Monday, April 28, 2025

The T List: Mother’s Day Gift Guide

Greek pantry goods, elegant boxer shorts — and more.
T Magazine

April 28, 2025

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Welcome to the T List, a newsletter from the editors of T Magazine. This week, in addition to our usual recommendations, we're offering a Mother's Day gift guide, with recommendations on what we're coveting for ourselves and considering for our maternal figures. Sign up here to find us in your inbox every Wednesday, along with monthly travel and beauty guides, and the latest stories from our print issues. And you can always reach us at tmagazine@nytimes.com.

LOUNGE ACT

Airy Boxers Fit for a Sunday Stroll

Three pairs of shorts collaged on a purple-pink background. One pair is white with a scalloped hem, one is green with flowers and the third is striped with yellow and blue.
From left: the Garment Cyprus shorts, $210, mrlarkin.com; Comme Si La Boxer Bermuda, $270, commesi.com; and Baserange Stave shorts, $140, baserange.com. Courtesy of the brands

By Laura Regensdorf

If there's an underlying theme to the usual clothing gifts for mothers, it's comfort. Robes, slippers, monogrammed pajamas: These are the sartorial equivalents to a well-deserved breakfast in bed. But what if such soft styling were a little less domesticated? A new wave of ladylike boxers suggests an indoor-outdoor ease, with refined detailing and elongated cuts. The cotton poplin Stave shorts by the French Danish brand Baserange have a breezy fit and sun-faded disposition that would be at home on a Mediterranean ferry. Vaquera's knee-grazing pink-and-white boxers offer a subversive edge — especially when paired with tall leather boots, as seen on the label's spring 2025 runway in Paris. On the side of whimsical restraint, the Garment's Cyprus shorts are trimmed in a series of micropleats with a scalloped hem; they come in crisp white or black, in keeping with the Copenhagen line's monochromatic palette. For fans of smooth-on-skin silk, Comme Si's La Boxer Bermuda marries an athletic silhouette with a delicate floral by Liberty. The garden print recalls the boxer Muhammad Ali's self-described winning technique, which also sums up a mother's protective instincts: "Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee."

AEGEAN TREAT

Made-in-Greece Pantry Goods

Food items collaged on an orange background.
From left: Yiayia and Friends yellow fruit vinegar, $38, yiayiaandfriends.com; Daphnis & Chloe sesame seeds, $12, daphnisandchloe.com; Psyche Organic extra-virgin olive oil, $28, psyche.organic; Daphnis and Chloe Recovery Herbal Tea, $13, daphnisandchloe.com; and Primis Imports sea salt flakes, from $5, primisimports.com. Courtesy of the brands

By Luke Fortney

In ancient Greece, Rhea, the mother of gods, was honored each spring with cakes, flowers and fine wines in an early iteration of Mother's Day. Draw from that history with a range of Greek imports that are now available in the United States. Damian Primis, a bassoonist with the New York Philharmonic, started Primis Imports during the pandemic, when performance halls were closed. After selling out of olive oil, he expanded into pantry staples, like sea salt flakes and seeded sesame brittle. "They're some of the most addicting little treats you can have," he says. The Athens-based company Daphnis and Chloe specializes in organic seasonings and teas, including one variety made for wine lovers. The tea's notes of sage and chamomile — meant to be restorative after a night out — were developed with the Barcelona-based Natural Wine Company. In Thessaloniki in northern Greece, Yiayia and Friends produces its yellow fruit vinegar with local grapes, orange, lemon and mandarin. Each 200-milliliter bottle features custom artwork from the Greek studio Beetroot Design. Psyche Organic is based in Copenhagen, but its small-batch olive oils come from single-estate Greek farms. Its founder, Theophilos Constantinou, ships his oils in one-liter pouches, inspired by budget wine, that seal in precious aromas and flavors.

GROWTH POTENTIAL

An English Estate's Take on Japanese Gardening Gear

A jacket, a knife with a green cover, a pair of secateurs with black handles and a pouch-like green bag with a strap, all collaged on a lilac background.
From left: the Newt x Niwaki Samue jacket, about $250; Hori Hori and canvas sheath, about $50; Higurashi secateurs, about $86; and tool bag, about $37, all available May 2 at niwaki.com and thenewtinsomerset.com. Courtesy of the brand

By Aemilia Madden

Even the most experienced gardener is bound to face some failure. That's why Niwaki, a company that specializes in Japanese tools, and the Newt, a country estate and hotel in Somerset, England, turned to the Japanese proverb "nana korobi ya oki" as inspiration for their four-piece collection of horticultural accessories, launching May 2. The saying, which translates to "fall down seven times, stand up eight," evokes the patience and persistence required in tending beds of tulips or patches of strawberries. To accompany gardeners on that journey, Niwaki and the Newt have created a Samue work jacket with deep pockets and a kimono collar, a Hori Hori knife for digging and weeding, carbon steel Higurashi secateurs for pruning and a hedge green canvas tool bag, all designed with a quaint English garden in mind. But the stylishly austere, durable designs make them a utilitarian choice for all those exercising a green thumb, no matter where their patch of dirt may be.

STAR SHINE

Zodiac Pendants for Every Aesthetic

Necklaces and charms collaged on a peach background.
Clockwise from top left: Renna necklace, $10,000, rennajewels.com; David Webb necklace, $7,800, davidwebb.com; Sauer pendant, $2,550, sauer1941.com; Renalto Cipullo pendant, $3,800, renatocipullo.com; Van Cleef & Arpels pendant, $2,580, vancleefarpels.com; Darius Jewels charm, $6,950, dariusjewels.com; and Jade Trau charm, $2,150, jadetrau.com. Courtesy of the brands

By Jaclyn Bloomfield

A zodiac necklace can be a stylish way to honor your mother, whether it features her own sign or that of someone she holds dear. Van Cleef & Arpels has been reimagining the zodiac theme since the 1950s — its current offerings include sculptural gold medallions that depict each astrological symbol. David Webb's zodiac necklace features a reversible design, one side with the sign outlined in diamonds, the other molded in 18-karat polished gold. The New York-based company Renna references each constellation with hand-carved pendants: The stars are engraved in rock crystal and backed by lapis lazuli, with diamonds surrounding the exterior of the medallion. The Brazilian jeweler Sauer also incorporates lapis lazuli, pairing it with graphic gold accents and the astrological sign name carved into the bottom of the pendant. Renato Cipullo, an Italian-born jeweler now based in New York, first designed his zodiac pendants in the 1970s, drawing inspiration from ancient Roman culture. His latest iteration, made with 18-karat gold, uses negative space to create a suspended design. The New York-based jeweler Jade Trau's diamond-adorned zodiac charms are more delicate in scale and can be worn on a chain or slipped onto a huggie earring. And the Los Angeles-based brand Darius Jewels crafts each of its charms in the shape of the zodiac symbols, accenting them with antique old mine cut diamonds for a more vintage feel.

SURREAL SETTINGS

Ceramics That Bring Whimsy to the Table

Four sets of ceramic items collaged on a bright green background. At the center are two spoons, one shaped like a radish and the other like a red chili. To the right are six slices of fruit. To the left is a box that looks like a stack of plates with bonbons on top, and a pair of white shell shaped knife rests.
Clockwise from top left: Iaac Crafts pearly knife holders, about $113, laromaine-editions.com; Murava Ceramics set of two ceramic vegetable-shaped spoons, $75, etsy.com; La Galine fruit knife holders, about $97, laromaine-editions.com; and Este Ceramiche ceramic trompe l'oeil box, $490, abask.com. Courtesy of the brands

By Mackenzie Oster

My mother tends toward practical purchases, so I make it a point to give her the little luxuries she wouldn't buy for herself. These vegetable-shaped spoons, handmade in Turkey by the ceramist Victoria Baba, definitely qualify. Inspired by the bountiful countryside of Baba's hometown in Belarus, the utensils are made to order and available in a variety of shapes, from a leafy radish to a snap pea. A spoon set could be paired with a hand-painted chocolate box by the Italian manufacturer Este Ceramiche for a trompe l'oeil bundle. For an alternate array of produce, the Parisian housewares brand La Galine offers a set of knife holders that look like slices of cantaloupe, lemon and fig (among other fruits). The Seoul-based company Iaac Crafts takes a more minimalist but still whimsical approach with a set of eight pearly porcelain knife holders that mimic the coiled shape of seashells.

COMFORT FOOD

Meal Delivery Companies That Have Postpartum Mothers in Mind

Three photos of prepared dishes collaged on a bright green background.
A selection of dishes offered by postpartum-focused meal delivery services, from left: Milky Oat's lamb pilaf with toasted almonds and apricots; Welcome Home's tomato soup; and Chiyo's corn chickpea muffins with berry compote. Courtesy of the brands

When my mother-in-law is staying nearby, she'll sometimes arrive at our apartment with so many containers of frozen soup that she needs a hand truck to transport them. There is, in my opinion, no greater gift a person could bring to a household that includes small children than healthy prepared food. When our freezer is empty, and especially when we're all sick, I fantasize about more homemade soup magically arriving to replenish our stock. And it turns out that is in fact an option, thanks to the chef Marisa Mendez Marthaller, also known as the Soup Doula, who makes dishes, including kitchari and mushroom-and-vegetable broth, that can be preordered and picked up in Brooklyn's Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood or delivered locally. As I think about entering a second postpartum period later this year, I've also been looking into the many new larger-scale services that provide meals for parents in the months and years after birth: There's Chiyo, which ships weeks' worth of nutritious postpartum meals within the contiguous United States; Welcome Home and LaRoot, which deliver within the tristate area; and Milky Oat in the Bay Area. These companies all offer gift certificates, but I don't know any new parents who would be mad about a surprise delivery of nourishing meals showing up at their door.

COLOR WASH

Swirled Soaps Made in Small Batches

Clockwise from bottom left, on a bright pink background: a black and white soap on a black dish, a yellow and green soap, a green and blue soap with the word Sssoaps engraved into it, a cube of soap that's blue and white with string coming out of it.
Clockwise from top left: Trillium lemon-lime soap, $6, trilliumsoaps.com; Sssoaps Batch 091, $13, sssoaps.co; and Terra-Tory fresh aloe detox soap, $20, terra-tory.com; and Umé jasmine ylang-ylang soap, $54, umestudio.com. Courtesy of the brands

By Jinnie Lee

For the mother who doesn't ask for much, an artisanal swirly soap is not only a nod to self-care but an artistic addition to the bathroom. The Toronto-based brand Sssoaps uses local ingredients to make its hand-poured bars. For its Batch 091 mixture, founder Sandro Petrillo combined floral essential oils like bergamot and lavender with French green clay and indigo powder to give the bar its verdant hue. Kimberly Waldropt, who launched her natural skin-care company Terra-Tory in 2017, offers a moisturizing ocean blue body bar made with aloe vera leaf juice and peppermint that is intended to have a cooling effect for any summer sunburns. Umé, an Oakland, Calif.-based home goods design studio, sells a larger soap shaped like an abstract mountain range with pointy peaks and scooped-out dips. Its jasmine ylang-ylang iteration is marbled black and white, and can be purchased with a custom ceramic dish shaped like an oversize shirt button. In Rockland, Maine, Trillium is a family-run soap business that launched in a farmhouse kitchen in 1992. All of its bars are made with rainwater and organic aromatics, then imperfectly hand-cut from a larger block. The lemongrass-and-lime bar, with French green clay and poppy seeds sprinkled in, has a gentle exfoliating texture for hands that could use a little more love.

FROM T'S INSTAGRAM

Sandra Poulson Shares Her Favorite Artworks

Sandra Poulson sits on a stool in a studio space, surrounded by artworks in progress.
The artist Sandra Poulson, photographed in 2022. Adama Jalloh

Born in Lisbon and raised in Luanda, Angola, the interdisciplinary artist Sandra Poulson makes sculptures and installations that untangle the ongoing effects of neocolonialism. She incorporates bright, monochromatic garments as well as concrete, soap, dust and wood into her works, carefully sourcing materials that are connected to everyday life in Angola.

This week, Poulson's first museum exhibition will open at MoMA PS1 in Long Island City, Queens, featuring a new installation of appropriated furniture and wood that alludes to the circulation of raw goods between Angola, the Netherlands and the rest of the world.

Poulson discussed the first work that inspired her, a work she returns to again and again, and a new work of her own that she's excited about. Click here to read the full piece and follow us on Instagram.

And if you read one thing from T Magazine this week, make it:

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