All products featured here are independently selected by our editors and writers. If you buy something through links on our site, Mashable may earn an affiliate commission. Compared to the $600 ...
Since it appeared on the scene in the early 20th century, Art Deco design has never really gone out of style. Sure, the glamorous aesthetic may have fallen out of favor during the early aughts (when ...
As the saying goes, everything old is new again. While one could argue that Art Deco has long remained influential, a century after the publication of The Great Gatsby and the 1925 French art fair ...
On a Google support page, the company says it is rolling out a new option to let users change their email address even if it is an “@gmail.com” address. For quite some time now, Google has allowed ...
The TP-Link Deco line offers Wi-Fi 7 at a reasonable price, and the BE68 is a tri-band unit with 10Gbps Ethernet, wired backhaul, and a 6 GHz band for more advanced users. My home networking setup has ...
In Paris in 1925, the French government initiated its ambitious International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts with one specific goal – to showcase and celebrate the excellence of ...
The TP-Link Deco BE11000 is simple to set up and extremely fast, even in conditions where other Wi-Fi systems falter, but it is on the pricier side, and requires an app for configuration. Mesh systems ...
PARIS — More than a century after its birth, Art Deco is once again having a moment. The Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris is celebrating the seminal design movement of the Roaring 1920s with a ...
There are plenty of Art Deco pieces out there, but according to Benoist F. Drut of NYC’s Maison Gerard, savvy collectors covet works actually shown at the 1925 exhibition that gave the movement its ...
What do the Chrysler Building (New York), Palais de Chaillot (Paris), and Christ the Redeemer Statue (Rio de Janeiro) have in common? As bold icons of art deco, they illustrate the far-flung influence ...
It’s 1925. It’s a new age, all the lines on the economic graphs are going up, and surely no future conflict could ever be as bad as what Europe had just gone through — they didn’t call it “the Great ...