â„¢
WINTER 2017
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The Shops at
Via Mi zner
Exciting Women’s Fashion
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saunders.com | hamptonsrealestate.com /SaundersAssociates
/SaundersRE
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main street, southampton village, new york (631) 283-5050 montauk highway, bridgehampton, new york (631) 537-5454 26 montauk highway, east hampton, new york (631) 324-7575
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2287
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prime hamptons real estate
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375-6900 | DS@Saunders.com
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THE YACHT-MASTER The emblematic nautical watch embodies a yachting heritage that stretches back to the 1950s. It doesn’t just tell time. It tells history.
rolex
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oyster perpetual and yacht-master are
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trademarks.
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OYSTER PERPETUAL YACHT-MASTER 40
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When t he answer me ans t he world. When t he answer me ans t he world.
2 3 6 Wo rt h Av e n u e | PA l m B e Ac h 2 3 6 Wo rt h Av e n u e | PA l m B e Ac h b etter idge.com b etter idge.com
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561.655.5850 561.655.5850
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3 D AYS A U TO M AT I C ACC I A I O - 4 5 M M ( R E F. 674 )
PA N E R A I B O U T I Q U E S
A S P E N • B O C A R ATO N • N A P L E S • PA L M B E A C H
PA N E R A I . C O M
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•
+ 1 87 7 726 3724
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JAEGER-LECOULTRE BOUTIQUES 312 Plaza Real, Boca Raton, FL 33432 • 561-368-3866 254 Worth Avenue, Palm Beach, FL 33480 • 561-833-0801
Eduardo Novillo Astrada, polo Champion, Winner of the Argentine Triple Crown.
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Reverso Tribute Calendar watch
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We perfect each part of this watch by hand. Even the ones that you can’t see.
Although you will probably never actually see most of the
fact that not all of these lavishly finished parts are
levers, wheels, and springs in the Saxonia Moon Phase
concealed. Fortunately, the sapphire-crystal back reveals
calibre, Lange’s master watchmakers me ticu lously per-
the fascinating interaction of quite a few of them. Treat
fect them by hand. Aficionados will appreciate the
yourself to a close-up look. www.alange-soehne.com
306 North Plaza Real · Boca Raton, FL 33432 · Tel. (561) 361-2311 252 Worth Avenue · Palm Beach, FL 33480 · Tel. (561) 833-0803 www.lesbijoux.com
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256 Worth Avenue, Via Amore, Palm Beach, Florida 33480 tel.561.6197692 / info@oliviapreckel.com / www.oliviapreckel.com OliviaPreckel_Worth1617.indd 1
9/26/16 9:10 AM
Worth Avenue’s Oldest Shop Worth Avenue’s Oldest Shop K K
assatly’s Inc., a Palm Beach assatly’s a Palm tradition Inc., since 1923,Beach is
tradition 1923, is celebrating 85 years insince business. Brothers celebrating 85 years in business. Edward and Robert KassatlyBrothers joined Edward and Sam, Robert Kassatly joined their father who founded the their father Sam, who and founded the business, in the late 1950s have been business, in the late 1950s andtohave working together ever since servebeen the working ever since to serve the needs oftogether its discriminating clientele. needs of its discriminating clientele. The store is based on a tradition of The storeservice, is based on merchandising a tradition of personal unique personal service, unique merchandising and an uncompromising commitment and an uncompromising commitment to quality and customer service— to quality customercontributed service— qualities thatand undoubtedly qualities that undoubtedly contributed to the Kassatly brothers being honored to Kassatly brothers as the business leaders of thebeing year honored for 1993 as leaders the year for 1993 by business the Palm Beachof Daily News and by the Palm Beach Daily News and awarded the prestigious Worth Avenue awarded the prestigious One and Only Award for Worth 1997. Avenue OneThe and shop’s Only Award for 1997. specialties include the Thecollections shop’s specialties include the finest of custom designed finest collections custom Madeira linens forofthe table, designed bed and Madeira table, bed and bath, as linens well asfora the large selection of bath, as well as a ladies large selection of hand-embroidered and men’s hand-embroidered ladies and men’s handkerchiefs made especially for handkerchiefs made especially for Kassatly’s. In addition to imported Kassatly’s. In addition to imported linens, Kassatly’s also carries a very linens, alsolinens, carries a very fine lineKassatly’s of domestic American fine line of domestic linens, American and European designer lingerie, men’s and European designer lingerie, men’s sleepwear, cashmere sweaters and a few select items in men’s sportswear. Special themes such as Christmas, sleepwear, cashmere sweaters and a few select items men’s sportswear.charm—and Special themes such as touch. Christmas, Thanksgiving, polo and golf endow the store’s linensinwith a whimsical a personal Thanksgiving, polohas andsomething golf endow store’s linens with a whimsical a personalboaters touch. and Kassatly’s forthe everyone—tennis players, golfers,charm—and horsemen, fishermen, Kassatly’s hasifsomething for everyone—tennis players,will golfers, horsemen, fishermen, boaters and bridge players—and it doesn’t, just ask; Edward and Robert have it made especially for you. bridge players—and if it doesn’t, just ask; Edward and Robert will have it made especially for you.
Kassatly’s, Inc. Kassatly’s, Inc. Kassatlys.com 250 Worth Avenue • Palm Beach (561) 655-5655 250 Worth Avenue • Palm Beach (561) 655-5655
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YOUR FINE DINING DESTINATION AWAITS.
Featuring custom-designed NYY Steak to-go bag. Special thanks to Worth Avenue Association, Herve Lager, St. John, John Barrett Salon, Tom Ford, Braman Bentley Palm Beach. Stylist: Ali Marino NYY Steak To-Go Bag design by NDN Promotions, Inc. Tax and gratuity not included. Must be 21 or older to consume alcohol. See NYY Steak for complete details. Management reserves all rights. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, please call 1.888.ADMIT.IT.
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casinococo.com 40 minutes from Palm Beach, located at Seminole Casino Coconut Creek.
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Amina Rubinacci
150 Worth Avenue, Suite 128 • Palm Beach, FL • 561-659-7887 • altona.com
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Renato’ s PA L M
B E ACH
87 Via Mizner • Worth Avenue • 561.655.9745 renatospalmbeach.com
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© 2016 · finejewelr y@ t amaracomolli.com
18K gold
TAMARA COMOLLI BOUTIQUES PALM BEACH · 150 Worth Avenue · p 1 561 659 3700 SOUTHAMPTON · 27 Main Street · p 1 631 283 7600 SOUTHAMPTON · LAKE TEGERNSEE · SYLT · PALM BEACH · MUNICH · MARBELLA
Selected
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B CUSETST PUBL OM ICA 2016 TION Rout in FL
™
AGAZINE ASS DA M ORI
ATION OCI
[ C O N T E N T S ]
custo ely vot ed b m Floridmagazin est a sin e in 1980 ce
FE ATU R E S
66 Seaside Style
The easy Palm Beach aesthetic is part island style, part understated chic, with an eye toward tropical coastal living. PHOTOGRAPHY BY BILLY COLEMAN
74 Palm Beach Primer
The Palm Beach mystique is rooted in
colorful history, a storied lifestyle and a cast of characters with links to the national and international stage. BY MARIE SPEED AND JOHN THOMASON
84 S un-kissed Sparkles These Worth Avenue jewels are full of local color—and a delicious sense of style. PHOTOGRAPHY BY MARC HICKMAN
90 Bedazzled
The Eau Palm Beach Resort offers a classic yet whimsical backdrop for this year’s playful resort fashion. PHOTOGRAPHY BY BILLY COLEMAN
Striped two-piece suit and white linen shirt from Island Company, sandals from Via Capri and bracelet from Mariko WORTH AVENUE
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[ C O N T E N T S ]
DE PARTME NTS
26 President’s Letter For merchants and visitors alike, Worth Avenue has a special sense of place— and its own enduring legacy of quality and service.
BY MARLEY HERRING
28 Worth Avenue Association Here is the Worth Avenue Association’s board of directors and a membership roster of Avenue merchants.
35 Island Notes We crystallize the energy of Worth Avenue and Palm Beach into a curated guide of don’t-miss events, dining ideas and beauty and lifestyle trends.
BY LISETTE HILTON, ALEXANDRA PRINS, NILA DO SIMON AND LIBBY VOLGYES
60 Vias Our “treasure hunt” shows how to find Worth Avenue’s “secret” courtyards—or vias—and provides a few don’t-miss tips along the way.
84 47
BY MEGAN KEARNEY
62 For Men Only Here are essential accessories for men—and some manly diversions, on and off the Avenue.
BY SHELLIE FRAI AND LAURA TOLLIVER
96 Visitor’s Guide South Florida offers residents and visitors an ever-changing palette of activities year-round, from fine arts to football—and everything in between.
BY ALEXANDRA PRINS
108 Hotels and Accommodations Our renowned resorts, hotels and exemplary restaurants are an extension of the luxurious Palm Beach lifestyle.
112 Parting Shot The Worth Avenue Association takes pride in its commitment to community service with a growing list of charitable partners, including this year’s Tri-County Animal Rescue.
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BY NILA DO SIMON
ON THE COVER PHOTOGRAPHER: Billy Coleman MODELS: Winter: Dusica Savic/Next Model Management; Spring: Selena Weber and Renato Freitas/Next Model Management STYLIST: Terri Dacquisto/Wilhelmina ART DIRECTORS: Lori Pierino, Valentine S. Fracassi HAIR/MAKEUP: Paola Orlando with Frederic Fekkai products/Chanel cosmetics LOCATION: Eau Palm Beach Resort & Spa; eaupalmbeach.com; 100 S. Ocean Blvd., Manalapan, 561/533-6000
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WINTER Red dress by Kaufman Franco from Neiman Marcus, earrings and bracelet from Patricia Robalino SPRING HER: Barbara Bui top from Shari’s Place, Lior white pants from Marley’s, Tom Ford bag from Neiman Marcus HIM: Theory white long-sleeve shirt and white pants as well as Brunello Cocinelli jacket from Neiman Marcus, braided belt from Maus & Hoffman, Tom Ford sunglasses from Edward Beiner
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[ P R E S I D E N T ’ S
L E T T E R ]
Welcome to Worth Avenue I
MITCH HERRING PHOTOGRAPHY
f you haven’t been to Worth Avenue, you haven’t been to Palm Beach. Throughout the years, I have come to see what a special experience Worth Avenue is—for shop owners as well as visitors. We are steps from the ocean in an enclave of graceful historic architecture tempered by hometown charm and tropical breezes. Our merchants have a strong association that is built upon a legacy of flawless personalized customer service—and a commitment to giving back to the community. We are pleased to say our visitors share in these values through a shopping experience that is both luxurious and low-key, as easy as it is elegant. We want Worth Avenue to be a place they feel is their own, and we work hard to make sure everyone feels at home. There are more than 200 shops and restaurants on Worth Avenue and in its romantic courtyard “vias”—from couture to mom-and-pop boutiques. We have something for everyone, from home furnishings to eyewear, resort fashion to gift shops. There are splashing fountains and sculptures, hidden staircases and climbing bougainvillea. Most of all, there is the inimitable Worth Avenue magic, the sense that you are here but somewhere else as well, a touch of Europe, a little slice of island time. Worth Avenue is all of that. This magazine celebrates Worth Avenue and reflects it classic charm. In fact, we are happy to announce that it has again won “Best Custom Publication” from the Florida Magazine Association—a statewide honor that underscores its quality and position in Florida’s publishing industry. I hope you will enjoy your time with the magazine and with us and that you discover the special character of Worth Avenue as I have over the years. And that you come back, again and again.
Marley Herring President, Worth Avenue Association
PARKING IS PLENTIFUL. Historic Worth Avenue is a street of dreams, and parking is a breeze. Valet parking is available at the Apollo parking lot, just north of Worth Avenue, off Hibiscus Avenue, as well as at the parking garage, at 150 Worth Ave., just across from the beach. Plentiful two-hour parking spaces are available on Worth Avenue itself, and two-hour metered parking can be found on Peruvian Avenue (one block north of Worth Avenue). If you use one of our parking lots, be sure to ask when you are shopping to have your ticket validated by participating merchants. Please visit our website, worth-avenue.com, for our calendar of events, merchandise and news.
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faceaface-paris.com
at
Edward Beiner
TM
PURVEYOR OF FINE EYEWEAR
The Esplanade at 150 Worth Tel : 561-832-2020
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[ 2 0 1 7
B O A R D
PRESIDENT Marley Herring 721-1022*
O F
D I R E C T O R S ]
DIRECTORS: Gregg Beletsky Past President
MARLEY’S PALM BEACH COLLECTION
VICE PRESIDENT Gustav Krarup 832-8812
659-3684
LOUIS VUITTON
Ashley Berry 366-4306 BRAZILIAN COURT HOTEL
TOURNEAU
2ND VICE PRESIDENT Jeffrey Sabean 659-6090 TIFFANY & CO.
Franklyn de Marco, Jr. 835-3500 TA-BOO’ RESTAURANT
TREASURER John Maus 655-1141
SECRETARY Linda Goings 820-3820 PALM BEACH DAILY NEWS
1000 Clint Moore Road, Suite 103 Boca Raton, FL 33487 561/997-8683 bocamag.com
Past President
655-0774
RICHTER’S OF PALM BEACH
Eliza Tizabgar 307-4007 FASHION GALLERY PALM BEACH
655-1996
BETTERIDGE JEWELERS
256 Worth Avenue, Suite 312 P.O. Box 2126 Palm Beach, FL 33480 659-6909 Robin Miller, general manager robinmiller@worth-avenue.com worth-avenue.com
Edward Kassatly
*All 561 area code
Vanessa Henry 655-6850
MAUS & HOFFMAN
media
Stefan Richter
WORTH AVENUE ASSOCIATION
SHERRY FRANKEL’S MELANGERIE
Past President
CHESTERFIELD HOTEL
Sherry Frankel Past President
JES
Greg Palmer 659-5800
Past President
655-5655
KASSATLY’S
PUBLISHER Margaret Mary Shuff
GROUP EDITOR IN CHIEF Marie Speed MANAGING EDITOR John Thomason ASSOCIATE EDITOR Allison Lewis
WEB EDITOR Jason Clary
CONTRIBUTORS Shellie Frai Lisette Hilton Alexandra Prins Nila Do Simon Laura Tolliver Libby Volgyes
SENIOR ART DIRECTOR Lori Pierino
ASSISTANT ART DIRECTOR Valentine S. Fracassi PHOTOGRAPHERS
Aaron Bristol Billy Coleman Marc Hickman Eduardo Schneider
PRODUCTION MANAGER Mandy Wynne
PRODUCTION COORDINATOR Shari Brown IRECTOR OF ADVERTISING D AND MARKETING Rebecca Valenza ACCOUNT MANAGERS
Bruce Klein Jr. Gail Eagle Lorraine Manfre Stephanie Kronen Lorey Reed
EVENTS COORDINATOR Portia Smith
CONTROLLER Jeanne Greenberg
CIRCULATION DIRECTOR George Agoglia
SUBSCRIPTIONS SERVICES Kat Algeo
Visit us on the web
Take a walk along Worth Avenue at worth-avenue.com and enjoy all the wonderful amenities available on America’s most beautiful shopping street—we’re only a few keystrokes away!
worth-avenue.com 28
PUBLISHERS OF Boca Raton, Delray Beach, Mizner’s Dream, Worth Avenue, Boca Raton Chamber of Commerce Annual, Salt Lake, Utah Bride and Groom, Utah Style & Design
WWW.WORTH-AVENUE.COM
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Patricia Robalino Designs
323 Worth Avenue Palm Beach, FL 33480
www.patriciarobalino.com tel: (561) 328-3952
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[ w o r t h
a v e n u e
a s s o c i a t i o n ]
2017 members *area code is 561 120% LINO 333 Worth Avenue 833-0711* Apparel/accessories 55 CROISETTE 415 Hibiscus Avenue 355-4244 Apparel A.B. LEVY 209/211 Worth Avenue 835-9139 Art/antiques ACENTO 313 1/2 Worth Avenue (Via Bice) 832-4035 Jewelry ALTONA 150 Worth Avenue, Suite 118 832-0303 Apparel AMINA RUBINACCI 150 Worth Avenue 832-0303 Apparel APOLLO PARKING 405 Hibiscus Avenue 659-4979 Parking ASHLEY JOHN GALLERIES 410 South County Road 429-8454 Art gallery BALATRO VINTAGE GALLERY 408 Hibiscus Avenue 832-1817 Apparel BETTERIDGE 236 Worth Avenue 655-5850 Jewelry BIBI’S BOUTIQUE 250 Worth Avenue 833-1973 Pet boutique BICE 313 1/2 Worth Avenue (Via Bice) 835-1600 Italian cuisine
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BOTTEGA VENETA 239 Worth Avenue 833-3701 Leather goods THE BRAZILIAN COURT HOTEL 301 Australian Avenue 655-7740 Hotel/condos THE BREAKERS 1 South County Road 655-6611 Resort BRIDGES MARSH & ASSOCIATES 18 Via Mizner 832-1533 Architects BRIONI 251 Worth Avenue 650-0030 Men’s apparel BROOKS BROTHERS 225-C Worth Avenue 659-6464 Apparel BROWN HARRIS STEVENS OF PALM BEACH 353 Worth Avenue 659-6400 Real estate C. J. LAING 34 Via Mizner 820-0039 Apparel CAFÉ BOULUD 301 Australian Avenue (Brazilian Court Hotel) 655-6060 Fine dining CAFÉ VIA FLORA 240 Worth Avenue (Via Flora) 514-4959 Casual dining CALYPSO ST. BARTH 247B Worth Avenue 832-5006 Apparel
CARTIER 214 Worth Avenue 655-5913 Jewelry CHANEL 301 Worth Avenue 655-1550 Apparel CHARLOTTE KELLOGG 256 Worth Avenue, Suite 314 820-2407 Apparel THE CHESTERFIELD HOTEL 363 Cocoanut Row 659-5800 Hotel CHRISTOFLE 150 Worth Avenue 833-1978 Silver/gifts THE COLONY PALM BEACH 155 Hammon Avenue 655-5430 Hotel CRUCIANI PALM BEACH 313 ½ Worth Avenue (Via Bice) 833-3373 Apparel/accessories/leather goods CYNTHIA VAN BUREN, ESQ. 205 Worth Avenue, Suite 307G 833-1717 Attorney
EAU PALM BEACH RESORT AND SPA 100 South Ocean Boulevard Manalapan 533-6000 Resort EDWARD BEINER, PURVEYOR OF FINE EYEWEAR 150 Worth Avenue, Suite 161 832-2020 Fine eyewear EMILIO PUCCI 150 Worth Avenue 655-7070 Apparel ENGEL & VOLKERS PALM BEACH 150 Worth Avenue, Suite 236 659-3872 Real estate
ESCADA 222 Worth Avenue 835-9700 Apparel ESPLANADE AT 150 WORTH 150 Worth Avenue 212/546-0865 Shopping center EVERYTHING BUT WATER 319 Worth Avenue 820-9555 Swimwear EXCELL AUTO GROUP 1001 Clint Moore Road, Suite 101 998-5557 Affiliate—luxury auto EXPRESS PARKING 150 Worth Avenue 832-8715 Parking
DANIELLA ORTIZ 256 Worth Avenue 366-0008 Leather goods DEA LUXURY ITALIAN LINENS 341 Worth Avenue 366-1203 Fine linens DIANE FIRSTEN 28 Via Mizner 833-2331 Apparel DTR MODERN GALLERIES 440 South County Road 366-9387 Art gallery
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FASHION GALLERY PALM BEACH 205 Worth Avenue 307-4007 Consignment
GOLFINO PALM BEACH 150 Worth Avenue 249-3567 Golf/sports apparel
FLOWERS OF WORTH AVENUE 205 Worth Avenue 514-0660 Floral
GRAFF 221A Worth Avenue 355-9292 Jewelry
THE FOUR SEASONS RESORT 2800 South Ocean Boulevard 582-2800 Resort FRÉDÉRIC FEKKAI 301 Australian Avenue (Brazilian Court Hotel) 833-9930 Salon/personal services GALERIA OF SCULPTURE 11 Via Parigi 659-7557 Art (glass)
GUCCI 150 Worth Avenue, Suite 137 655-6955 Apparel/leather goods HAMILTON JEWELERS 215 Worth Avenue 659-6788 Jewelry HERMÈS 240 Worth Avenue 655-6655 Apparel/accessories/jewelry
HIRE SOCIETY 205 Worth Avenue 899-0776 Recruiting/catering
ISLAND COMPANY 256 Worth Avenue 655-3231 Apparel
JENNIFER GARRIGUES INC. 308 Peruvian Avenue 659-7085 Interior design/home furnishings JENNIFER MILLER 5 Via Mizner 659-9095 Jewelry JIMMY CHOO 244 Worth Avenue 655-3635 Leather goods/shoes/handbags
JACKIE ROGERS INT’L. 256 Worth Avenue 469-9950 Apparel
KASSATLY’S 250 Worth Avenue 655-5655 Fine linens/gifts/apparel
J. MCLAUGHLIN 225 Worth Avenue 655-5973 Apparel
KATE SPADE NEW YORK 225A Worth Avenue 366-1384 Apparel KENNETH R. BEER, MD, PA 1500 North Dixie Highway, Suite 305, West Palm Beach 655-9055 Affiliate—cosmetic surgery/ dermatology
IL PAPIRO 347 Worth Avenue 833-5696 Stationery/gifts
JPMORGAN CHASE 411 South County Road 227-0023 Financial institution
KIOSK PALM BEACH 238 Worth Avenue 650-1105 Gifts/apparel LENDAN, INC. 205 Worth Avenue, Suite 201 833-5825 Real estate/management LE VISAGE SWISS HERITAGE 150 Worth Avenue, Suite 224 328-7340 Skin care LINDA A. GARY REAL ESTATE 201 Worth Avenue 655-6881 Real estate
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MARIKO 329 Worth Avenue 655-5770 Jewelry/apparel MARLEY’S PALM BEACH COLLECTION 256 Worth Avenue 721-1022 Apparel MARYANNA SUZANNA 313 1/2 Worth Avenue (Via Bice) 833-0204 Gifts/home furnishings MAUS & HOFFMAN 312 Worth Avenue 655-1141 Apparel/leather goods MAXMARA 216 Worth Avenue 832-0069 Apparel MICHAEL KORS 226A Worth Avenue 659-2929 Apparel MORGENTHAL FREDERICS 311 Worth Avenue 655-3937 Fine eyewear MYSTIQUE CREATED GEMS 250 Worth Avenue 655-3008 Jewelry NEIMAN MARCUS 151 Worth Avenue 805-6150 Department store NEW PALM, LLC 325 Worth Avenue 805-7410 Real Estate/management
LOUIS VUITTON 150 Worth Avenue, Suite 107 659-1626 Leather goods/shoes
NYY STEAK AT SEMINOLE CASINO 5550 NW 40th Street, Coconut Creek 954/935-6699 Affiliate—fine dining
LUXURY PR GROUP 205 Worth Avenue, Suite 124 328-3605 PR/media
OLIVIA PRECKEL 256 Worth Avenue 305/582-2438 Apparel/furrier
WWW.WORTH-AVENUE.COM
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PALM BEACH CHAMBER OF COMMERCE 400 Royal Palm Way, Suite 106 655-3282 Service PALM BEACH DAILY NEWS 400 Royal Palm Way, Suite 100 820-3830 Newspaper PALM BEACH HISTORIC INN 356 South County Road 832-4009 Hotel PALM BEACH ILLUSTRATED P.O. Box 3344 472-1902 Magazine publisher PALM BEACH SOCIETY MAGAZINE 240 Worth Avenue, Suite 9 659-5555 Magazine publishing PATRICIA NIX STUDIO 256 Worth Avenue 659-6867 Art studio PATRICIA ROBALINO DESIGNS 325 Worth Avenue, Suite 5 328-3952 Jewelry PATTI ESBIA ANTIQUE & ESTATE JEWELRY 326 Peruvian Avenue (Via Demario) 833-9448 Antiques/jewelry PEGGY DAVEN 250 Worth Avenue 514-0923 Jewelry
PERUVIAN AVENUE CORP. P.O. Box 2561 793-1148 Real estate PETER MILLAR 313A Worth Avenue 833-8332 Men’s apparel
SUSAN E. RILEY 240 Via Amore 315-7828 Apparel
TRESOR RARE 209 Worth Avenue 424/288-4406 Perfumerie/skin care
TA-BOÓ 221 Worth Avenue 835-3500 Fine dining TAGLIALATELLA GALLERIES 313 ½ Worth Avenue 833-4700 Art
TRIANON/SEAMAN SCHEPPS 237A Worth Avenue 802-4410 Jewelry VAN CLEEF & ARPELS 202 Worth Avenue 655-6767 Jewelry
SHARI’S PLACE 331 Worth Avenue 855-2910 Apparel
TAMARA COMOLLI FINE JEWELRY COLLECTION 150 Worth Avenue, Suite 115 659-3700 Jewelry
VIA CAPRI, 34 323 Worth Avenue, Suite 3 (Via Demario) 312/720-1789 Leather goods/shoes
PROVIDENT JEWELRY 150 Worth Avenue & 125 Worth Avenue 833-0550 Jewelers
SHERRY FRANKEL’S MELANGERIE 256 Worth Avenue; 655-1996 Gifts/accessories
TEW AND TAYLOR 359 South County Road 366-0100 Construction consultants
VIA MIZNER PROPERTIES 90 Via Mizner 802-3088 Real estate/management
RALPH LAUREN 300 Worth Avenue 651-3900 Apparel
SOCAPRI 235C Worth Avenue 802-9940 Apparel/gifts/leather goods
TIDELINE OCEAN RESORT AND SPA 2842 South Ocean Boulevard 540-6440 Resort hotel
VILEBREQUIN 335 Worth Avenue 835-0170 Swimwear
RAPTIS RARE BOOKS 226 Worth Avenue 508-3479 Books/gifts
ST. JOHN BOUTIQUE 256 Worth Avenue 833-5564 Apparel
TIFFANY & CO. 259 Worth Avenue; 659-6090 Jewelry/gifts/leather goods
VINEYARD VINES 305 Worth Avenue 659-5900 Apparel
RENATO’S 87 Via Mizner 655-9752 Fine Italian dining
STARBUCKS 150 Worth Avenue, Suite 110 651-7740 Coffee shop
TOM MATHIEU & CO. 312D Worth Avenue 655-5880 Floral arts
WILLIAM R. EUBANKS INTERIOR DESIGN, INC. 1 Via Parigi, 805-9335 Interior design
RICHTERS OF PALM BEACH 224 Worth Avenue 655-0774 Jewelry ROBERTA ROLLER RABBIT 150 Worth Avenue 833-4643 Apparel/accessories
STRONG BOALT 326 Peruvian Avenue, Suite 9 530-7333 Apparel
TOMAS MAIER 38 Via Mizner 650-1221 Apparel/accessories TOURNEAU 175 Worth Avenue 832-8812 Jewelry
WORTH AVENUE MAGAZINE 1000 Clint Moore Road, Suite 103, Boca Raton, 997-8683 Magazine publishing WORTH AVENUE YACHTS 150 Worth Avenue, Suite 136 833-4462 Yacht sales/brokerage
PIZZA AL FRESCO 14 Via Mizner 832-0032 Restaurant/casual dining PRETTY BALLERINAS 150 Worth Avenue, Suite 130 659-6670 Shoes
SABELLA MIKESELL COUTURE 240 Worth Avenue 318-8311 Apparel/couture SALVATORE FERRAGAMO 200 Worth Avenue 659-0602 Leather goods/shoes/apparel SEQUIN 219 Worth Avenue 328-8405 Jewelry
STUBBS & WOOTTON 340 Worth Avenue 655-6857 Shoes
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Island Notes Home 35 • Body & Soul 39 • Beauty 43 • Eat & Drink 47 • Go & Do 55
COASTAL COMFORT A sitting room by Palm Beach interior designer Jennifer Garrigues
home
BY N I LA D O S I MO N
SHORE THINGS
Escape from the hustle and bustle of life by bringing relaxing coastal elements into your home. With endless options these days, there’s never been a better time to make your home a tropical oasis.
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PRINTS CHARMING Get your nautical stripes on with this Kate Spade New York Charlotte Street Highball set—with blue stripes that will inspire you to set sail quickly. (Kate Spade New York, 225 Worth Ave., 561/366-1384)
CAN IT Hold just about anything (including your love of the water!) in this Kate Spade New York Charlotte Street Canister. (Kate Spade New York, 225 Worth Ave., 561/366-1384)
COASTING ON Set sail without leaving your home with this Aquatica Coaster Set by Jonathan Adler, made of white porcelain with color on-glaze accents. (Four Seasons Resort Palm Beach, 2800 S. Ocean Blvd., 561/582-2800)
VASE FORWARD Add a touch of whimsy with Jonathan Adler’s playfully chic Utopia Collection, which includes these mermaid and sailor vases, crafted by the loving hands of Peruvian artisans. (Four Seasons Resort Palm Beach, 2800 S. Ocean Blvd., 561/582-2800)
DISH ABOUT IT Spice up your servingware with these hand-fired and hand-painted dishes from Tuscany. (Maryanna Suzanna, 313 Worth Ave., 561/833-0204)
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Modern Coastal design
MIRROR, MIRROR Bring the ocean to your walls by adding this Michael Aram Ocean Coral Mirror with nickel-plated aluminum frame. (Neiman Marcus Palm Beach, 151 Worth Ave., 561/805-6150)
LIGHT IT UP Your home will smell as relaxing as the beach with this soy candle from Island Company. (Island Company, 256 Worth Ave., 561/655-3231)
Jennifer Garrigues says a modern, coastalinspired home has a couple things in common: comfort and coziness. And she should know. With more than 30 years of interior design experience, Garrigues has been designing homes in Palm Beach, New York and everywhere else in the world. Garrigues says one of the easiest ways to amp up the coastal vibe is to include ocean and sand colors in your home, either through paint, furnishings or accent colors. “Be sure it has some strength and personality to it,” she says. “And, ‘modern’ doesn’t always have to imply white; look for colors that work for you and that you want to live with.” To enhance the home’s contemporary yet relaxed feel, Garrigues says to keep rooms clean and uncluttered. “Negative space is quite calming,” she says. It’s important to keep the feel airy and light, and crowding a space can defeat that goal. That includes lighting. Keep the home devoid of unsightly lines and wires, and use glass or Lucite lamps to add a modern touch. Even more, Garrigues advises to keep accessories—especially overtly nautical ones—to a minimum. She says something as simple as a basket with shells in it adds enough coastal impact to a modern home. She also suggests incorporating patio furnishings inside the home to keep a casual yet outdoorsy feel. Cream, offwhite, blue and green hues make a home instantly relaxed and coastal. “Even if you mix and match indoor and outdoor furniture, be sure to bring the upholstery colors together by adding complementary pillows that will bring color into a room,” she says. With so many flooring material options, Garrigues says keeping to a light color will enhance the seaside look. She says using a stone floor for the entryway or bathroom and mixing in wood flooring for other parts of the home might be the perfect blend. “Just add a darker rug on the light floors to anchor the room,” Garrigues advises.
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Island Notes BY L I S ET T E H I LTO N
body & soul The hand weights are so yesterday. So is the loneliness of the long-distance runner. It’s time to shake it up this year through a whole new approach to fitness—and a few of these fun options.
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No-boredom workouts! L Mix it up a little with these fun fitness regimens.
ongtime Palm Beach personal trainer Craig Campbell knows what’s hot and what’s not among local fitness buffs. Campbell, who co-owns Palm Beach Fitness with his wife Aprill, says gone are the days of going to the gym and doing the same workout time and time again. Change is good, Campbell says. “A lot of trendy stuff is high-intensity interval training, so you’re getting cardio and resistance training at the same time,” Campbell says. “Shorter, more intense workouts are kind of what it’s all about.” But high-intensity training isn’t for everyone. Functional training is in demand, according to Campbell. That focuses on maintaining strength, balance, movement and flexibility. Still another trend: boutique gyms that have a focus or brand, such as CrossFit, spinning, boxing, circuit training, boot camps and more. The great news is there’s no getting bored. Campbell encourages his personal training clients to do a little bit of everything, from gym workouts to yoga and Pilates. A traditional sport that has become increasingly popular with fitness fans is boxing, and Boxfit Palm Beach head trainer and owner Ian Curran is at the forefront in Palm Beach. Born and reared in England, Curran worked for the Queen’s cousin, the Duke of Westminster, as a wine sommelier and later as a fitness trainer to royalty. During those years,
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he traveled the world, learning from sports superstars in boxing, kickboxing, soccer and more. In addition to boosting strength and cardio respiratory fitness, boxing improves a number of other fitness-related skills, from balance and coordination to reactivity and agility, Curran says. “It improves your golf game and also your tennis game, as well as leaves you with a great overall feeling of well-being,” he says. “It’s also the best thing to de-stress. With a burn rate of 1,000-plus calories per session, there’s nothing that compares. That’s why Victoria’s Secret models, high-level executives, hedge fund managers, brokers, actors, athletes, CEOs, doctors and company leaders are drawn to our facility.” Spinning off a new program from a more traditional discipline is the hallmark of the Pure Barre franchise. Founded by dancer, choreographer and fitness guru Carrie Rezabek Dorr, the Pure Barre exercise and lifestyle brand has taken the U.S. by storm. Diane Rico, of Pure Barre West Palm Beach, says clients can see results in as little as 10 classes. “Pure Barre is a full-body workout combining elements of Pilates and ballet,” Rico says. “It utilizes small isometric movements at the ballet barre, working the muscles to fatigue and immediately stretching them back out. Pure Barre is great for strengthening and is low impact; therefore, [it’s] safe on the joints and to do every day.” If hitting a gym or a dance studio is not your cup of tea, you can always take to the waves on a stand-up paddleboard (S.U.P.)—and do a little yoga besides. Eau Spa, at 100 S. Ocean Blvd. in Manalapan, offers yearround private S.U.P. yoga lessons, as well as a sprinkling of S.U.P. yoga classes during summer months. The full-body workout offers physical and mental benefits, giving those who dare a remarkable sense of balance, power, heart health, weight loss and stress relief, according to Eau Spa. Private lessons at the resort are by appointment only, depending on weather conditions. Individual private lessons are $160. Package pricing is available. For more information, call 561/540-4960, visit eauspa.com or email concierge@eauspa.com.
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Where to go for what: GYM: Palm Beach Fitness 165 Chilean Ave. Palm Beach pbfitness.net 561/655-5554 Offers personal training, stretch training, free weights, nautilus strength, cardio workouts, Precor, Cybex and Stairmaster. SPINNING: Velocity Cycling Studio 321 S. Dixie Highway West Palm Beach 561/247-2453 vcyclingstudio.com CROSSFIT: CrossFit CityPlace 2400 S. Dixie Highway West Palm Beach 561/366-9348 crossfitcityplace.com BOXING: Boxfit Palm Beach 208 S. Olive Ave. West Palm Beach 561/331-8137 boxfitpalmbeach.com YOGA: Haute Yoga Palm Beach 340 Royal Poinciana Way, #332B Palm Beach 561/514-9098 hauteyogapalmbeach.com PILATES AND BALLET: Pure Barre Palm Beach Gardens 11290 Legacy Ave., Suite K120 Palm Beach Gardens 561/622-7006 purebarre.com SUP YOGA: Eau Palm Beach Resort & Spa 100 S. Ocean Blvd. Manalapan 561/533-6000
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S pecial A dver t ising S ect ion
Betteridge
236 Worth Avenue · 561/655.5850 · Betteridge.com
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Betteridge: A Palm Beach Institution Running the gamut from jewels and antiques to watches, silver and gifts, this venerated establishment in a landmark setting is a destination for discerning shoppers from all around the world. The Betteridge name in jewelry dates to the 1700s in Birmingham, England. Betteridge settled in the U.S. in 1897, and Terry Betteridge is currently the fourth-generation jeweler and owner of four Betteridge locations. Betteridge Palm Beach is in the historically preserved Greenleaf & Crosby shop —a Worth Avenue landmark since the 1930s. The store is a beautiful Old World setting with cases and wall units from the days of Henry Flagler. Betteridge is a tribute to the individuality of the contemporary shopper, offering a range of fine jewelry from antique and estate jewelry to classic diamond, gemstone and pearl jewelry.
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It is home to Verdura, Nicholas Varney, Mark Davis, Goshwara, Bielka, Paul Morelli, Paolo Costagli, Robert Procop, Dorota, Peggy S. Guinness, Judy Geib and Ivanka Trump. Customer service is truly the Betteridge hallmark. Services on premises include jewelry repair and construction, jewelry design, appraising and purchasing. Staff experience exceeds 125 years in fine jewelry! “There is no other shop in Palm Beach with the variety of merchandise or the range of services offered at Betteridge,” says manager Inez Fogel Heery. “Back-to-back shows from November through April offer something for
3 5 everyone, and customer service is our priority every day of the year.” 1) Verdura “Theodora” 75th Anniversary Cuff Bracelet, $97,500 2) Betteridge Collection Invisibly-Set Sapphire & Diamond Door Knocker Earrings, $22,500 3) Judy Geib Handmade Emerald & 24k Yellow Gold Necklace, $49,600 4) Estate Collection Diamond & Emerald Bypass Ring, $17,500 5) Mark Davis Vintage Bakelite bangle inlaid with Bakelite stations studded in 18K gold bezel set Spessarite Garnets and Peridots, $7,700
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Island Notes
BY NILA DO SIM O N
beauty
Take the new age approach to aging
It’s about time we let age come along with beauty, not before it. Today’s anti-aging cosmetics are packed with innovative scientific studies that enhance your beauty as the birthdays keep coming.
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[ B E A U T Y ]
REFRESHING ROUTINE This emollient and potent treatment is designed to restore the skin while the body is at rest, its most receptive treatment time. The Le Metier de Beaute Rejuvenating Anti-Aging Night Crème encourages an improved appearance in fine lines, wrinkles and pore size. (Neiman Marcus Palm Beach, 151 Worth Ave., 561/805-6150)
BRING ON THE BRIGHTNESS Indulge in the innovative anti-aging technology of Supremÿa: Phytocomplex LC12 in SisleyParis’s Supremya At Night Anti-Aging Eye Serum. The formula is enriched with active ingredients that target dark circles, puffiness, lack of firmness in the eyelids, crow’s feet and wrinkles. (Neiman Marcus Palm Beach, 151 Worth Ave., 561/805-6150)
HAIR TODAY Packed with Gatuline®AgeDefense extracted from walnuts that provide protection against free radicals to help slow the aging process, the Phytodensium Shampoo works to replenish and rejuvenate hair while recapturing the qualities of younger-looking locks: density, elasticity, strength and luster. (Frank Cassi Beauty, 125 Worth Ave., 561/833-7883)
FACE MAGIC
REPAIR CARE Remedy dry, unmanageable hair and turn it soft and silky with the Fekkai PrX Reparatives Collection, which includes an elixir, shampoo, conditioner and masque. Strands are left smooth, healthy-looking and smelling of a ravishing creamy vanilla and exotic sandalwood scent. (Frederic Fekkai, 301 Australian Ave., 561/833-9930)
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Now this is what we call a magic wand! This special professional filler by Hermetise targets wrinkles and restructures them with its mix of powerful plant extracts and other ingredients. And the Hermetise peeling mask purifies and refines skin, restoring its luminosity and silky texture. Hermetise peeling mask and professional filler. Le Visage, 150 Worth Ave., 877/687-6734)
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EYE SEE Brighten and hydrate the under-eye area while firming it with Kate Somerville’s +Retinol Firming Eye Cream. The retinol formula improves the skin texture, and the gold applicator tip cools on contact. (The Spa at Four Seasons Resort Palm Beach, 2800 S. Ocean Blvd., 561/533-3715)
LAYER ON THE LUXURY La Prairie’s Skin Caviar Essence-in-Lotion is an essential step missing from your beauty routine. Original and innovative, Skin Caviar is the only cosmetic in its class to use caviar water, which lifts, firms, hydrates and smooths skin while minimizing pores and improving skin elasticity. (Neiman Marcus, 151 Worth Ave., 561/805-6150, neimanmarcus.com)
BODY WORKS Give your entire body a royal treatment with the Hydropeptide Active Body Scrub, which exfoliates the skin while nourishing it. (Eau Spa, 100 S. Ocean Blvd., 561/540-4960)
Graceful Aging When advising customers on anti-aging products, Le Visage skin care specialist Lindsey Booth asks two main questions: What is the product’s purpose, and what ingredients are in it that will help you achieve desired results? Those questions have helped Le Visage customers achieve a luxurious, individualized experience each time they step inside the Palm Beach boutique and spa. Here, Booth gives her five best tips on how to prevent the appearance of aging:
COLLAGEN: “One of the things we lose as we age is collagen, which is a very important ingredient, so be sure to look for it in high concentration.” BEE PRODUCTS: “Products like royal jelly have a reparative effect for lines and wrinkles, and will penetrate the deeper layers of the skin.”
PEPTIDE BLENDS: “Some women make the mistake in thinking all they need is a moisturizer. While that’s important, if you’re not using a moisturizer that’s high in a peptide blend along with collagen, it isn’t doing an effective enough job on its own.”
important to preparing the canvas that you’re applying treatment to.” SUN PROTECTION: “Always use an SPF. It’s hot and it’s sunny in Palm Beach. Be sure to always use an SPF, even if it’s blended in your makeup.”
CLEAN THE SKIN: “Cleaning the skin properly and using a gentle exfoliator is very
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www.prettyballerinas.us
150 Worth Avenue - 130 - 33480 Palm Beach - Florida - Tel: 561 659 6670
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Island Notes
eat & drink
BY L I B BY VO LGY ES
TRENDSETTERS Chefs at Palm Beach’s poshest restaurants respond to national dining trends by forging new ones.
Green Cay kale salad from Eau Palm Beach Resort
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Classic Innovation
Our chefs don’t follow flavors of the week—they create their own.
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hat is old is new again—everyone in Palm Beach knows that. Just ask the chefs of Palm Beach, who, despite trends like kale everything, cauliflower rice and elevated toast, know that classic food is always in season. Take the dynamic chef duo Josh Thomsen and Manlee Siu at Eau Palm Beach. Thomsen serves as executive chef at Eau Palm Beach, and Siu is the chef de cuisine at Angle. They joined the Palm Beach food scene from Agricola Eatery in New Jersey last year, bring-
ing with them a keen interest in local produce. Siu, for instance, somehow manages to incorporate current food trends into the menu without falling into the food trend trap. “I don’t believe that because it’s a trend, we’re going to do it,” Siu says. “Every region and every location is going to be different. Just because someone’s doing, say, tomatoes or cherries, everyone’s doing something with that. I’m not going to do that as a trend, because it’s not growing here. I don’t think Chef (Thomsen) and I follow trends.”
Still, their menus can’t help but reflect some of the national consumer interests, even if they don’t realize it: for example, their methods of fermented foods and their heavy reliance on local, seasonal produce. “I’m not reinventing the wheel—it’s something someone’s always done,” Siu says, about her keen interest in fermenting foods. “I’m just presenting it in a more formal setting. And I’m doing it because it’s the only way to stay true to what we’re preaching, which is stay local and preserve the seasons.”
Right, Josh Thomsen and Manlee Siu; below, roasted oyster mushroom, Kai Kai farm squash, sweet mini pepper, lentil, black quinoa, farro baby carrots and Green Cay dill flower in a mushroom broth
“I don’t believe that because it’s a trend, we’re going to do it,” Siu says. “Every region and every location is going to be different.”
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“I do want to do more trendy stuff, but it’s a matter of working it into the menu,” Coughlin says. “You kind of have to go very slowly (with changes).”
Top, Chesterfield Hotel Executive Chef Gerard
LIBBY VOLGYES
Coughlin; right, the ceviche trio
During the summer, as the growing season dies down and the farms close, she kicks into high gear with her pickling and begins preserving the carrots, ramps, okra and green beans, something that excites Siu for prolonging vegetables’ longevity. “The season’s over, but we’re still able to put them on the menu,” she says. Thomsen echoes Siu’s belief of staying above the trends rather than following them. “For the longest time—and Manlee and I have been together for the longest time—out here we call it farm-to-table and out there, they call it cooking,” Thomsen says. “We almost get offended when people call it farm-to-table.” And in regard to fermenting? “Mother Nature gave us amazing stuff, and Manlee wants to preserve it so we can have it in different parts of the year,” Thomsen says. Over at Temple Orange—or TO, as Thomsen affectionately calls it—he’s tackling the
problematic lionfish and serving it fish ‘n’ chips style. “We say it’s trendy, but let’s be serious,” Thomsen says. “Lionfish is a problem. How could I make something palatable that’s a garbage fish? I thought fish ‘n’ chips. It works.” Up the street at the Chesterfield, Executive Chef Gerard Coughlin travels to the Chesterfield’s sister hotels in London to trade ideas and see what’s trending. Last year, he created a snapper ceviche that’s been particularly popular with diners. “I do want to do more trendy stuff, but it’s a matter of working it into the menu,” Coughlin says. “You kind of have to go very slowly (with changes).” The ceviche is a hamachi, tuna and salmon
ceviche trio flash-marinated on the plate with lime juice and served with a bit of radish, cucumber, green onion, chives, dill and cilantro. The restaurant finishes it with a touch of soy sauce and sesame oil and serves it as an appetizer. Then there’s Coughlin’s foray into fresh pasta. “Fresh pastas are starting to become really popular,” Coughlin says. “I made some the other day here. I watched a YouTube [video]; you can make it without a machine.” Bice, which opened in Palm Beach in 1990, is no stranger to fresh pasta and recently expanded its offerings to include gluten-free pasta. It now offers a gluten-free penne and occasionally gluten-free spaghetti, in addition to its deliWORTH AVENUE
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cious and famed risotto, which is also gluten-free. “On the main menu, I change items once or twice a month,” Executive Chef Elmer Saravia says. “Signature dishes you don’t touch! You can change dressings, though— you can make it more twangy, (give them) more flavor.” Saravia has steered his menu to incorporate more local produce as well, using heirloom tomatoes from Walt’s Heirloom Tomatoes and buying local microgreens. He sources his seafood from Independent Seafoods and looks for local fish as well. He also has a vegetable platter for guests that
Top, Bice Executive Chef Elmer Saravia; below, tuna tartare with avocado and cucumber relish
LIBBY VOLGYES
“Its flavors just are like music,” Saravia says. “You feel an explosion.”
desire a meat-free dinner, filled with eggplant, red onions, Belgian endive, radicchio, zucchini, asparagus and tomatoes marinated in extravirgin olive oil with salt, pepper and balsamic. And then there’s the app he can’t take off the menu: the artichoke dish. “Guests that we have here … they will come with a knife and look for me in the kitchen (if I take it off ),” Saravia jokes. There is one guest he has that comes and orders it whenever she misses her mother. It’s comprised of a whole artichoke braised with white wine and chicken stock with garlic, thyme, parsley, salt and pepper, and finished with lime juice, fresh mint and thyme. And as poke bowls sweep the nation, he demurely offers up a tuna tartare as an alternative option. “Its flavors just are like music,” Saravia says. “You feel an explosion.”
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The Leopard LOUNGE in The Chesterfield Hotel
~ TRADITIONAL ENGLISH AFTERNOON TEA $30 ~ While aromatic tea blends linger, our scones are served warm from the oven with Devonshire clotted cream and jam. Your appetite will whet as the dainty tea sandwiches arrive along side the delicious pastries and confections. Choose from a selection of loose leaf teas, and for a special treat, add a glass of Champagne or Wine.
~ OFFERING BREAKFAST, LUNCH, AND DINNER DAILY ~
~ L IVE ENTERTAINMENT 7 NIGHTS A WEEK ~
363 Cocoanut Row • Palm Beach, FL 33480 • (561) 659-5800 • www.ChesterfieldPB.com Quoted prices are exclusive of taxes and gratuities. Complimentary valet parking.
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Island Notes
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Garden to Glass Cocktails with a healthy provenance
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s farm-to-table cuisine continues sweeping the nation (can we just call it cooking now?), the latest trend to hit the bars also has root in restaurants’ soil: the garden-to-glass movement. Over at the Breakers, HMF incorporates as many fresh herbs as possible, plucked straight from its plush gardens and dropped into its opulent glassware. “Our garden is year-round in Florida,” says Nick Velardo, vice president of food and beverage for the Breakers. “Our rosemary grows year-round in summer, but many things are mostly in winter, which is wonderful because it’s our season.” In addition to rosemary, the garden also yields basil and lemongrass, popular components to top-selling cocktails. The lemongrass is an integral component over at HMF in the Mojito Royale: Bacardi, lemongrass kaffir lime syrup, lime, Champagne and club soda. And then there’s the GT. Just when you think you’ve seen all the cucumber drinks, this combines rosemary and cucumber in a surprising flavor profile. The GT combines Hendrick’s Gin with three Kirby cucumber slices (muddled and strained), a giant sprig of rosemary (also muddled and strained) and more of both to garnish. “The GT is a very, very herbal drink,” Velardo says. “You’re muddling a big sprig of rosemary and then garnishing it with another sprig. That’s a very herbaceous drink. It’s almost a whole cucumber in that drink. It’s really one that comes to mind when you think of a garden drink.” It’s no surprise to find such commitment from a resort that’s been using its garden in the kitchen for years. A cycle of gardeners grow herbs every day, with chefs following after them. “I think when you think of garden-to-glass cocktails, it appeals to people who like to think they’re having something healthy and putting something healthy in their bodies,” Velardo says. “Cocktails are like food, and they change seasonally and constantly evolve with the seasons. Cocktails should be created with great produce.”
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The GT 1 ½ ounces Hendricks Gin 3 Kirby cucumber slices, muddled and strained 1 sprig rosemary, muddled and strained Fill glass with tonic Garnish with sprig of rosemary and two slices of cucumber Mojito Royale (pictured) 1 ½ ounces Bacardi 1 ounce lemongrass kaffir lime syrup 3 wedges lime Add ice, shake and strain into a highball glass 2 ounces Champagne Top with club soda
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Island Notes
go & do
BY MICHEL L E F E R R A N D
Worth Avenue and Palm Beach have a yearlong roster of fun events—everything from pet parades to luxury auto shows and fine art extravaganzas. This is the place everywhere wants to be—and you’ll see why when you experience South Florida at its best.
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Island Notes
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On the Avenue HISTORIC WALKING TOURS OF WORTH AVENUE November 2016 through April 2017
Every Wednesday during the busiest season, November through April, local and international visitors have the opportunity to take an hour-long walking tour of Worth Avenue with historian Rick Rose. Through colorful anecdotes and commentary, the exciting and informative tours explore the origins and character of Worth Avenue, its unique architecture, the historical significance of many of its legendary landmarks and some of its famous residents. Tours begin at 11 a.m. in Via Amore (formerly Via Gucci) at 256 Worth Ave., across from Tiffany & Co. and Chanel. There is free two-hour parking along Worth Avenue or at the Apollo Parking lot behind Tiffany for a small fee. The cost for the tour is $10 per person, a portion of which benefits local charities.
CHRISTMAS TREE LIGHTING Nov. 29, 2016, 6-8 p.m.
Santa Claus, his elves and performers are decking the halls a little early this holiday season with Worth Avenue’s annual Christmas Tree Lighting, which marks the unofficial start to Palm Beach’s shopping season. Join the Worth Avenue Association and Palm Beach Mayor Gail Coniglio for the annual parade down Worth Avenue and a night of holiday cheer. The parade begins at 6 p.m., but the real magic will occur at 6:29 p.m., when the flip of a switch lights the magnificent 40-foot tree. Be sure to get there early for a chance to get your little ones on Santa’s lap.
PET PARADE AND CONTEST March 11, 2017, 9:30 a.m.-noon
Dogs, cats and bunnies, oh my! The furriest of friends are welcome at Worth Avenue’s 21st annual Pet Parade and Contest. With creative and entertaining categories such as Best Smile, Most Obedient and Best Tail Wagger, owners and their pets have the opportunity to win great prizes and compete for the honor of being one of Palm Beach’s doggy divas. Watch as mistress of ceremonies, Worth Avenue personality Sherry Frankel, introduces each four-legged contestant on this special dog day afternoon. Registration starts at 9:30 a.m., and the contest will begin at 10 a.m.
TURTLE TUESDAYS The second Tuesday of the month, June through October, 2017
Because Palm Beach is one of the largest nesting grounds for sea turtles in the world, Worth Avenue merchants, residents and visitors are welcomed on the second Tuesday of the month during nesting season to help collect and remove dangerous debris from the Palm Beaches. The town of Palm Beach and the Worth Avenue Association provide supplies for the event as part of their community service initiatives.
MUSIC TO MENUS Nov. 17, 2016, 4-9 p.m.
Ths progressive cocktail party with heavy hors d’ouevres hosted by the Worth Avenue Association and Worth Avenue magazine will allow guests to wander Worth Avenue’s romantic vias, serenaded by the Palm Beach Symphony, which will be playing throughout the event. Some stores will be open for extended hours, so guests can indulge in a little shopping as they go.
From top: Visitors gather on the Ave., images from last year’s Music to Menus, the Avenue’s Christmas tree, Turtle Tuesdays
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VALET A WHOLE NEW WAY. SALES | NEW CONSTRUCTION | CHARTER
150 Worth Avenue, Ste. 136
10 Spring Wharf
801 Seabreeze Blvd, Suite G
Palm Beach, Florida 33480
Newport, RI 02840
Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33316
+1 (561) 833-4462
Team@WorthAvenueYachts.com
www.WorthAvenueYachts.com
+1 (954) 703-5737
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Island Notes
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Don’t Miss These Annual Expos & Events PALM BEACH CAVALLINO CLASSIC Jan. 25–29, 2017
Palm Beach International Raceway and other area locations, 17047 Bee Line Highway, Jupiter, 561/994-1345 This event will feature a wide range of expensive exotic cars, and benefit different charities. Events include Classic Sport Sunday and the Rolls-Royce Reunion.
ART PALM BEACH Jan. 19-22, 2017
Palm Beach County Convention Center, 650 Okeechobee Blvd., West Palm Beach, 239/495-9834 Art Palm Beach will celebrate its 19th anniversary this year with its signature visual art, photography and design galleries showcasing contemporary and emerging artists.
PALM BEACH JEWELRY, ART & ANTIQUE SHOW Feb. 16–21, 2017
Palm Beach County Convention Center, 650 Okeechobee Blvd., West Palm Beach, 561/822-5440 Gathering more than 200 of the world’s top exhibitors, the show includes fine art, sculptures, textiles, jewelry and other antiques in a world-class art exhibition that attracts serious collectors as well as art aficionados.
ARTIGRAS FINE ARTS FESTIVAL Feb. 18–20, 2017
Abacoa Town Center, 1155 Main St., Jupiter, 561/748-3946 Combining activities, festival food, drinks and a variety of art, this non-traditional arts festival is an event for the whole family. Catering to all age groups, the lively, two-mile-long festival is a day well spent.
PALM BEACH FINE CRAFT SHOW Feb. 16–19, 2017
Palm Beach County Convention Center, 650 Okeechobee Blvd., West Palm Beach, 203/254-0486 More than 100 contemporary craft artists in wide-ranging mediums from glass and porcelain to baskets, jewelry and wearable art will take part in the prestigious Palm Beach Fine Craft Show.
PALM BEACH CONTEMPORARY ART SHOW March 10-12, 2017
Expo Center, South Florida Fairgrounds, 9067 Southern Blvd., West Palm Beach (one mile west of the Turnpike) This vibrant art show is the design and fashion event of the year—innovative and fresh, featuring 100 contemporary artists in an eclectic range of media.
A piece by So Young Park from the Palm Beach Fine Craft Show
For three days in April, downtown Delray Beach is engulfed by this signature craft show, which extends for more than 10 blocks down the center of Atlantic Avenue, and includes arts and crafts from more than 800 artists and exhibitors from across the country.
BARRETT-JACKSON CLASSIC CAR AUCTION April TBA, 2017
Expo Center at South Florida Fairgrounds, 9067 Southern Blvd., West Palm Beach, 480/663-6255 The only collectors’ car auction on the East Coast, the Barrett-Jackson Classic Car Auction remains one of South Florida’s favorite spring attractions, with millions of dollars’ worth of classics, memorabilia and related social events.
SUNFEST May 3-7, 2017
PALM BEACH INTERNATIONAL BOAT SHOW March 23-26, 2017
Entrances on Banyan Street, Clematis Street, Datura Avenue, Evernia Street and South Flagler Drive, West Palm Beach, 800/940-7642 Earning the title as one of the top 10 boat shows in the United States, the annual Palm Beach International Boat Show brings more than $350 million worth of yachts, boats and accessories from the world’s leading marine brands to West Palm’s scenic downtown waterfront.
The Waterfront at Downtown West Palm Beach, 561/659-5980 Dozens of local and nationally acclaimed pop, rock, indie, country and reggae acts fill three stages near the West Palm Beach waterfront, in Palm Beach County’s largest music and arts festival.
DELRAY AFFAIR April 7-9, 2017, 10 a.m.– 5 p.m.
Atlantic Avenue, Downtown Delray Beach, 561/278-0424 A piece by Ree Gallagher from the Palm Beach Contemporary Art Show
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Phone: (561) 482-8110 www.TriCountyAnimalRescue.com 21287 Boca Rio Road, Boca Raton, FL, 33433
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[ V I A S ]
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MAP ILLUSTRATION BY MICHAEL GUHL
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A Worth Avenue Treasure Hunt Discover the world of Worth Avenue’s charming vias. BY MEGA N K E A R N E Y
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he Worth Avenue vias— those hidden courtyards tucked along the Avenue— were designed especially by architect Addison Mizner to lend an aura of mystery and European ambience to the street. And the result was a whole dimension of charm that is rarely achieved in the world’s most legendary shopping streets. We took a long walk through the vias to experience them firsthand—and to provide our guests with a “treasure” map extolling their don’t-miss attributes. Ready, set, go!
VIA PARIGI:
FIND IT: Between Brown Harris Stevens and Il Papiro, 300 Block WHAT NOT TO MISS: Although the corridor that makes up the via may feel tiny at first, Via Parigi is anything but. Adorned by a trellis and intricate mosaic staircases, it opens up into a large outdoor terrace. A fountain is the centerpiece of Via Parigi, and abstract iron statues of the four seasons surround it. [ 1 ] This is also home to Stubbs and Wootton, one of Palm Beach’s trademark shoe salons, famous for its embroidered slippers.
VIA MIZNER:
FIND IT: Between Select Fine Art and Style Paris, 300 block WHAT NOT TO MISS: One of the most unique aspects of the via is its small graves, home to Mizner’s pet monkey Johnnie Brown [ 2 ] and Laddie, a dog that belonged to a later Mizner owner, Rose Sachs. As you walk around, if you look closely enough, you’ll see the faded
words “Via Mizner” engraved into a small fountain, reminding you exactly how much history encompasses this via.
VIA ROMA:
FIND IT: Between H.T. Stuart Jewelers and Mariko, 300 block WHAT NOT TO MISS: Via Roma may seem small at first glance, but when you reach the end of the thin corridor, be sure to look up at the intricate skylight [ 3 ] that shines almost as brightly as the jewelry in the window of H.T. Stuart Jewelers and Mariko.
VIA DEMARIO
FIND IT: Between Courage B and East Coast Jewelers/Patricia Robalino, 300 block WHAT NOT TO MISS: Before you enter the via, look up at the entrance and spot the regal lion head staring down at you and the beautiful architecture and columns surrounding it. Via DeMario is home to a classic statue surrounded by exotic orchids— pearl white when in full bloom. [ 6 ]
VIA AMORE:
FIND IT: Between Maus & Hoffman and Ralph Lauren, 300 block WHAT NOT TO MISS: If you’re looking for a true Italian feel, visit Via Mario. A fountain greets you at the entrance of the via, [ 4 ] and a reflecting pond lines the entryway and leads you to another eyecatching sculpture. If you want to have a secluded picnic or lunch, Via Mario is the place for you, as it has tables and chairs in every corner.
FIND IT: Between St. John Boutique and Island Company, 200 Block WHAT NOT TO MISS: Via Amore is filled with sculptures, art and has something eye-catching everywhere you look. Wrought iron gates encompass walls of the first entrance, and sculptures and fountains line each terrace. Lost? Be on the lookout for the mosaic compass [ 7 ] on the ground near Café Via Flora, a quiet café surrounded by trees, flowers and twinkling lights. Additionally, make sure to spot the can’t-miss mural in the via before enjoying a delicious lunch.
VIA BICE:
VIA ENCANTADA:
VIA MARIO:
FIND IT: Between Peter Millar and Trillion, 300 block WHAT NOT TO MISS: A blue-and-white arched walkway leads you to a courtyard and replica of Venus de Milo in Via Bice. The via is most notable for Bice, a restaurant with authentic Italian cuisine and romantic outdoor dining in a spacious courtyard. From an extensive pasta selection to desserts like tiramisu and sorbet, Bice offers a great lunch or dinner on the avenue. [ 5 ]
FIND IT: Between Maje and Sandro, 200 block WHAT NOT TO MISS: This whimsical via has yellow walls and stark white chandeliers, with pink and blue spiral staircases adding splashes of color. A pink iron rose is showcased within the via, adding to its playful ambience. [ 8 ]
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[ F O R
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Man Up
There are plenty of Worth Avenue diversions and fun shopping finds for the man about town. BY SHELLIE FRA I, LAUR A TO L L IVE R A N D STA F F
Get an old-fashioned gentleman’s shave at Leo’s Golden Razor, at 206 Brazilian Ave., 561/655-5631; the Everglades Barber Shop, at 411 Cocoanut Row, 561/445-3684; or Sunrise Barbershop, at 239 Sunrise Ave., 561/659-0464.
THE GREAT OUTDOORS
PERSONAL BEST
Eau Spa at Eau Palm Beach Resort offers a whole MENu designed to pamper guys, from the “Muscle Melter” deep tissue massage to a 90-minute “tuneup” that includes a “back-refining polish” hot stones massage and a mini facial. There’s even a Jet Lag Cure treatment for globetrotters. 100 S. Ocean Blvd., Manalapan, 561/540-4960
Go clubbing the old-fashioned way at the Palm Beach Par 3 Golf Course at 2345 S. Ocean Blvd. Named as one of the “Top 50 Most Fun Golf Courses in America” by Golf Digest, the oceanfront course boasts sparkling views. Top off the round with lunch at the on-site Al Fresco restaurant and bar for breakfast, lunch or dinner. Call 561/547-0598 for tee times. Take to the seas in grand style by buying or chartering a yacht. Visit Worth Avenue Yachts at 150 Worth Ave., Suite 136, 561/833-4462; or Ferretti Group at 125 Worth Ave., Suite 110, 561/249-4242. Down under has a whole different meaning at the Worth Avenue Pier Debris Dive Site. Schools of tropical fish flash among the spooky debris of the former Worth Avenue Pier. Erected in 1925 and damaged by hurricanes in the 1940s and 1960s, the pier was officially demolished in 1969. Enter the water in front of the clock tower at the end of Worth Avenue and dive at your leisure.
THE GREAT INDOORS
Ta-boo, Worth Avenue’s most iconic restaurant, has a dark bar and a good bartender or two. Have a very Palm Beach happy hour from 4 to 7 p.m. daily. 221 Worth Ave., 561/835-3500.
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It doesn’t get better than this.
All the best The reasons you shop on Worth Avenue are the same reasons you shop at Maus & Hoffman.
312 Worth Avenue • Palm Beach • (561) 655-1141 WWW.MAUSANDHOFFMAN.COM
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[ F O R
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O N L Y ] AMERICAN ALLIGATOR WALLET, $648 This alligator wallet is lined with calfskin. Brooks Brothers, 225C Worth Ave., 561/659-6464
High Style & High Tech Must-Haves Stock up on a litte swag for the man in your life. BY SH E L L IE F R A I A N D LAU RA TO L L I V ER
CUFFLINKS INC. BRUSHED SILVER 8GB USB FLASH DRIVE MONEY CLIP, $80 This money clip has a built-in flash drive that can store up to 1,750 songs, 10,000 photos or up to 10 hours of video. Neiman Marcus, 151 Worth Ave., 561/805-6150
QUIT YOUR JOB LUGGAGE TAG, $10 This luggage tag may give you a few ideas on that next getaway. Island Company, 256 Worth Ave., 561/655-3231
STELLE AUDIO PILLAR WIRELESS SPEAKER, $299 This speaker provides listeners with premium 360-degree sound. Play any music wirelessly with this Bluetooth-enabled device. Neiman Marcus, 151 Worth Ave., 561/805-6150
BOTTEGA VENETA WOVEN LEATHER BACKPACK, $3,500 This woven nubuck backpack features adjustable shoulder straps and multifunctional internal pockets for laptops and smartphones. Neiman Marcus, 151 Worth Ave., 561/805-6150
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BEATS BY DR. DRE POWERBEATS2 WIRELESS IN-EAR EARPHONES, $200 Plug out the noise and plug in to these wireless in-ear earphones. Neiman Marcus, 151 Worth Ave., 561/805-6150
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Worth Avenue ~ in the Hermès Courtyard 561 / 315 ~ 7828 www.SusanERiley.com
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Follow Follow Followus us @cjlaing us@cjlaing @cjlaing
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MARYANNA SUZANNA Specializing in imported Italian Maiolica and handblown Venetian Glass TABLEWARE • CENTERPIECES WALL PLAQUES • CACHEPOTS CERAMIC TABLES • URNS CHANDELIERS • MIRRORS • SILK FLOWERS
Extensive collection of chic and fun jewelry from PATRICE, ANGELA CAPUTI of Florence and SENT of Murano Visit Our Large Display Warehouse (by appointment) Shipping & Delivery Available
313½ Worth Avenue, Via Bice • Palm Beach, FL • 561.833.0204 maryannasuzanna_worth1617.indd 1
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Seaside Style
The easy Palm Beach aesthetic is part island style, part understated chic, with an eye toward tropical coastal living. P H O T O G R A P H Y B Y B I L LY C O L E M A N
Shot on location at Eau Palm Beach Resort & Spa
Agnona white blouse and Antonio Berardi white pants from Shari’s Place, earrings and bracelet from Mariko All clothing and accessories from stores on Worth Avenue, Palm Beach
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Mock turtleneck sweater from Maus & Hoffman, white shorts from Island Company, Tom Ford sunglasses from Edward Beiner
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HER: Blue and white striped off-the-shoulder blouse from CJ Laing, navy bottom from Vilebrequin, bag from Island Company, bracelet from Maryanna Suzanna, earrings and ring from Mariko HIM: Blue swim trunks from Vilebrequin, Tom Ford sunglasses from Edward Beiner
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Navy bikini from Vilebrequin and jewelry from Mariko
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White linen shirt from Vilbrequin, beige linen shorts from Island Company, belt from Maus & Hoffman, sandals from Via Capri
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PHOTOGRAPHER: Billy Coleman MODELS: Selena Weber/Next Model Management; Renato Freitas/Next Model Management STYLIST: Terri Dacquisto/Wilhelmina ART DIRECTORS: Lori Pierino, Valentine S. Fracassi HAIR: Paola Orlando with Frederic Fekkai products MAKEUP: Paola Orlando with Chanel cosmetics PHOTO ASSISTANTS: Miguel Mori DIGITAL TECH: Mike Iturrioz STYLIST ASSISTANT: Chloe Chin/Wilhelmina LOCATION: Eau Palm Beach Resort & Spa www.eaupalmbeach.com 100 S. Ocean Blvd., Manalapan, Fl 33462 561/533-6000
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Lareida navy button up from Shari’s Place, white shorts from Island Company, Givenchy bag from Neiman Marcus, belt from Marley’s, shoes from Susan Riley, Tom Ford sunglasses from Edward Beiner and necklace, ring and bracelet from Mariko
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HER: Roland Mouret dress and Roberto Cavalli bag from Shari’s Place, necklace from Mariko HIM: Navy shirt from Vilebrequin, navy blazer from Maus & Hoffman, Theory white pants from Neiman Marcus WORTH AVENUE
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PALM BEACH {A Primer} Who we are, historic moments and how to experience America’s legendary charmed island By Marie Speed & John Thomason
he Palm Beach story started more than a century ago when the 16-mile-long barrier island
(anchored by Henry Flagler’s Royal Poinciana Hotel) was ordained a winter retreat for America’s golden-age society A list. In those early days, Worth Avenue was a sleepy little tropical outpost with an alligator concession, a far cry from today’s designer boutiques and luxe restaurants and blocks of parked Bentleys. Over the years, as Palm Beach solidified its status as one of the country’s social capitals, an insular privileged community emerged, marked by grand mansions and galas, celebrities and industrialists. These days, the community still retains that cachet although in a decidedly younger, more egalitarian style. It’s still rich, still exceptional and still eccentric—but changing with the times. Here’s a snapshot of the Palm Beach mystique, then and now.
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The Tradition
Palm Beach—with the richest ZIP code in the country (33480) and a tropical rainforest climate—has always operated on a seasonal cycle that has become less pronounced these days but generally steps up after Christmas when the snowbirds arrive (the population can reach 40,000), and ends around Easter (population dropping to 9,000) when they leave for their other mansions in New York or the Hamptons or Greenwich or Newport. As the island has become home to more young families, the population is less seasonal, with older, more “ordinary” (at least in Palm Beach terms) homes at the north end of the island and the mega mansions in enclaves like Billionaire’s Row (south of Southern Boulevard but north of Sloan’s Curve) or along the ocean north of there. Children go to Palm Beach Day School, and everyone belongs to a private club. The Palm Beach B&T (Bath & Tennis) is a family favorite; the Everglades Club is the most exclusive. Charity work is very big here (as well it should be), and balls and benefits are a way of life, from the very formal Red Cross Ball to the galas for the Palm Beach Zoo, The Norton Museum, the Preservation Foundation ... and about a million more.
The Palm Beach look is studiously casual, with bright colors, a cashmere sweater loosely knotted around the neck, bare legs, white pants, Jack Rogers sandals or Stubbs & Wootton slippers. Everyone is very thin, ponytails are big, blonde is standard. Men drift toward an aging preppie look, with a little Italian tailoring thrown in for good measure. Loafers by Gucci. Despite its great wealth and legacy of privilege, there is still a small-town vibe in Palm Beach. Locals like to catch breakfast at Green’s Pharmacy, ride bikes, go to church on Sundays and shop at the same stores their parents patronized. Although Fitzgerald famously said, “Let me tell you about the very rich. They are different from you and me,” this may not be the case these days in Palm Beach. At least not on the surface.
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From top, strolling Worth Avenue and tea at The Chesterfield
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WAYS TO EXPERIENCE PALM BEACH THAT WON’T BREAK THE BANK
• Take a walking, driving or biking tour of the island with your own private guide through Leslie Diver’s Island Living Tours (561/868-7944; islandlivingpb.com). Driving tours range from 90 minutes to 2.5 hours and include a walk through the vias on Worth Avenue. Biking tours (bikes not included—you can rent them at the Palm Beach Bicycle Trail Shop) are 90 minutes each, and are a great way to ogle the Island’s grand landmarked estates designed by the “Fab Four” of esteemed Palm Beach architects: Addison Mizner, Marion Sims Wyeth, John Volk and Maurice Fatio. • Do a little stargazing with an affordable lunch, starting with celebrity spotting at Starbucks (150 Worth Ave. in the Esplanade). Less expensive dining is also available at Pizza Al Fresco (14 Via Mizner), Piccolo Mondo (87 Via Mizner) and Echo Palm Beach (230 Sunrise Ave.). • Live it up like a pro—but at a fraction of the price—at the Palm Beach Par 3 Golf Course at 2345 S. Ocean Blvd. (561/547-0598) • Have a civilized cuppa at The Chesterfield Palm Beach’s afternoon tea, with sandwiches and scones, daily from 1 to 5 p.m. in the library and courtyard. (363 Cocoanut Row, 561/659-5800) • Window-shop on Worth Avenue (the real street of dreams) and wander through the vias for a distinctly European strolling experience. Have a glass of wine in one, buy a hat in another. Turn off your phone. Take the long way home.
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Did you know?
q The Cartier Panther [designed in
The Breakers was originally christened the Palm Beach Inn, until it was destroyed by fire. When he rebuilt it, developer Henry Flagler named it The Breakers after a eureka moment while watching the waves break along the shoreline of the Atlantic Ocean. t
u In the 1920s, there
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE PALM BEACH COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY
t WHITE SHOES FOR MEN WERE INTRODUCED IN PALM BEACH IN THE LATE 19TH CENTURY AT A FLAGLER-OWNED SHOE STORE. THEY BECAME POPULAR WORLDWIDE, BUT IF YOU WEAR THEM AFTER LABOR DAY, YOU MAY STILL RISK EXCOMMUNICATION.
1917] was inspired by Florida panthers that roamed Palm Beach in the 1900s.
was a “dress censor” employed on the beach at The Breakers to ensure propriety in attire—no skin showing and dark stockings, please. t The sense of exclusivity associated with Palm Beach may owe its roots to sewing-machine heir and early resident Paris Singer. He decreed that no membership to his Everglades Club would be guaranteed for next season, keeping every socialite on his or her best behavior: One woman was dropped from the club’s roster because she laughed too loud at a dinner party.
GET HAPPY: Places to eat, drink & be merry
THE COLONY HOTEL
Stroll down Memory Lane on Friday nights (and hit the dance floor), with Motown and all-time favorites of the 1960s. (155 Hammon Ave., 561/655-5430)
THE CHESTERFIELD It’s always a party in the decadent Leopard Lounge where “happy hour” takes on a whole new meaning—early as well as late. (363 Cocoanut Row, 561/659-5800)
BRAZILIAN COURT HOTEL & BEACH CLUB
Enjoy cocktails under the stars on the patio, or at the stylish bar at Café Boulud. (301 Australian Ave., 561/655-7740)
HMF AT THE BREAKERS PALM BEACH
Partake in retro cocktails in the luxe lounge at this historic (and very hot) nightspot, or try The Seafood Bar for a great ocean view. (One S. County Road, 561/655-6611)
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PHOTO COURTESY OF PRESERVATION FOUNDATION OF PALM BEACH
From left, the Providencia, first postmaster E.M. Brelsford and the Kennedy compound back in the day (Note: The 1878 wreck of the Providencia is the theme of the Preservation Foundation of Palm Beach’s “1878 Series” events this year.)
TIME TRAVELING: WILD LIFE Palm Beach’s earliest pioneers discovered a region populated by black bears, wildcats and giant turtles. They killed the latter to make stew, but found that the whites of their eggs wouldn’t cook. ROAD TRIPS There was, alas, no Publix down the street. Pioneer families traveled to Titusville, by boat, 160 miles away for groceries, which hopefully didn’t spoil by the time they dropped anchor back home. To obtain lumber, it meant a 300-mile trek to Jacksonville. COCONUTTY E.M. Brelsford, the first postmaster of Palm Beach, named the town after the coconut palms that grew near Lake Worth. The trees were planted following the wreck of the Providencia, a ship from Trinidad, bound for Spain, which ran aground on Palm Beach in 1878. It carried 20,000 coconuts’ worth of cargo, which pioneers sold to locals for two and a half cents apiece.
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How Palm Beach Was
THE FIRST LADIES WHO LUNCHED Palm Beach’s galas raise millions for charitable causes every season, a generosity that arguably owes its origins to the Ladies Aid Society, organized by R.B. Moore in 1888. She hosted a fundraiser to build the town’s first schoolhouse, raising $226 on sewn and embroidered articles. County officials chipped in an extra $200 to seal the deal. OH, HENRY Henry Flagler broke ground on the Royal Poinciana Hotel in 1893. It took a thousand workmen to complete what was then the largest wooden-structured hotel in the world. Not to be outdone, he would go on to build the Breakers and Whitehall, among other Palm Beach institutions. The latter came about after his third wife, Mary Lily Kenan, remarked that she wanted to live in a marble mansion. You could say she gilded him into it. DON’T ROCK THE BOAT Root canals are painful enough, but imagine enduring one in a laboratory that swayed back and forth. A pioneer dentist named Dr. F.H.
Houghton established a practice in his Palm Beach houseboat in the late 1880s. Historian Wilma Spencer states the obvious in Palm Beach: A Century of Heritage: “Although the floating office boasted every modern machine and appliance, Dr. Houghton urged patients to make appointments that coincided with calm weather.” DESIGNING MAN With so many paradisiac buildings sprouting up on an island 16 miles long, somebody had to design them. The most famous architect of this American Eden was the portly, whimsical Addison Mizner, though his arrival was inauspicious. He “came to Palm Beach from New York on a stretcher,” writes Spencer. He suffered from necrosis, constricted lungs and heart palpitations, but was able to convalesce in the calm Florida climate. When Mizner descended on the island, he was not only penniless but $6,000 in debt. He turned his fortunes around by placing his signature goulash of influences on countless Palm Beach edifices. One scholar described
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PHOTOS COURTESY OF THE PALM BEACH COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY
FIVE THINGS
YOU MUST BUY BEFORE YOU LEAVE WORTH AVENUE: A “T” bracelet from Tiffany & Co., 259 Worth Ave., 561/659-6090
Chanel No. 5 from Chanel, 301 Worth Ave., 561/655-1550
his style as “Spanish-MoorishRomanesque-Gothic-Renaissance-Bull Market-Damn the Expense.” The results were sometimes as eccentric as he was. He completed one villa without a bathroom, built another with an outdoor staircase that led to nowhere, and finished another without a staircase between the first and second floors. THE WINTER WHITE HOUSE In the early 1930s, bootlegger Joseph P. Kennedy purchased the Palm Beach manse La Guerida for $115,000, about a third of its market value. It would become the Kennedy compound for generations, a place where both Joseph and his son John would indulge their sexual dalliances— Joseph with film starlet Gloria Swanson, and John, much later, with a roster of mistresses that was rumored to be in the hundreds. Only when he was convalescing from back surgery, in the mid1950s, did JFK keep his libido in check. While recuperating at La Guerida, his wife arranged for mutual friend Grace Kelly to show up in a sexy nurse outfit and administer a feeding. John didn’t even notice her. As Murray Weiss and Bill Hoffman report it in Palm Beach Babylon, Kelly lamented, “I must be losing it.”
A Christmas candle from Ralph Lauren, 300 Worth Ave., 561/651-3900
Coconut Lust dessert from Ta-boó, 221 Worth Ave., 561/835-3500
From top, Gloria Swanson and Grace Kelly
A pair of slippers from Stubbs & Wootton, 1 Via Parigi, 561/655-6857.
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LO CAL COL OR El Solano
In Like Flynt
‘Imagine’ That
Residents were more accepting of El Salano’s next renter, John Lennon. The rock icon, Yoko Ono and their children stayed in the mansion in 1980, where he reportedly strolled the property in T-shirts and cutoff shorts, strumming his guitar and noodling with new songs. He rarely strayed outside the residence, though he was initially turned away from brunch at The Breakers because he wasn’t wearing a tie. He planned on buying the property, a venture that was cut short, along with his life, in December 1980. After his assassination, more than 100 fans gathered at El Salano for a vigil that included oceanside Beatles sing-alongs.
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El Salano
That’s One Pricy Sponge Cake
A customer at Ta-boo once offered a waiter $500 to supply Twinkies in 30 minutes. The waiter scrambled to a market, bought the snack cakes and served them on a plate with raspberry sauce and whipped cream. The customer tipped $175 on a $600 bill.
An Inconvenient Death
When resident Frank Lahainer, an Italian count and real-estate tycoon, died from leukemia at age 90, in March of 1995, his 57-year-old wife Gianna inherited his $300 million fortune. The timing of her husband’s passing was inconvenient, however: Palm Beach was still in the midst of its social season, and the widowed Lahainer didn’t want to miss any of it. So she postponed the funeral and had her husband embalmed and stored at the Quattlebaum-Holleman Funeral Home for 40 days, during which time she partied on a yacht with Ivana Trump, among other diversions. “Three days after he left,” writes journalist Ronald Kessler in The Season, “she threw a party at the Biltmore with beluga caviar and Dom Perignon Champagne.”
Dressed For Transgress
The late Neil Cargile was one of the most colorful characters in the annals of Palm Beach. A recreational airline pilot profiled by The New Yorker, he dressed in flamboyant women’s clothes and called himself “SheNeil,” though his masculine voice and demeanor gave residents no illusions about his gender. Once, when police pulled him over for drunk driving, he insisted he was being singled out because of his red sequined minidress.
We Hope She Was Insured
Every parking lot in Palm Beach is its own luxury car show, so it pays to be extra cautious when you’re behind the wheel. When an elderly driver lost control of her car in the parking lot of the Palm Beach Publix, she hit a Rolls-Royce, a Mercedes, a Porsche, a Cadillac and … an Isuzu pickup truck.
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE PALM BEACH COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY
Brownie McLean, the now nearly 100-yearold dowager duchess of Palm Beach, shocked neighbors when she rented her mansion El Salano to porn publisher Larry Flynt in the late 1970s. (He concealed his business under the benign moniker H & F Realty, which stood for “Hustler & Flynt.”) Locals discovered his presence after they noticed the island’s private mansions turning up in Hustler photo shoots. Responding to the outrage, Flynt was quoted as saying, “I’m not here because I’m looking to get accepted by a group of pompous, unimportant people.” Nonetheless, his publication enjoyed a local boost in sales. According to a clerk at the nowdefunct Main Street News, “every little old lady” bought the magazine.
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POP QUIZ:
MATCH THESE PUBLIC FIGURES WITH THE PALM BEACH DESTINATION THEY’VE REPORTEDLY FREQUENTED. 1
JENNY MCCARTHY, IVANA TRUMP, BROOKE SHIELDS, BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN
A
TA-BOÓ
2
BILL BLASS, CATHERINE DENEUVE, MARGARET THATCHER
B
251 NIGHTCLUB
3
LIBERACE, BING CROSBY, RICHARD NIXON, JANE MANSFIELD
C
PETITE MARMITE
4
CELINE DION, ARETHA FRANKLIN, ROD STEWART, ROXANNA PULITZER
D
LEOPARD LOUNGE AT THE CHESTERFIELD
Lilly Pulitzer
John F. Kennedy
Butch Trucks
CELEBRITY SPOTTING
Henry Paulson
In addition to heavy hitters like Rod Stewart, Rush Limbaugh, Howard Stern and Donald Trump, Palm Beach has been home to the following notable residents.
Dina Merrill
Vera Wang
George Hamilton
James Patterson
Yoko Ono Answers: 1. B, 2. D, 3. C, 4. A
SOURCES: WILMA SPENCER’S PALM BEACH: A CENTURY OF HERITAGE; RONALD KESSLER’S THE SEASON; MURRAY WEISS AND BILL HOFFMAN’S PALM BEACH BABYLON
Douglas Fairbanks Jr.
John Lennon WORTH AVENUE
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A WALK ON THE WILD SIDE Not everything in Palm Beach is man-made; there are a few ways to dip into the island’s natural world, too.
p The municipal beach at the foot of Worth Avenue offers Caribbean-blue waters and broad beaches for sunbathing, paddleboarding and snorkeling. Up the beach just off The Breakers is one of South Florida’s most popular dive spots— The Breakers Reef—which is two miles long and teeming with sea life, from corals, sponges and tropical fish to moray eels and even the occasional whale shark.
u The Four Arts Botanical Gardens (2 Four Arts Plaza, Palm Beach) date to 1938, with seven gardens illustrating the special plants and landscape design best suited for a subtropical climate; the adjacent Philip Hulitar Sculpture Garden adds art to the mix in an outdoor museum-like setting.
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p Those exotic squawkers wheeling overhead are wild quaker parrots that lend Palm Beach—and most of South Florida—its special tropical charm. In fact, Palm Beach is home to all kinds of wildlife, from its many seabirds like terns and ospreys and wading birds like blue herons to what swims offshore.
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p Pan’s Garden offers a time out from shopping and strolling in a pocket park that serves as a native Florida refuge. Only steps from Worth Avenue, the park is named for the bronze statue of Pan of Rohallion at the garden’s entrance pool. The half-acre garden was once a parking lot; now it features more than 300 species of native trees, shrubs, grasses and wild flowers, many of which are endangered. The garden’s western boundary is the tiled Casa Apava wall ca. 1920s that was “rescued” from the once-sprawling estate of the same name before it was carved up into smaller parcels.
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t The Lake Trail, which follows the Intracoastal on the western side of the island, offers a great view of the Intracoastal and an up-close look at the homes and tropical vegetation of Palm Beach. Start at the North Bridge, where E.R. Bradley’s casino once was (all that remains on the site now is a fireplace)( 2 ), and proceed past The Biltmore and the houses on Hi-Mount Road built on what is known as the coral cut, to an 1897 house called “The Vicarage,” once home to swashbuckling Douglas Fairbanks Jr. The northernmost end of the island is a broad dock once home to Annie’s Tackle Shop and Dock( 1 ), a mainstay for boaters and residents alike that was torn down in the early 1980s.
p
bike trail continues WORTH AVENUE
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Estate pineapple brooch in 18-karat gold with Madeira citrines and diamonds, Robert Procop “American Glamour” earrings in 18-karat gold with orange and yellow sapphires and diamonds, Peggy Stephaich Guinness quartz cabochon in 22-karat gold, and Goshwara mandarin garnet and citrine tassel necklace in 18-karat gold, all from Betteridge
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Sun-kissed sparklers These delicious tropical jewels are some of Worth Avenue’s finest. PHOTOGRAPHY BY MARC HICKMAN
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18-karat diamond enamel leaf earrings and necklace, 18-karat Kurt Wayne emerald frog cuff links and 18-karat diamond emerald lizard pin, all from Patti Esbia
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Handcrafted floral motif gemstone bracelet in 18-karat white gold with moonstones, sapphires and diamonds; chandelier earrings with opal and diamonds in platinum; and custommade hand-carved oval aquamarine ring with sapphires and diamonds, all from Hamilton Jewlers WORTH AVENUE
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Sapphire cushion cut 1.01-carat diamond ring, sapphire and diamond Carissa necklace, and pear-shaped sapphire and diamond hoops, all from Graff Diamonds
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Mikado Flamenco bracelet in 18-karat rose gold with brown pavé diamonds, pavéline bracelet in 18-karat rose with white pavé diamonds, Bouton pavé brown diamond ring in 18-karat rose gold, paisley drop diamond ring in 18-karat gold, Mikado pendant in blue chalcedony and 18-karat gold, Mikado bouquet cacholong pendant in 18-karat rose gold, Mikado bouquet quartz fairy pendant in 18-karat rose gold, calchalong stone Bouton ring in 18-karat gold and pavé diamond drop clasp in 18-karat rose gold, all from Tamara Comolli Fine Jewelry Collection
ART DIRECTORS/STYLISTS: Lori Pierino, Valentine S. Fracassi WORTH AVENUE
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Blue Notes This season’s Palm Beach resort fashion is jazzy and bright—and hits all the right notes. PHOTOGRAPHY BY B I L LY C O L E M A N
Shot on location at Eau Palm Beach Resort & Spa
MODEL: Dusica Savic/Next Model Management STYLIST: Terri Dacquisto/Wilhelmina ART DIRECTOR: Lori Pierino HAIR: Paola Orlando with Frederic Fekkai products MAKEUP: Paola Orlando with Chanel cosmetics PHOTO ASSISTANT: Miguel Mori DIGITAL TECH: Mike Iturrioz STYLIST ASSISTANT: Chloe Chin/Wilhelmina LOCATION: Eau Palm Beach Resort & Spa www.eaupalmbeach.com 100 S. Ocean Blvd., Manalapan, Fl 33462 561/533-6000
All clothing and accessories from stores on Worth Avenue, Palm Beach
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Blue dress by St. John and earrings from Mystique Created Gems
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Midnight blue dress by Herve Leger and Tom Ford shoe from Neiman Marcus, bracelet and earrings from Mystique Created Gems
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Lela Rose top from Neiman Marcus, bracelet from Mystique Created Gems, earrings from Patricia Robalino WORTH AVENUE
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Red dress by Kaufman Franco from Neiman Marcus, earrings and bracelet from Patricia Robalino OPPOSITE PAGE: Givenchy sequin dress and Tom Ford shoes from Neiman Marcus, earrings and bracelet from Patricia Robalino
Eau Palm Beach Resort & Spa www.eaupalmbeach.com Eau Palm Beach (a AAA five-diamond award winner) represents the next generation of Palm Beach resort luxury— fresh, whimsical and unselfconsciously stylish. With rooms recently redone by Jonathan Adler, an oceanfront location and a playful spa (don’t overlook the Self-Centered Garden) that attracts guests from throughout the region and across the country, this resort has it all. Dining at Eau is also remarkable with fine cuisine at several different venues—overseen by star chef Josh Thomsen. Other resort attributes include two pools, a tricked–out teen center, tennis courts, and of course the award-winning Eau Spa.
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Vizcaya
South Florida has it all
Florida’s Gold Coast has something for everyone, from major sports teams to wild animals roaming free to stately gilded mansions and museums. Get out there! BY JACKIE SMITH
Arts & Culture NORTON MUSEUM OF ART, WEST PALM BEACH
One of the Southeast’s premier art museums, as well as the largest in Florida, the Norton Museum of Art has been a cultural fixture in West Palm Beach since 1941. Founded by Ralph Hubbard Norton and wife Elizabeth Calhoun Norton, the museum is known for the quality of its permanent collection, traveling exhibitions and innovative educational programs. The internationally renowned permanent collection features more than 7,000 works concentrated in European, American, Chinese and contemporary art and photography. The museum also offers a year-round schedule of special exhibitions. Free public tours are available, and private group tours may be arranged. Tours offer the opportunity to wander through the museum’s exhibits or follow a guide through the Museum Collection or special selected exhibitions.
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The Norton Museum of Art, at 1451 S. Olive Ave., is closed on Mondays and on major holidays. Hours are Tuesday to Sunday from noon to 5 p.m. But on Thursdays, hours are extended to 9 p.m. for its weekly Art After Dark program. Visitors 21 and older get to sip on a glass or two of wine while indulging in gourmet dishes from the museum’s café, Fratelli Lyon. They can also enjoy DIY art projects, lectures, live music and film screenings. Museum admission is free for all visitors through December 2018. For more information, call 561/832-5196 or visit norton.org.
PAN’S GARDEN, PALM BEACH
Standing with flute in hand, the bronze statue of Pan of Rohallion welcomes visitors to this green oasis in the center of Palm Beach. Pan’s Garden is a half acre filled with southern magnolia trees, scarlet milkweeds and about 300 more species of native Florida vegetation. Visitors can walk through the tranquil pathways
or relax on a bench under the garden’s roofed, open pavilion. At 386 Hibiscus Ave., Pan’s Garden is open to the public weekdays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. General admission to the gardens is free. For more information, call 561/832-0731.
FLAGLER MUSEUM, PALM BEACH
The development of Florida’s economy and status as a tourist destination can be attributed to Henry Flagler, who built the Florida East Coast Railway from Jacksonville to Key West. Flagler and his wife Mary Lily Kenan spent their winters in the Beaux-Arts mansion Whitehall, known today as the Flagler Museum. Today, it is a beautiful, well-preserved national historic landmark. Visitors to the museum can take audio, self-guided brochure tours, self-guided smart-device tours or docent-led tours of the estate and Henry Flagler’s private railcar, built in 1886 for his personal use. Visitors can also download the free Flagler Museum app on
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$5 for children ages 5 and older and free for members; however, the gardens are closed during the month of August. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday. For information, call 561/832-5328 or visit ansg.org.
RAYMOND F. KRAVIS CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS, WEST PALM BEACH
The Norton Museum of Art
their smartphones prior to their visit to learn more about the history of the museum as well as have access to audio tours, an orientation video, events calendar and more. Those who visit on Sunday at 3:30 p.m. have the pleasure of hearing Whitehall’s weekly organ demonstration. At the corner of Cocoanut Row and Whitehall Way, the museum is open Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from noon to 5 p.m. Regular admission is $18 for adults, $10 for kids ages 13 to 17, $3 for children ages 6 to 12, and free for children 6 and younger. For more information call 561/655-2833 or visit flaglermuseum.us.
ANN NORTON SCULPTURE GARDENS, WEST PALM BEACH
After marrying Ralph Hubbard Norton, founder of the Norton Museum of Art, in 1947, sculptor and art collector Ann Von Weaver began to fill their property, now the Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens, with more than 100 works. Visitors to the historical site can wander through the property and admire Ann’s artwork, including the nine monumental sculptures she left behind, eight in brick and one in granite. In addition to her love for sculpting, Mrs. Norton had a passion for wildlife, and wanted her work to be placed among plants and animals. The luscious garden holds native plants as well as more than 300 rare palms and welcomes birds and other animals that seasonally migrate to the area. Admissions to the gardens and home, at 2051 S. Flagler Drive, is $10 for adults, $8 for seniors,
Since its initial grand opening in November of 1992, the Kravis Center has grown into one of the premier destinations in Palm Beach County for plays, concerts, arts education and more. At 701 Okeechobee Blvd., the center hosts about 550 performances by national and international artists each season, with nearly 50,000 visitors each season. The elegant, state-of-the-art Alexander W. Dreyfoos Jr. Concert Hall is the largest venue, with 2,195 seats. For the box office, call 561/832-7469 or 800/572-8471.
known artists as well as Florida artists. The museum is home to more than 4,000 works from artists like Picasso and Degas to contemporary American art, West African tribal art and pre-Columbian Art. Children and adults can participate in regularly scheduled classes and programs or sign up for four-to-sixweek art courses for beginners and experienced artists at the museum’s art school. The museum, at 501 Plaza Real, is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday; 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday; and noon to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Admission is $12 for adults and $10 for seniors. Students with ID and children 12 and younger are admitted free. However, during the months of June, July and August, admission is free the first Sunday of each month. For current exhibits, call 561/392-2500 or visit bocamuseum.org.
MORIKAMI MUSEUM AND JAPANESE GARDENS, DELRAY BEACH
The only museum in the United States devoted exclusively to Japanese culture can be found 35 minutes down the road from Worth Avenue. The Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens features a large museum that showcases Japanese art as well as unusual objects from everyday life, past and present. It also features one of the largest authentic Japanese gardens in the United States. Visitors may roam through six diverse gardens—each inspired by a different time period and style of Japanese gardening—explore one of the rotating gallery exhibitions, or attend a tea ceremony performed monthly in the Seishinan tea house. The museum, at 4000 Morikami Park Road, is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday. Admission is $15 for adults, $13 for seniors, $11 for students and $9 for children ages 6 to 17. Call 561/495-0233 or visit morikami.org for more information.
BOCA RATON MUSEUM OF ART, BOCA RATON
The Boca Raton Museum of Art serves the Boca Raton community as a cultural and art hot spot with its two-story museum as well as its own outdoor sculpture garden that houses more than 20 installations by internationally
The Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens
BONNET HOUSE MUSEUM AND GARDENS, FORT LAUDERDALE
Nestled between the Atlantic Ocean and the Intracoastal Waterway is the historic Bonnet House Museum and Gardens, the former home of artists Frederic and Evelyn Bartlett. Now on the National Register of Historic Places, the estate’s décor has Caribbean-style influences as well as art, china, animal figures and flowers collected by all three of Frederic Bartlett’s wives. The Old Florida yet whimsical feel continues throughout the grounds, where monkeys and swans can be seen. Aside from viewing the house, art and gardens, visitors can sign up for orchid, birding and art classes or attend one of the live performances hosted at the house veranda once a month from January through April. WORTH AVENUE
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Admission is $20 for adults and $16 for children ages 6 to 12. Children younger than 6 and Bonnet House Members enjoy free admission. Tours of just the garden are $10. The Bonnet House, at 900 N. Birch Road, is open for public tours from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday. For more information, call 954/563-5393 or visit bonnethouse.org.
VIZCAYA MUSEUM AND GARDENS, MIAMI
Another grand house to explore is Vizcaya, a 34-room villa overlooking Biscayne Bay, built by industrialist James Deering in 1916. Only 10 minutes from downtown Miami, the expansive Italian estate and bayfront gardens are examples of the late Gilded Age at its best.
Public guided tours are $5 and typically last 45 minutes; a 90-minute audio tour is also offered for the same price. Admission is $18 for adults, $12 for seniors (62 years and older with ID), $10 for students (with ID) and visitors using wheelchairs, $6 for children ages 6 to 12 and free for children 5 and younger. The museum is open daily, except Tuesdays, from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. For more information, call 305/250-9133 or visit vizcaya.org.
NEW WORLD SYMPHONY, SOUTH BEACH
Home to highly gifted graduates of the nation’s most distinguished music programs, the New World Symphony ensemble, established in 1987 under the artistic direction of Michael Tilson Thomas, offers classical music to the South Florida community. In 2011, the New World Center, designed by Frank Gehry, opened on Lincoln Road featuring a large performance hall and a 7,000-square-foot outdoor projection wall, where guests can enjoy select events throughout the season while relaxing on the lawn, free of charge. The New World Center also offers 30- to 45-minute guided tours for $5; space is limited to the first 20 people. For the box office, call 305/673-3331 or visit nws.edu.
FAMILY OUTINGS
Tom Mathieu & Company 312-D Worth Avenue, Palm Beach | 561-655-5880
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*Jessica Klewicki Glynn Photography
PALM BEACH ZOO, WEST PALM BEACH
With more than 250 species and 1,400 animals, the Palm Beach Zoo at Dreher Park features unique creatures that thrive in Florida’s subtropical climate, from turtles to jaguars to giant anteaters. In keeping with its mission to propagate endangered species, the zoo is home to one-third of the existing endangered population of bush dogs, a wild dog species from South and Central America. Within the past few years, a baby giant anteater, a baby Chinese muntjac and a baby Mexican spider monkey were born at the zoo, proving its success in increasing the population of vulnerable species. Visitors can partake in the Sloth Experience and/or Aldabra Tortoise Experience—feeding, bathing and taking photographs with the animals for $35 per person (member prices are $5 cheaper). At 1301 Summit Blvd., the Palm Beach
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Zoo is open daily (except Thanksgiving and Christmas) from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Regular admission is $19.50 for adults, $17.50 for seniors and $14.50 for children ages 3 to 12. Children younger than 3 enter for free. The zoo also offers a dual discovery pass in conjunction with South Florida Science Center and Aquarium; the buyer can purchase a full-day general admission pass at the Palm Beach Zoo and use the same pass that day, or weeks later, for another day at the South Florida Science Center and Aquarium, or vice versa. Call 561/547-9453 or visit palmbeachzoo. org for more information.
can feed for $1 or brush for no additional fee. Hours for Lion Country Safari, at 2003 Lion Country Safari Road, are 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. The zoo is open every day of the year, including Christmas and New Year’s Day. Admission is $33 for visitors ages 10-64, $29.50 for seniors ages 65 and older and $24 for children ages 3 to 9. Parking is $7 per vehicle. If you purchase your tickets online, you save $2 and get free
parking. For information, call 561/793-1084 or visit lioncountrysafari.com.
SOUTH FLORIDA SCIENCE CENTER AND AQUARIUM, WEST PALM BEACH
The South Florida Science Center and Aquarium features a giant freshwater and saltwater aquarium housing local and exotic marine life, a digital planetarium, a conservation research
LION COUNTRY SAFARI, LOXAHATCHEE
Lion Country Safari sprawls over 600 acres in Palm Beach County and is home to more than 900 animals living in large, natural exhibits. While driving through the safari park, tourists can catch glimpses of llamas, lions, wildebeests, chimpanzees and more. There are also private guided tours which include three animal encounters. In Safari World, the walkthrough area of the park, visitors can explore a plethora of bird, reptile and mammal exhibits. For $5, you get the opportunity to ride a camel; if you’re looking for something still fun but with your feet firmly planted on the ground, you can feed the giraffes their breakfast for a small fee of $2.50. There is also a petting zoo that contains goats and sheep, which guests Lion Country Safari
329 Worth Avenue 561-655-5770 www.marikopalmbeach.com
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station and an interactive Everglades exhibit. At 4801 Dreher Trail N., the Science Center is open Mondays through Fridays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays. General admission is $15 for adults, $13 for seniors (60-plus years) and $11 for children between the ages of 3 and 12. Admission to the planetarium is $5 extra for adults and seniors and $3 extra for children. For information, call 561/832-1988 or visit sfsciencecenter.org.
LOGGERHEAD MARINELIFE CENTER Loggerhead Marinelife Center is a nonprofit education and ocean conservation facility dedicated to sea turtles and other marine life. The center features a variety of exhibits, live sea turtles and other coastal creatures, including a prehistoric Archelon sea turtle replica, saltwater aquaria and displays of local wildlife, as well as educational displays about South Florida’s marine environment. The center is open daily, closed only for major holidays. Call 561/627-8280.
Loggerhead Marinelife Center
RAPIDS WATER PARK, WEST PALM BEACH
which moves 30,000 gallons of water per minute to create a simulated wave system for riders to body-board over a fixed surface at 35 miles per hour. Visitors can also rent a “Big Surf Cabana,” complete with flat-screen TV, personal food and beverage service and more. The park is open daily from March 15 through April 27 and May 17 to Sept. 1. Regular admission is $41.99 per person Monday through Friday and $46.99 per person on weekends. Children younger than 2 are admitted free. For hours and more information, call 561/848-6272 or visit rapidswaterpark.com.
Rapids, South Florida’s premier family waterpark, is on North Military Trail in West Palm Beach and features 30 acres of attractions. Thrill-seeking visitors can hurtle down one of 35 water slides, including Big Thunder, on which riders fly 20 miles per hour down a 45-degree drop. In 2011, the World Waterpark Association and the International Association of Amusement Parks & Attractions named Rapids Racer “Best Ride.” Rapids’ newest, and one of its wettest, attractions is FlowRider,
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MARLINS PARK, MIAMI
Home to the Miami Marlins, this stadium was completed in March 2012, just in time for baseball season. Two miles west of downtown Miami at 501 Marlins Way in Little Havana, the park took over the former Miami Orange Bowl site and holds 37,000 seats. The stadium features a retractable roof to shield spectators from Florida’s scorching sun and frequent summer rain, making the baseball experience much more enjoyable for Floridians and visitors. Catch a game or take a behind-the-scenes tour of Marlins Park, which includes visits to the field, clubhouse, batting cage area and the “Art in Public Places” art found throughout the facility. Tours cost $10 per person and operate Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., except on Marlins home game days. Call 305/480-1300 or visit miami. marlins.mlb.com. FOR MORE MAJOR LEAGUE SPORTS: • From August to December, the Miami Dolphins tackle NFL competition at Sun Life Stadium. Call 888/FINS-TIX. • The Miami Heat—2006, 2012 and 2013 NBA champs—hit the hardwood from midOctober to mid-May at AmericanAirlines Arena in Miami. Call 786/777-1250. • Around the same time, from September through April, the NHL’s Florida Panthers take to the ice at Sunrise’s BB&T Center. Call 954/835-7000.
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Seeing is Believing! Imagine an entire jewelry store dedicated to making your jewelry dreams come true! Since 1978 Mystique has meticulously handcrafted fine jewelry ideal for traveling and perfect for your active lifestyle. Enjoy the look, the feel, & the prestige of fine jewelry.
THE EVERGLADES & AIRBOAT RIDES
A World Heritage Site and the largest subtropical wilderness in the world, the “River of Grass” is two and a half hours south of Palm Beach and is best accessed by a guided tour. Two-hour tram tours at Shark Valley (305/221-8455) introduce visitors to the wildlife and nature of the Everglades, and include the opportunity to walk up the Shark Valley observation tower for a panoramic view of the heart of the Everglades. At Everglades Safari Park, on Southwest Eighth Street in Miami, sightseers can watch the Alligator Wildlife Nature Show, walk down the Jungle Trail and take a 30-to-40-minute airboat ride through the wetlands. The park is open seven days a week from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Call 305/226-6923 for reservations and more information.
Eternity Bands in 14K gold, starting at $450
Mystique of Palm Beach
250 WORTH AVENUE , PALM BEACH FL (561) 655-30 08 | MYSTIQUEGEMS.COM
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Great Finds Your guide to some of Worth Avenue’s finest shops.
Betteridge Jewelers Pre-owned Van Cleef & Arpels “Socrate” dress wristwatch, with the 18-karat white gold and diamond case designed as a dimensional cluster of small diamond-set flowers. The front opens to reveal a round-shaped motherof-pearl dial. Set on an auberginecolored leather strap accented by white gold flowers; $62,000.
Tourneau TNY Series GMT
120% Lino
Kassatly’s Cashmere sweaters, imported from Scotland and offered in more than 60 fashionable colors and assorted designs.
120% Lino is not only known for its fashionable Italian linen collections, but also for its great fashion accessories. Currently, 120% Lino offers the newest exclusive handbags from Italian designer Gianni Chiarini. The gold lamé linen and snakeskin clutches and handbags are at once understated yet luxurious, just like 120% Lino. Prices: $170 - $210.
Shari’s Place Exclusive Baroque pearl earrings with emerald gemstones and white diamond detailing; White mink shrug with pave beading and silk lining by Carolyn Rowan for Shari’s Place.
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Tamara Comolli Fine Jewelry Collection CURRICULUM VITAE ring with white diamonds and white diamond pavé (6.25 cts), 18-karat yellow gold, $47,480. Our Ring Collection, based on playful, sliding sapphires, diamonds and colored gemstones is a masterpiece of goldsmith craftsmanship.
10/24/16 4:55 PM
Special Advertising Section
Mystique of Palm Beach Seeing is believing! Undetectable diamond-quality cubic zirconia Margarita earrings set in solid 14-karat white gold, from $295.
Hamilton Jewelers Exclusively in Palm Beach at Hamilton, Chantecler Jewelry expresses the passion and elegance of the luxurious and exotic island of Capri. Founded upon classic ideals of beautiful women, celebrities and La Dolce Vita lifestyle, the house continues to uphold the principles of passion and heritage with loyal admirers from heirs of dynasties and monarchy to classic icons like Jacqueline Kennedy and Grace Kelly.
Olivia Preckel Casual & chic Olivia Preckel fox fur vest is a statement piece for your wardrobe. Ideal for looking glamorous and feeling warm while walking in the city, traveling and enjoying the months of snow. It’s a designer piece to treasure.
Patricia Robalino Designs Exclusive Design 18-karat gold Mother of Pearl earrings with white and smoky topaz and diamonds.
Mariko Faux pearl and coral brooch measured diagonally 5” X 5”
Rangoni Firenze Shoes Modern & 100% Italian, the “Smile” in Blue Rombi print comes from our newest collection, “Valentina Rangoni.”
A. Lange & Söhne Saxonia Moon Phase, L086.5 caliber, 40.0 mm pink gold case.
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Special Advertising Section
Great Finds
Amina Rubinacci The jewelry is handmade with one-of a-kind designs. The designer uses materials: Baroque pearls, jade, real stones, genuine coins, Mother of Pearl, and silver and gold tone findings.
Jaeger LeCoultre
Reverso Tribute Calendar Watch
Seminole Casino Coconut Creek Gift Cards Vilebrequin Family fun in the sun with matching Father & Son “Ancre de Chine” print swim trunks.
Share the love this holiday season with a Seminole Casino Gift Card. Seminole Casino Gift Cards are good at all Seminole Casino Coconut Creek restaurants, including NYY Steak, Sorrisi and more. To purchase gift cards, visit CasinoCoco.com.
Four Seasons Resort Palm Beach
Island Company Merchant striped linen shirt, 100% linen, $145.
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At the Four Seasons Resort Palm Beach, Swell boutique carries a range of both renowned and up-and-coming designers, including James Perse, famous particularly among T-shirt fans. James Perse designed a Palm Beach inspired T-shirt, featuring the names of all of our local beaches, exclusively for and only available at Swell. $60 for men’s and women’s, and $37 for kids. Also available in hoodies and other fun apparel.
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Special Advertising Section
Esplanade Palm Beach
Lobster risotto at
Renato’s Restaurant.
The Esplanade is the perfect destination for exquisite shopping and gourmet dining in Palm Beach. Explore the latest fashions, accessories, shoes, giftware and more at stores such as Saks Fifth Avenue, Neiman Marcus, Gucci, Louis Vuitton, Akris, Christofle, Amina Rubinacci, Roberta Roller Rabbit, Golfino, Altona, Provident Jewelry, and much more. Enjoy a tasty cup of coffee or tea at Starbucks, their only location on the island.
Via Mizner Explore one-of a-kind stores and fine restaurants.
Maus & Hoffman Cashmere and silk v-necks are featherweight and completely comfortable. Knitted in Scotland of 70% cashmere/30% silk in a fine gauge knit that makes for comfort alone, or layered. In lilac, natural, red, light blue and royal, as shown, and black, not shown. Sizes M,L,XL,XXXL.
Worth Avenue Yachts A private yacht vacation is the perfect holiday gift! Contact Worth Avenue Yachts today at Charters@ WorthAvenueYachts.com.
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Excell Auto Group This holiday give the unexpected! Contact Excell Auto Group today at sales@excellauto.com.
10/24/16 2:24 PM
Special Advertising Section
Great Finds
Panerai
Luminor Due 3 Days Automatic Acciaio – 45mm. $10,500
Graff Diamonds
Maryanna Suzanna ANGELA CAPUTI, Firenze—Ever elegant, sophisticated and chic. Latest and largest collection available only at Maryanna Suzanna.
With its diverse form and natural beauty, the delicate butterfly is an enduring influence for Graff Diamonds. Represented in a striking literal translation, the Princess Butterfly features a highly-sculptural butterfly depicted by an outline of tapered baguette gemstones, which define the pavé wings and conceal a hidden timepiece.
Edward Beiner Chopard’s ultra-feminine and sophisticated optics from the Imperiale collection embody true luxury. Inspired by the unique and refined detailing of the jewelry collection that recalls the work of the finest goldsmiths, these full rim 23-karat gold plated frames in shiny dark Havana feature a rounded temple that have been finished in regal accents and precious stones that radiate. Available exclusively at Edward Beiner.
Patti Esbia Antique & Estate Jewelry Antique large enameled floral brooch in gold with diamonds and rubies.
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Trianon Engina shells cufflinks and studs set with ruby cabochons and 18-karat yellow gold.
10/24/16 2:24 PM
256 Worth Avenue, Via Amore
561/665-1996 bigpoodle256@att.net
Charlotte Kellogg 256 Worth Avenue, Via Amore
561/820-2407 www.charlottekellogg.com
It All Happens in Via Amore
Sherry Frankel's Melangerie
Marley’s Palm Beach Collection Specializing in Classic, Easy Care Fashions
Jackie Rogers 256 Worth Avenue, Via Amore 561/469-9950
1000 Park Ave, New York, NY 10028 212/535-5155
256 Worth Avenue, Via Amore
561/721-1022 www.marleyspalmbeachcollection.com
jackierogers.com
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[ D I N I N G
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Dining
Worth Avenue’s restaurants are an integral part of the Avenue experience, whether you are dining al fresco in a courtyard or enjoying fine dining at an iconic culinary landmark. The Avenue may be all about shopping, but it also offers a few tasteful diversions. BICE
CUISINE: Northern Italian ATMOSPHERE: This warm but very sleek and contemporary
Avenue landmark is see-and-be-seen country with beautiful people, a large European contingent and a certain international glamour. It’s also a power lunch spot and has a breezy outdoor patio. ADDRESS: 313 1/2 Worth Ave. PHONE: 835-1600 WEBSITE: palmbeach.bicegroup.com
CAFÉ VIA FLORA
CUISINE: Mediterranean/American ATMOSPHERE: Café Via Flora offers casual courtyard seating in a ro-
mantic via and is a less expensive option than most Palm Beach restaurants. ADDRESS: 240 Worth Ave. (Via Flora) PHONE: 514-4959
PIZZA AL FRESCO
CUISINE: Italian ATMOSPHERE: Country Italian in a casual outdoor patio ADDRESS: 14 Via Mizner PHONE: 832-0032 WEBSITE: pizzaalfresco.com
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RENATO’S
CUISINE: Continental with an Italian flair ATMOSPHERE: French country ADDRESS: 87 Via Mizner PHONE: 655-9752 WEBSITE: renatospalmbeach.com
STARBUCKS
CUISINE: Coffee shop ATMOSPHERE: Typical Starbucks, with an upscale island spin ADDRESS: 150 Worth Ave., No. 110 PHONE: 651-7740
TA-BÔO
CUISINE: American eclectic ATMOSPHERE: Casual contemporary with a clubby British colonial vibe ADDRESS: 221 Worth Ave. PHONE: 835-3500 WEBSITE: taboorestaurant.com
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Luxury Accommodations Palm Beach hotels are legendary for luxury and ser-
vice—and a real amenity for the Worth Avenue visitor. We suggest you make a holiday of it and rediscover the pleasures of top-ranked lodging and luxury. THE BREAKERS 1 S. County Road 561/655-6611, thebreakers.com The Breakers is synonymous with Palm Beach history and grandeur and is known for its sweeping hotel amenities—five pools, nine restaurants, a fabulous spa, endless beachfront. But we don’t want you to overlook The Seafood Bar, with its bright oceanfront setting, or HMF, for a sumptuous retro bar experience.
FOUR SEASONS RESORT PALM BEACH 2800 S. Ocean Blvd. 561/582-2800, fourseasons. com/palmbeach One of South Florida’s most elegant oceanfront boutique hotels offers impeccable amenities, but our don’t-miss here is the beachfront Atlantic Bar & Grill, where a new menu draws inspiration from street fare and food carts. Enjoy beach food favorites from around the globe, like ahi tuna and Atlantic salmon chirashi, rooted in Southeast Asian cuisine.
The Ocean Grill at The Breakers
Featuring
THE BRAZILIAN COURT HOTEL & BEACH CLUB 301 Australian Ave. 561/655-7740, thebraziliancourt.com The graceful Brazilian Court has everything—including a phenomenal Daniel Boulud restaurant—but an essential experience here is the Frédéric Fekkai Salon & Spa. After opening in 2004, it quickly became a notable luxury in the Palm Beach area, with a talented staff and top-notch amenities. This 1,600-square-foot boutique offers styling, coloring, manicures and pedicures, massages, waxing and other spa treatments complete with 14 stations overlooking the pool.
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Main Course Salads Pizzas
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Best Hamburger in Palm Beach
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Casual dining on Worth Avenue Lunch | Dinner
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Pasta
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Fresh Dover Sole Meuniére
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Roasted Mahogany Duck
Sunday Brunch
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Prime Steaks
Open 7 days a week
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Fresh Fish daily
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Homemade Desserts
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Espresso & Cappuccino
Continuous dining from 11:30 am to 10:00 pm
221 Worth Avenue | Palm Beach | 561-835-3500 Visit us online at Taboorestaurant.com taboo_Worth1516.indd 1
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THE CHESTERFIELD PALM BEACH 363 Cocoanut Row 561/659-5800, chesterfieldpb.com It’s veddy British, veddy cozy and a delight of a hotel—one of the island’s really great spots—but we’d have to make our favorite
Receive a COMPLIMENTARY UPGRADE* and BREAKFAST or cocktails for $5 Book online at tidelineresort.com. Rate code UBC5. *Based on availability. 2 8 4 2 S O U T H O C E A N B LV D, PA L M B E AC H F L 3 3 4 8 0 5 6 1 . 5 4 0. 6 4 4 0
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[ D I N I N G & A C C O M M O DAT I O N S ] The courtyard pool at Eau Palm Beach Resort
The Elegance of a Landmark Hotel u Discreet Service and Exceptional Comfort Cuisine from Café Boulud u Styling by Frédéric Fekkai Salon & Spa Worth Avenue Shopping and Art
301 AustrAliAn Ave., PAlm BeAch Fl 33480 t 561.655.7740 | www.theBrAziliAncourt.com R E C E N T
A C C O L A D E S
Top Three Boutique/Lifestyle Hotels - Smart Meetings 2016, 2015 World’s Best Hotels - Travel + Leisure 2016, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2010 Condé Nast Gold List - 2015, 2014, 2013, 2011, 2010, 2008 Ranked #1 in Florida - Condé Nast Traveler Readers’ Choice Award 2013, 2012 Enduring Classics - Fodor’s 100 Hotel Awards 2013
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amenity The Leopard Lounge. Known as one of the best places to get a drink and people-watch, the venue has live entertainment every day of the week as well as great drink and food specials. If you’re out for the day, join The Chesterfield for afternoon tea from 1–5 p.m., complete with tiny sandwiches, scones and pastries.
EAU PALM BEACH RESORT 100 S. Ocean Blvd., Manalapan 561/533-6000, eaupalmbeach.com Eau is whimsical and fully loaded with luxury amenities, but we have to stake our don’t-miss claim on its fabulous Eau Spa, a lavish, 42,000-square-foot “water playground” complete with a bath lounge, salon, spa treatments, garden villas, DIY scrub and polish bar, fitness center and a “beautique.” Looking for a relaxing day to yourself? The spa offers a pass to the Self-Centered Garden with swinging chairs, pools and meditation areas for just $50.
THE COLONY PALM BEACH 155 Hammon Ave. 561/655-5430, thecolonypalmbeach.com The Colony is another classic Palm Beach address, with a pedigree and level of amenities that date to the days when the Duke and Duchess of Windsor were winter guests. We love, love, love it, but we have to say that, aside from the great Royal Room Cabaret (another bonus), we are partial to Motown
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Friday Nights at the Polo Lounge. Once a week, The Colony takes guests back to the Temptations era with the band Memory Lane performing Motown favorites from the ‘60s to the ‘80s. You’ll be dancing approximately eight minutes after you arrive.
PALM BEACH HISTORIC INN 365 S. County Road 561/832-4009, palmbeachhistoricinn.com In the heart of Palm Beach, within walking distance of shops, restaurants and the beach, the Palm Beach Historic Inn is equipped with modern amenities—yet stays true to its historic charm. Only a short distance away are golf courses, luxury spas, bike trails and many other attractions unique to the Palm Beach area. After a long day of exploring the area, relax with an in-room spa treatment.
TIDELINE OCEAN RESORT & SPA 2842 S. Ocean Blvd. 561/540-6440, tidelineresort.com The Tideline Ocean Resort & Spa is a charming boutique hotel that enjoys direct beach access, an on-site spa and lavish shopping opportunities on nearby Worth Avenue. As if the unforgettable sea vistas from the hotel rooms weren’t enough, Brandon’s by the Beach oceanfront restaurant puts the vacation in dinnertime. Warm tropical breezes included.
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250 Worth Avenue
561/833-1973 www.shopbibi.com
General Counsel, The Van Buren Family Foundation Non-Profit; Not-for-Profit; Charities
Worth A Look
Bibi’s (Doggy) Boutique
Cynthia Van Buren Attorney at Law
250 Worth Avenue, Suite 307G
561/779-5118 www.cvbesq@bellsouth.net
Kenneth Beer, M.D., PA
Dea Luxury Italian Linens 341 Worth Avenue
561/366-1203 deapalmbeach@dealuxurylinens.com
www.deaitaly.com
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Kenneth Beer, M.D., PA West Palm Beach Office: Jupiter Office: 1500 North Dixie Highway 641 University Blvd, Ste 212 561/655-9055 561/932-1707
mdunn@palmbeachcosmetic.com palmbeachcosmetic.com
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[ P A R T I N G
S H O T ]
Suzi Goldsmith
This year, the Association’s charitable donations have gone to the dogs. BY NILA DO SIMON
W
hen Suzi Goldsmith, executive director of Tri-County Animal Rescue, was notified her organization would be the upcoming beneficiary of Worth Avenue Association’s Historical Walking Tour of Worth Avenue, she jumped for joy. Literally. “I started screaming so loud that all four dogs in my office started howling with me,” she says of the reactions from the two poodles, Irish wolfhound and Great Pyrenees. Knowing Goldsmith and the animal rescue’s history, it’s understandable how she could be flooded with emotions. Twenty years ago, Goldsmith set out on a mission to create a no-kill shelter to care for animals until a loving home adopted them. Where some local shelters have a euthanizing policy because of budgetary constraints, there is no situation in which Tri-County will euthanize a healthy animal. To date, more than 50,000 cats and dogs in the tri-county area have been saved from being euthanized. “We have no boundaries,” Goldsmith says. “If somebody in the Bahamas, Istanbul or anywhere else needs help, we help them. Once, we drove 13 hours to Alabama to a puppy mill to receive 60 puppies. Those dogs had never been out of chicken coops before. One puppy had never had its feet on grass.” With no government assistance, Tri-County Animal Rescue relies solely on donations to safely keep the more than 400 animals currently held in the Boca Raton shelter. Goldsmith says approximately 94 percent of her current donations come from Palm Beach residents. The shelter’s association with Worth Avenue isn’t a new one. As a regular participant in the Avenue’s annual pet parade,
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dogs and cats from the shelter are brought to the event for potential adoption. A 6-month-old terrier, Cuddles, was even adopted, thanks to the help of Association board member Gregg Beletsky. A longtime patron of the shops on Worth Avenue, Goldsmith (a Manalapan resident) is familiar with the generosity of the Association members and their clients. So it came as no surprise when in 2012 the Worth Avenue Association decided to donate all net proceeds of its weekly walking tours to different local charities each year. The beloved tour, which for years has showcased the history and unique architecture of the area, has donated significant sums to the designated charity each year. Past recipients have included Forever Family, Loggerhead Marinelife Center, Els for Autism Foundation and Palm Beach Zoo. “It’s such a wonderful feeling to give back,” says Marley Herring, the current president of the Worth Avenue Association. “Palm Beach is very pet-friendly, and we’re so pleased to be associated with a wonderful charity that does good work.” The walking tours aren’t the only ways the Association is contributing to the community. Beach cleanups and annual food drives have also kept the Association’s philanthropic arm active and far-reaching. For Goldsmith, the connection to the Worth Avenue Association is something she says will make a difference at Tri-County. The monies received will benefit the shelter’s medical fund, which pays for animals that have health issues such as cataracts and broken bones. “We are just over the moon about being connected to the Avenue,” she says. “I love every shop on the Avenue, and now it’s great to be connected in this charitable way.”
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Happy Holidays from
Excell Auto Group
Great! Jewelry again...
More than 15 years exceeding expectations. The finest pre-owned luxury and exotic autos in South Florida 1001 Clint Moore Rd. Suite 101. Boca Raton, FL 33487 www.excellauto.com 561.998.5557
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10/24/16 9:22 AM
Breguet, the innovator. The Marine 5827 chronograph
Having become a member of the Board of Longitude in Paris in 1814, Abraham-Louis Breguet was appointed Horologer to the French Royal Navy by Louis XVIII the following year. This prestigious title, embodying exceptional scientific competence, is now perpetuated through the Marine collection and the Marine 5827 chronograph, which features a central chronograph minutes and seconds. History is still being written...
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