An Edgartown village heirloom is staged to make a difference in Rwanda.
By Karla Araujo
Designing a streamlined home at ease in its pastoral up-Island setting.
By Mollie Doyle
As great as it is to be naked outside, that probably should be kept between you and nature. Some people want to be totally enclosed. Others want at least a glimpse of the landscape.
By Geoff Currier
What you can get for $10 million on the Vineyard.
By Joyce Wagner
For the last thirty-five years, Jean Dupon has owned and operated Le Grenier at 96 Main Street in Vineyard Haven, serving French cuisine in the second-story restaurant and cultivating a devoted clientele. But now he’s ready to say au revoir to all that – the restaurant industry and its fifteen-hour days. “I’m sixty-nine years old,” he says. “It’s time to relax.”
By Erin Haggerty
A venerable Island leader with a longtime construction business, John Early talks about life on the Vineyard, how affordable housing here should change, and lessons he learned in the Peace Corps.
By Rachel Orr
Influenced by the beauty of hand-woven Shaker baskets, architects David Handlin and John Garrahan evoke a similar style in a Menemsha staircase.
By Nicole Grace Mercier
Window treatments for the well-exposed home.
By Joyce Wagner
An Aquinnah home surrounded by conservation land, with sweeping views of the Atlantic and private beach access, offers a remote, quiet retreat.
By Erin Haggerty
The Martha’s Vineyard Camp Meeting Association, an old-fashioned neighborhood of tiny colorful cottages in the center of Oak Bluffs, has an appealing storybook quality to it, along with some unusual ownership eccentricities.
By Remy Tumin
Recently renovated by architect Dudley Cannada, this whaling captain’s house combines an interesting past with modern amenities.
By Remy Tumin
He started the Seafood Shanty; he owned the Harbor View Hotel. He helped shape a town as well as an island. Now in his late eighties, he lives in a penthouse looking out over the Edgartown Light – far from his poor roots.
By Elaine Pace