is being actively discussed, policies

being implemented and action being taken.’

Barcelona, for example, where an in ux of 20 million visitors in 2019 started pushing out the city’s 1.6 million residents, has banned new luxury hotels, introduced licences for AirBnB landlords, increased tourist taxes, and limited the number of docking cruise ships.

Venice, where UNESCO warned that overtourism is causing ‘irreversible damage’, has banned large cruise ships and now charges day trippers €5 on select days. Rome has brought in hefty nes for bad tourist behaviour, and the Vatican has banned sel e sticks – which is a relief.

Really, though, limiting overtourism is down to us. Visiting o -season is the obvious one. I’ve had glorious breaks in the last year doing just that: Ibiza in October, and the South of France in May. In both, the weather was balmy, the restaurants quiet and the locals happy to see me.

Avoiding obvious destinations is the other, something that Original Travel is pushing. ‘It’s about visiting the undiscovered corners of the classics,’ Tom Barber, the founder, says. ‘Fly to Naples and instead of the Amal Coast, head south to Cilento and Calabria. Same culture, food and weather, but none of the camera-toting tourists.’ It sounds blissful: fewer crowds, better experiences, happier hosts – and a much lower chance of getting smacked in the face.

PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES
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GET SET, AND GO

Are you all set for a summer of sport?

Think tennis at Wimbledon, horse racing at Ascot, rowing at Henley and sailing at Cowes Week. And don’t forget the Tour of Britain cycling event, which first began in 1945. For a tiny nation, we really pack a punch when it comes to our sporting heritage.

Don’t just be a spectator though –this summer, PoB Hotels is encouraging everyone to embrace their inner sportsman, and connect with one or more of Britain’s five most-loved sports through PoB Hotels’ extensive offering. Many of its hotels not only enjoy superb facilities but are also set in Britain’s most idyllic locations – ride a bike along a scenic cycle track, sail round our breathtaking coastline, or hit the open moors on horseback.

And because PoB Hotels all have excellent food and rooms, once you’ve worked up an appetite, you can tuck into a delicious dinner before settling down in stylish surroundings.

Victoria Pendleton, former Olympic cycling champion, is leading the way, having just completed her very own PoB break incorporating fitness, kayaking, rowing, horse riding, and of course cycling. Not that you need to be an Olympic super star to take part: there are plenty of opportunities for all levels, whether you want to try a new sport or to pursue one you already love.

WET AND WILD

Britain’s coast was made for a sailing break, with PoB Hotels scattered along its length as well as by lakes and reservoirs. Some have their own boats, or are a short walk from sailing clubs. For the ultimate rowing experience, you can’t beat following in the wake of regattas and races on the Thames.

SADDLE UP

Do you prefer two wheels or four legs?

It’s a rare PoB Hotel that isn’t near somewhere great for cycling, with either bikes to borrow or nearby cycle-hire outfits so you can tackle everything from flat cycle ways to more hilly terrain. Many are close to stables, too, or might even have their own horses on site.

PERFECT YOUR FOREHAND

There are tennis courts in PoB Hotels everywhere from Cornwall to Scotland, where you can hit some balls around during a friendly game or perhaps take advantage of some expert tuition. You’ll find hard courts, grass courts of championship standard, and in some cases, both.

To book your next active escape, visit pobhotels.com/get-set-and-go

Brush up on
favourite
or try a new one with PoB Hotels
your
British sport
May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 199 PROMOTION
Get active this summer with PoB Hotels’ extensive sporting opportunities

Mind Your Manor

Estelle Manor in Oxfordshire is like Soho House, but for grown-ups. Fiona Duncan luxuriates at one of the UK’s most lavish hotels

Op ened last summer, Britain’s most lavish hotel to date is, quite simply, astonishing. As well as its fabulous looks and its impressive scale, depth, vision and attention to detail, it is also that rare thing among grand British country house hotels: it’s properly hip and cool and yet properly warm, enveloping and cultured - and that’s saying something for a vast, brooding neo-Jacobean pile in not-quite-the-Cotswolds. Overlooking a languorous pool, heated year-round, on the huge terrace, with green elds beyond, Estelle Manor’s gorgeous, eclectic, layered and patterned sitting rooms, bars and restaurants sweep through the house while outside its grounds are lled with amusements and diversions, not least the justopened Roman-inspired spa, Eynsham Baths, as large – 3,000 sq/m – as the once forlorn, now reborn manor house that it compliments.

e former Eynsham Hall, now Estelle Manor, is Soho Farmhouse for grown-ups. Better still, unlike members-only Soho Farmhouse, it welcomes hotel guests as well as members (who pay £3,600 per year, plus a £500 joining fee). Stay

there, if you can, for several days: there is much to do, with more activities to come. Already, it has echoes of Gleneagles in Perthshire, now correctly dubbed ‘the glorious playground’. Both properties are owned by hospitality entrepreneur Sharan Pasricha of Ennismore (whose portfolio also includes the Hoxton hotels and private members’ club Maison Estelle in London), but unlike Gleneagles, it’s been created from scratch under the guidance of Sharan’s wife Eiesha, a successful businesswoman in her own right and daughter of Indian billionaire Sunil Mittal.   e care, authenticity and integrity that has been lavished on Estelle Manor by its owners reminds me of why e Pig hotels also stood out – and still do stand out – from the crowd in their own mid-market sector: because they are the passion project of their founders, Robin and Judy Hutson, who, like the Pasrichas, see to every detail. At Estelle Manor, interior designers, under the guidance of Eiesha, have successfully complemented the Edwardian, neo-Jacobean atmosphere of the original house (built in 1908) with a marvellous mix of colours, textures,

200 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024

patterns and period furniture while twisting the 21st century into the mix with superbly chosen modern art. It’s hard to choose a favourite spot, but the original library shelves lled with books and objects of interest, and the Billiards Room, now a traditional Chinese restaurant dominated by a huge original replace, perhaps stand out. Other restaurants are the lively Brasserie and the lush Glasshouse, the latter overlooking the kitchen garden and serving its produce. Members, should they wish to be separate, have their own lounge, café and study, plus co-working space and kids’ club.

What else? A lot. ere’s the huge stateof-the-art gym (with 37 classes per week for members), a pair of padel courts to cater for the fastest growing racquet sport in the world, archery, axe throwing, foraging, falconry, bikeriding and mini Landies for the kids with more activities in the o ng, all happening within sight of the hotel. ere are further bedrooms,

cottages and even houses, all more contemporary in style than the lovely coi ed and canopied rooms in the main house, dotted around the estate. And there’s the spa.

Taking its inspiration from Roman villa ruins found close to the 60-acre Estelle Manor estate, the Eynsham Baths are a series of Roman-style bathing pools among sculpted stone columns with a vast central tepidarium bathing hall overlooked by a circular rst oor balcony, plus ve thermal pools, steam room, hay sauna, lounge, ten treatment rooms, a huge hammam and an outdoor ‘breathwork’ pool.

A not-inconsiderable fee of £95 allows hotel guests a three-hour spell in this serene temple of water and light, including a table in the lounge for healthy drinks and snacks. Add a massage from one of the expert practitioners specially brought in from ailand, India and other countries, and a sense of balance and serenity, when you step outside and return to the hotel, is guaranteed.

Time, for me, drifted idly by in the Eynsham Baths (no mobiles, no watches or clocks). In the Nosing Room, where you choose from a variety of specially concocted massage oils for your treatment, I was introduced to my therapist, Manos. How wonderful: the single best massage I have ever had was courtesy of Manos, from Greece, at Heck eld Place a year ago. Now here he was.

Serendipity. Estelle Manor is that kind of place. My only proviso is that while sta are generally excellent (many, like Manos, have come from the best establishments Britain has to o er) they are as a whole, as be ts the di cult circumstances of British hospitality these days, not quite as exceptional as the hotel itself, which has, like everywhere, a constant turnover.

BOOK IT: Doubles from £550 per night, including breakfast. +44 (0)1993 685800; estellemanor.com n

May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 201 Review |HOTELS & TRAVEL
From the restaurants to the spa, every inch of Estelle Manor has been carefully considered and luxuriously executed

Postcards From...

Raja Ampat, Indonesia. Our Editor-At-Wild sets sail to possibly the last great paradise

on Earth

Raja Ampat is home to more than 1,600 species of sh, 75 percent of the world’s known coral species, six of the seven known species of vulnerable to critically endangered sea turtles, and 17 known species of marine mammals. It’s a conservation triumph where reef manta rays have doubled in population. In short, the Indonesian archipelago is one of the most marine biodiverse locations on earth. However, the dance between the bene ts of eco-tourism and conservation must be carefully choreographed in order to preserve this last piece of paradise for generations to come – for this marine sanctuary is critical to our future and oceanic regeneration...

SETTING SAIL

Our home from home is a comfortable dive speci c ga rig boat, with the most excellent sunset spots, crew and food, with professional camera charging stations. We arrive at night and can’t resist a dive. Within minutes I see my rst Walking sharks, three of them. After six days of up to three dives a day, I am thrillingly t, strong, sated, knackered, and unbelievably chilled. Absorbing minerals in sea water this way leaves my mental mode resembling chilled surfer ow state.

202 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024
PHOTOGRAPHY AND WORDS BY FEE DRUMMOND

SHARKS AHOY

Swimming with reef sharks in the shallows is an unexpected surprise. Fast, they are fast! I melt down to horizontal and start swimming their circular route in crystalline waters. I slot in behind a pair of sharks who after a while, appear to accept me as no trouble, hot on their tails with my camera. One with a bite mark on its cheek helps me identify it.

I’M FREE

This is not scuba diving, this is mastering the art of breath – mind and body aligned to reach depth. Nothing is more peaceful, strengthening and mentally empowering. The ‘Mammalian Diving Reflex’ is how a baby’s windpipe automatically closes to prevent water from entering the lungs, and why whales and dolphins can survive such depths.

KALEIDOSCOPIC CORALS

WILD STYLE EDIT

Pack sustainably & stylishly

INTO THE MANGROVES

Where the land meets the sea is a critically important place and mangroves harbour some of the most important nursery systems for all marine life. When I put my face under water I am blown away by an exquisite crystalline vision. I duck dive straight into a sea snake, quite literally, and my GoPro and I delightedly follow his stark black and white stripes. He’s incredibly poisonous but I am thrilled to be a foot away until he curls away beneath a coral head. Friendly bat sh live on the end of large tree root systems, and shoals of transparent vertical stick sh mimicking twigs oat amid this underwater woodland.

With three-quarters of the world’s coral varieties, ten times that of the Caribbean, and gin-clear waters, it means that you can see a kaleidoscope of corals resembling Murano vases, bunches of baby corn, marbled fans, cobwebs, and oversized cabbage patches without having to swim a stroke. I glide over golden elds of what look like coral fungi made of ne fragile bone china. I strain every muscle in my body as I hold my breath, ensuring my long free diving ns don’t touch the acres of intricacy just inches away from my body.

1 With Nothing Underneath Striped linen shirt, £100. withnothingunderneath.com

2 Abysse Ama recycled plastic swimsuit, £244. abysseofficial.com

3 Sett SPF50 mineral, reef safe sunscreen, £15.99. settsurf.com

4 Patrick Mavros Elephant hair silver cuff, £430. uk.patrickmavros.com

5 Stow London Safari style weekend bag in tan leather, £695. stowlondon.co.uk

Fee’s trip is bookable via Wix Squared bespoke travel; wixsquared.com n

Swimsuit by Mari Swim $195, mariswim.com
PHOTOS: FEE DRUMMOND X FUJIFILM May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 203 Wild Travel | HOTELS &TRAVEL

FOOD &DRINK

Double Trouble

The Connaught Bar’s Float Like A Butterfly, Sting Like A Bee is a zingy cocktail duo

May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 205

FLOAT LIKE A BUTTERFLY, STING LIKE A BEE

1

To make butter y milk punch: mix 250g caster sugar, 30g fennel seeds, the zest of three lemons, 200g celery and 750g chopped pineapple (with rind) in a large jug. Add 100ml of lemon juice, 300ml lemon verbena tea, 350ml bourbon, 200ml tequila and 75ml absinthe and leave to infuse for 24 hours. Strain through a muslin cloth into another jug. Heat 300ml milk until warm, not boiling, and slowly pour the milk and 60ml of lemon juice into the jug and leave for 30 mins. Fine strain the mixture through two pieces of muslin cloth into a clean jug. Store in the fridge for up to a week.

2

To make bee-pollen armagnac: stir 700ml armagnac and 50g bee pollen together in a jug before straining through a paper co ee lter into a clean bottle. Store at room temp for up to a month

3

To make sugar syrup: add 500ml mineral water and 1kg of sugar to a blender and blend until the sugar is dissolved. Store in the fridge for up to a month.

4

Foodie Tales

INGREDIENTS

Stock Your Cabinet:

– Armagnac

– Champagne – Absinthe

– Bourbon

– Tequila

You'll Also Need:

– 1 pint whole milk

– 250g caster sugar

– 1 pineapple

– 30g Fennel seeds

– 3 lemons

– 200g celery

– 3 lemons

– Mineral water

Unusual ingredients – and where to buy:

– Bee pollen – find at Neal's Yard

Remedies or Ocado

Agostino Perrone, Director of Mixology at The Connaught, tops us up

What’s your drinks philosophy? It’s more of a hospitality philosophy that has guided me and e Connaught Bar team through almost 16 years of work: everything we do, from cocktail creation to service, is driven by an aim of providing the most memorable experience for our guests. is means that a cocktail is not just a liquid mix in a glass, but a vehicle of discovery, connections and emotions.

What was the rst cocktail you learnt to mix? Having started bartending in my hometown in Lake Como, Italy, it’s no surprise my rst cocktail was a negroni.

What’s your favourite ingredient for a drink? At the moment, I am keen on a chilli and sundried tomato distillate from a small producer in Italy called Clab Culture. It brings a burst of Mediterranean avours and aromas to the drinks, plus a gentle spicy kick. e drink you’d pull out as a dinner party aperitif? It has to be the martini cocktail, the most glamorous and versatile of all drinks.

– Lemon Verbena

Tea – find at True Tea Company, or any Wholefoods shop

Preparing the cocktails: for the Float Like A Butter y, combine 45ml milk punch, 5ml sugar syrup, 45ml champagne and two dashes of absinthe to a mixing glass lled with ice and stir until chilled. Strain into a ute. For the Sting Like A Bee, combine 30ml of the bee-pollen Armagnac, 20ml sugar syrup, 15ml lemon juice and 30ml champagne into a cocktail shaker lled with ice and shake until chilled. Serve together.

What ’s the best no/low drink you’ve had? I love avoured waters, something simple and re ective of the indigenous produce and local familiar tradition of a geography. For example, in Mexico I am always after agua de fresa or agua de lima (strawberry and lime water).

Where do you go to get away from it all? I have my secret place on Lake Como. A hidden gem on a hill that outlooks the entire lake. To get there, you need to walk through a tiny village and a wood, and all of a sudden you have the most breathtaking view of Lake Como, which you can enjoy from a bench placed on top of the hill. It’s my place to space out.

e Connaught Bar: Cocktail Recipes and Iconic Creations (Phaidon, £29.95) n

FOOD & DRINK | Recipe
PICTURED ON PREVIOUS PAGE
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GASTRO GOSSIP

Tessa Dunthorne raises a glass to new summer tipples and cool drinking destinations

IN GOOD SPIRITS

BAR CHAT

Where to drink away these longer evenings

THE WILD ONE...

Upstairs@Ronnie’s promises a night of debauchery with a great soundtrack. If you can stomach a sti drink on a Wednesday, the Jazz Jam goes on until 3am and here you’ll nd the next big names in blues. (We spotted Laurence Cottle – whose own shows sold out the main house – playing here for only £10 entry.) e drinks will send you dancing –negronis mix strong and with gin, and there’s an extensive selection of Moët & Chandon if zz is your preferred tipple. ronniescotts.co.uk

THE SERIOUS ONE…

Dram bar opened last November but it still feels a bit like only serious mixologists are in the know. Welcome to the cool crowd; this bar is among the best in London. It has everything – a whisky shop, private pool room, terraced garden, and even a cocktail vending machine. Drinks are a bit more niche but excitingly so – bartenders whip up mixes you’ll not nd elsewhere, like the Plum & Whey and Koji & Birch. On top of that, these only cost £12-13 – so you’ll leave... spirited. drambar.co.uk

THE SECRET ONE…

Prefer your martinis shaken not stirred? You’ll t right in at 007’s Spy Bar at Ra es London, the OWO. Descend underground until you reach an unmarked door. ere, go back in time to a room inspired by history – the rooms the Spy Bar now occupies once held intelligence ops. Expect it to be much more leisurely during your visit though, all cosied up in plush vintage sofas and with cocktail in hand. Mind you, we’re not at liberty to share the actual menu – it’s classi ed. ra es.com

1 The Aberturret Gin London Dry gin, £45 for 70cl. theaberturretgin.com

2 Sapling Spirits Climate positive gin, £24 for 70cl. saplingspirits.com

3 Silent Pool Gin magnum, £99 for 150cl. silentpooldistillers.com

4 The Botanist Cask aged gin, £70 for 70cl. thebotanist.com

THREE NEW BUBBLIES

AU NATUREL: Telmont has released its Réserve de la Terre, which is grown without herbicides, pesticides, fungicides, or synthetic fertilisers (uk.champagne-telmont.com). OLD SCHOOL COOL from Champagne Bollinger – the new La Grande Année Rosé 2015 is vinified in small oak barrels (champagne-bollinger.com). And a NEW GENERATION of wine: the Rathfinny Mini 2020 – the first ever 50cl bottle of English sparkling (rathfinnyestate.com).

Gins for your tonic
IMAGES COURTESY OF DRAM
The 007’s Spy Bar at Raffles holds all sorts of secret delights
May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 207 Tidbits | FOOD & DRINK

NEW INSTRUCTION

Braughing Friars, Braughing, Hertfordshire

£1,300,000

PRELIMINARY ANNOUNCEMENT - Oliver Minton Village & Rural Homes are delighted to bring to the market this fantastic 4 acre BUILDING PLOT

with planning permission granted for ‘Friars Bourne’, a stunning 7000 sq ft contemporary bespoke home in this highly sought after hamlet location on the rural outskirts of Braughing village. Please contact us for further information. East Herts District Council planning reference is 3/22/0217/FUL

PROPERTY

HOUSE OF THE MONTH

Mandalay, Long Beach Drive, Providenciales, Turks and Caicos Islands

Seven bedroom, ten bathrooms, 15,274 sq/ft, $22.5m

Sell it to us in a sentence... An architectural icon of the Turks and Caicos landscape.

How would you describe its design? Classic Caribbean – and the epitome of luxury living. Its masterful layout is centred on a stunning multilevel pool with a lounge, fire pit and cascading water features.

What’s unique about it? Its award-winning architectural design. The pool boasts 38 adjustable LEDs and stretches through the home, leading to an infinity edge overlooking the Caicos Banks.

What is its history? It was developed in 2012; architects R.A. Shaw Designs used a pre-existing foundation made before new regulations. It was given the prize for the Best Architecture Single Residence at the International Property Awards in 2017.

Best room in the house? This property is a chef’s dream: inside, you’ll find a family kitchen, a professional kitchen and a walk-in wine cooler, as well as a spectacular beachfront dining room.

Perks of the location? Mandalay sits about 40 feet from the sea and enjoys 190 feet of pristine Long Bay beach – a world famous spot for kiteboarding.  +1 (649) 3322612; tcrea.com

May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 209

Country ESTATES

Martha Davies picks five properties that dreams are made of

Mylor Downs, Cornwall, OIEO £3m

Set in 30 acres of glorious grounds, this Cornish home is a real stunner. ere are four bedrooms and four bathrooms in the main house, plus a separate farmhouse. lillicrapchilcott.com

Chalcot House, Wiltshire, £8m is Grade II*-listed manor is complete with a tennis court, swimming pool and stables, not to mention 52 acres of land encompassing both formal gardens and rolling parkland. struttandparker.com

Boden Hall, Cheshire, £6.65m

Stroll through the grounds of this sevenbedroom Georgian home and you’ll spot a lake, squash court and a saltwater pool. It’s a bucolic dream. ere’s also six cottages as part of the estate. savills.com

West Charleton, Devon, £3.75m

Looking for luxury? is grand estate features a vebedroom manor alongside six cottages and a detached oak-framed entertainment centre with a cinema room and indoor pool. marchandpetit.co.uk

Dancers End, Hertfordshire, £4.75m

From a party barn, gym and detached cottage to a tennis court, pavilion and topiaried garden, this Grade II-listed home has it all. You’ll also spot period features like marble replaces. knightfrank.co.uk

210 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 PROPERTY | Five of the Best

Arches Hall & Stud Farm, Latchford, Standon, Hertfordshire

London 25 miles | Newmarket 40 miles | Cambridge 26 miles | Hertford North 8 miles (Trains to London Liverpool Street from 49 minutes) Bishop’s Stortford 9 miles | London Stansted 13.5 miles (Distances and times are approximate)

Superb five-bedroom Edwardian house Stud with thirty loose boxes | Paddocks | Horse walker | Manège | Two grooms’ flats houses

Arches Hall presents a rare opportunity to acquire a picturesque residential and equestrian estate positioned within beautiful Hertfordshire countryside. The principal house dates to around 1900, with subsequent additions and is in a prominent position overlooking its own land and surrounding unspoilt countryside. The house is approached along a tree-lined drive, bordered by post and rail paddocks either side. The property includes the renowned Arches Hall Stud, which boasts an impressive track record, having produced a large number of winners of group races over a period of 40 years, by the renowned owner-breeder, Dick Hollingsworth. With an abundance of established paddocks, Arches Hall Stud offers the potential for a regional breeding operation or extensive livery facilities. An impressive residential and equestrian estate in a beautiful setting.

£3,750,000

Other Arches Hall Stud complex homes available: Superb contemporary Barn Conversion - £1,195,000 House with Stables & Paddocks - £925,000

More details available on request

NEW INSTRUCTION

ANGEL of the NORTH

property eye to Manchester

With its expanding population, imposing skyline and vibrant art and music scenes, it’s tempting to compare Manchester to London – but Mancunians won’t have it. ose that live and work in the UK’s second city covet its distinct identity and have no desire for it to become another London.

‘It’s becoming a better version of itself, not a clone of the capital,’ maintains Baljit Arora of estate agency Orlando Reid, who grew up in Manchester before spending 12 years living in London. ‘Manchester is a young, hip and wealthy city with a huge amount of regeneration and a pledge to become zero carbon by 2038 – 12 years ahead of the government’s 2050 target.’

Yet even Baljit, who moved back to Manchester a few years ago to launch Orlando Reid Manchester, concedes that it feels a lot more like London than it used to. Where once there were textile mills, Manchester’s centre is now populated by shiny residential skyscrapers inhabited by a new generation of young professionals working for companies such as Google, KPMG and Siemens. e centre is divided into distinct districts, some chic and sophisticated, others hip and edgy, and it shares many of London’s luxury brands from restaurants such as Sexy Fish and Chotto Matte to gyms including Barry’s Bootcamp and F45 Training and shops such as Harvey Nichols and Emporio Armani. It’s even, as of this summer, getting a Soho House. In a YouGov poll for Times Radio, more than half of those who wanted Britain to have a new capital backed Manchester.

But Manchester will never be London, Baljit

insists, and neither its inhabitants nor the developers regenerating the city want it to be. As the epicentre of the cotton trade during the Industrial Revolution, it’s cut from a di erent cloth, a hotchpotch of canals, Victorian warehouses and Art Deco shopping centres and hotels. It doesn’t have the green open spaces of London, but the Pennines and Peak District are within easy reach and over the past 30 years the city’s two-square-mile centre has been scrubbed up beyond recognition, with redundant warehouses and wharfs transformed into cutting-edge o ces, restaurants and shops, and the construction of new apartment buildings. ‘When I was growing up, the city centre was empty land and car parks – no one lived there,’ Baljit says. ‘Now we’ve got a huge number of residential developments with gyms, spas, primary schools and new parks, which has drawn a successful, young population into the centre. We can walk everywhere, the air is cleaner than it is in London and the cost of living is lower.’ ose that live and work in Manchester do not believe it’s a step down or compromise – quite the opposite. Culturally, the city has never looked to London; Oasis, e Stone Roses, acid house and rave all started out in Manchester and its music and arts scene lives on, along with its sporting prowess: Manchester City and Manchester United, two of Britain’s most successful football clubs, are based in the city. It’s also outpaced almost all other UK cities in terms of economic growth over the past decade and o ers a wealth of employment opportunities at companies such as Microsoft, Amazon and Adidas, Magic Circle law rms and management consultancies

Media City is just one of many thriving neighbourhoods attracting people to life in Manchester 212 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024
Anna Tyzack turns her prime

including PwC. No wonder, then, that 51 percent of all students in the city choose to remain there once they’ve graduated.

Manchester has its own nancial quarter, Spinning elds, a former garment district, which developed during the late nineties and is now home to around 40 percent of the city’s o ces, along with high-end fashion brands including Mulberry. Meanwhile, Media City, in the redeveloped Salford Quays to the west of the centre, houses the BBC, ITV and production companies. From here, it’s an easy walk to Deansgate, the Chelsea of Manchester, a strip of Victorian shopping arcades and luxury apartments stretching from Manchester Cathedral to the 47-storey Beetham Tower. e new W Residences have added further cachet to the area, as will Soho House when it opens this summer. For edgier bars, shops and hotels there’s the Northern Quarter, or ‘NQ’, and NOMA, two regenerated Victorian districts with independent record shops and some of the city’s liveliest nightlife.

‘Manchester’s skyline has changed beyond recognition – it has some of the tallest developments outside London,’ Baljit explains. Critics include Eamonn Canni e, who co-authored a report into Manchester’s new skyline by campaign group Save Britain’s Heritage. He believes the towers are out of keeping with Victorian Manchester, with planners giving in too easily to the demands of developers. Meanwhile, it’s unclear how much of a success the Media City project has been, with anecdotal reports of empty lots and producers still favouring London studios. Yet the city is only as clunky and experimental as it was at the start of the industrial revolution when its mills began to spring up, Baljit argues. ‘It works from a young professional’s perspective; you can live and work in the centre in a way that would be una ordable in London.’

Or at least you can for the time being. Rents are rising – by 50 percent in three years – although city centre apartments still cost around

half the price of the equivalent in central London: around £300,000 for an apartment in Deansgate or £425,000 for a three-bedroom townhouse in the trendy neighbourhood of Ancoats, just outside the centre. Families looking to move to the suburbs, however, already face prices in line with those of the capital. In Didsbury and Chorlton, detached four-bedroom houses cost more than £1.2 million, while in sought after commuter villages such as Alderley Edge, Hale and Bowdon, prices are some of the most expensive outside London with the largest houses costing between £5 and 7 million.

Baljit believes that prices will only strengthen as Manchester’s economy continues to ourish and more workers make the move from the capital. ‘It feels exciting: there are so many new tech companies and banks moving in as well as a lot of in uencers,’ he says. ‘It doesn’t feel like a second city; it feels like a global player.’ n

ON THE MARKET

PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES; UNSPLASH Cool new neighbourhoods are emerging across the city – whether that’s with new builds (above) or near the atmospheric Victorian shopping arcades (left) Alderley Edge, £5.85m A modern family home of 10,500 sq/ft surrounded by 16 acres of gardens and meadows. The house features large entertaining spaces, five bedroom suites and a spa with gym, sauna, steam room and pool. jordanfishwick.co.uk Ancoats, £395,000 A three-bedroom apartment in a modern building close to the canal and the shops, cafés and restaurants of Ancoats, which was recently voted one of the trendiest neighbourhoods globally by Time Out orlandoreid.co.uk Brunswick Mill, from £228,144 A Grade II-listed building currently being converted into 153 characterful apartments between Ancoats and New Islington. The development is a fiveminute walk from the metro and beside a canal. orlandoreid.co.uk Deansgate, £2.5m A penthouse in Deansgate Square in the heart of Manchester with access to The Club, a 22,000 sq/ft wellness space with gym and pool. The property has open plan living, three bedrooms and three bathrooms. savills.com
May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 213 PROPERTY

BOTANIC VISTAS

Elegant and historic 75 Cadogan Place offers oodles of charm

On the borders of Knightsbridge and Belgravia, this impressive Grade II-listed freehold building on the famed Cadogan Place has come to the market for the first time in over 60 years. Charlie Willis of CW London and CEO of The London Broker is the exclusive selling agent and says, ‘With the imminent Chelsea Flower Show in May, this historic and charming freehold period property is within easy walking distance of the Royal Hospital. It would be the perfect staging post for the green-fingered buyer wishing for wonderful yearround views over a sought-after historical communal garden once known as the London Botanic Garden, and along the dramatic white stucco-fronted terraces of Cadogan Place.’

The property’s freehold is offered for sale and with vacant possession for £5.95m, and provides totally flexible accommodation across three apartments. These have effectively served as a family home by offering a multigenerational living solution. The current owner occupied the ground and lower ground floor maisonette back in the 1960s and has subsequently acquired the remaining two flats from the Cadogan Estate. Quietly positioned in one of the best locations in London, directly opposite over seven acres of residents’ gardens and with a tennis court, the flats also benefit from the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea resident parking (by application). Cadogan Place is a short walk from the world-renowned shops and restaurants of Sloane Street, the King’s Road and Knightsbridge, with both Harrods and Harvey Nichols within easy reach.

The building is laid out over five floors and boasts many period features with a combined internal space covering 2,896 sq/ft, which includes three reception rooms, four double bedrooms (two en suite) and a kitchen leading to the conservatory and a rear patio garden. Its Georgian façade and elegant windows overlook the classic white-fronted terrace of Cadogan Place, the manicured residents’ garden and around to Sloane Street, where Beaverbrook Townhouse sits on the junction to Cadogan Square.

The garden is divided into two parts with the southern part, once known as the London Botanic Garden, having been laid out at the end of the 18th century by William Salisbury, containing a library, hothouse, greenhouse and conservatory. As a result, the South Garden still contains 300-year-old Mulberry trees. In the centre is the Hans Sloane Garden, created for the 2005 Chelsea Flower Show. The North Garden was created by the equally renowned

PHOTOS: © A WINSHIP
214 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024
75 Cadogan Place offers a prime location overlooking this sought-after Knightsbridge communal garden

Humphry Repton in 1806. Both areas are railed with enclosing lawns, and clumps of shrubbery and mature trees.

This area of Chelsea remains one of London’s most interesting historical quarters. Until 1777 the site of Cadogan Place was almost completely occupied by fields. Henry Holland built what he called ‘Hans Town’ on Lord Cadogan’s land, consisting of Sloane Square, Sloane Street, Cadogan Place and Hans Place. The simple terraced houses of stock brick became immediately fashionable among the upper middle and professional classes. Charles Dickens described the area in Nicholas Nickleby as the ‘slight bond’ between ‘the aristocratic pavements of Belgrave Square and the barbarism of Chelsea’. Previous inhabitants of Cadogan Place include an eclectic gathering from Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, anti-slavery campaigner William Wilberforce, writer and lover of Oscar Wilde Lord Alfred Douglas to the highly popular Irish comedy actress Dorothea Jordan who for 21 years was mistress to the Duke of Clarence, who later became King William IV and who had 10 children with the Duke.

Charlie Willis concludes, ‘According to homipi.co.uk, there are a total of 286 properties on Cadogan Place including 24 houses and 262 flats, with an average price of houses on this street at a reputed £11,101,529. This makes the freehold of 75 Cadogan Place a rare opportunity for a long-term investor or indeed a family looking to the future for a fabulously flexible home full of character.’

May/June 2024 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | 215 PROMOTION

Tales of our Time

Michael Hayman discovers what the Army’s ‘Be The Best’ slogan actually means

To Army Headquarters South East and the heathlands of Hampshire for an immersive leadership challenge day.

e invitation was written with military precision to strike fear into the heart of a comfort-driven pen pusher: me. ‘Limited cover from the elements’ and a test of ‘leadership, resilience and communication skills,’ it promised.

Was I up to it? A question posed not only by my internal monologue, but clearly a moment of collective doubt, in a windswept car park, on the assembling faces of business Britain. Leaders in their own commercial backyard but what about the in the Great Outdoors?

Army tea was the rst experience, an institution all of itself. Stewed across the ages it has the strength of Hercules. And it earns the respect of the most experienced regulars if you can take a brew.

ree cups in, we were brought to attention for the brie ng delivered by an urbane Lieutenant Colonel. We were gathered, he explained, to learn more about the leaders we might become. But to do this we needed to be introduced to the people we were at that moment.

First up, e Prisoner: trapped, folded arms and sullen in demeanour. e Passenger: happy to sit back and not play an active role. e Protestor: complaining, negative disruptive and disengaged. e Participant: enthusiastic, engaged and involved. And e Pilot: the hands-on leader who sets the course.

As I gingerly eyed my fellow participants I waged we had enough Prisoners in the ranks for a Dickensian penal colony.

But in this I was wrong. A veritable squadron of pilots were waiting to be discovered. For, as the day swung into action we were all to nd out what we were really made of. From physical training with the incredible gurkhas to ammunition resupply drills with the outstanding

Reservists of e Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment, and so much more.

As each task progressed, a dawning realisation. When the Army talks about ‘Be e Best’, it’s an invitation, not an instruction. We all have hidden qualities to be revealed, teamwork and leadership skills to be discovered, physical abilities that are better than you might think.

In short, the best of yourself is in you and a day like this is designed to reveal, rouse and re ne it. It’s something that Reservists get to experience on an ongoing basis and it is these skillsets that more employers in the business world can support.

Later, I was back on more familiar terrain: speaking at a black tie awards dinner in Central London. Quite the transformation from the khaki. But it was more than matters sartorial that had changed. e prisoner had been freed and I have some very brave, committed and brilliant members of the armed forces to thank for that. n

IMAGINE THAT

VISIT D-Day exhibitions – British Normandy Memorial, France and National Memorial Arboretum, UK – honouring the service and sacrifice of the D-Day generation. WATCH Six Triple Eight (Netflix). Kerry Washington will star in the inspiring story of World War II’s only Women’s Army Corps unit of colour. SUPPORT Army Reserve. Serve in your spare time (army.mod.uk/army-reserve).

Michael and British business leaders find out exactly what they’re made of
Michael and two Ghurkas Six Triple Eight lands on Netflix later this year 216 | COUNTRYANDTOWNHOUSE.COM | May/June 2024 LAST WORD

OCEANIA

Maison de parfums d’intérieur eu.baobabcollection.com

© Serge Anton Photograph taken in front of a work by Kudditji Kngwarreye. Nicolas Andrin - Aborigène Galerie Paris.
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