Only Natural International Student Design Competition Opens for Entries
The Only Natural International Student Design Competition launches its third edition, inviting students to create sustainable capsule collections primarily from natural fibres. Winners receive travel, accommodation, a trophy, and global publicity across Only Natural’s platforms, with the final showcase at Material Matters London in September. The competition evaluates entries on creativity, sustainability, cultural relevance, and commercial viability, reinforcing natural‑material innovation in fashion, footwear, accessories, and interiors. Submissions close on 30 June 2026, offering a clear deadline for academic programs to integrate the contest into their curricula.
‘It’s Not Weak to Speak’: NYC Construction Unions Launch Mental Health Initiative
The Building & Construction Trades Council of Greater New York launched the Building Trades Peer Support Network to combat the construction industry’s alarming suicide rate. The program aims to train 1,000 peer supporters—about 1% of its 100,000 members—to identify and...

Lykke Li’s ‘Knife In My Heart’ Unleashes Her Inner Emo Girl
Swedish singer‑songwriter Lykke Li has dropped the single “Knife In The Heart,” the first taste of her forthcoming album The Afterparty, due May 18. The track, which she describes as a “brutalist nursery rhyme,” pairs stark, minimalist production with an emotionally raw...

Medieval Farms Were a Boon for Biodiversity, Research Finds
A new study of the Lake Constance region shows that medieval farms created a mosaic of fields, pastures, and forests that drove a steady rise in plant diversity from 500 AD to around 1000 AD. The research, based on fossil pollen, archaeological...

Def Leppard’s Phil Collen on How India Continues To Inspire Them
Def Leppard will embark on their first India tour, playing Shillong on March 25, followed by Mumbai and Bengaluru. The three‑city run adopts the high‑tech setlist and production from their recent Las Vegas residency, promising a theatrical rock experience. Guitarist Phil...

The Aging Crisis Is Here, and Technology Is No Longer Optional
By 2034, roughly one‑fifth of Americans will be over 65, creating the first senior‑majority population and an old‑age dependency ratio above 0.35. The surge strains healthcare staffing, with projected physician shortages exceeding 90,000, and inflates caregiver demand beyond the 50 million...
D2C Fashion Brand Odette Plans Kidswear Launch and 100-Store Expansion by FY ’28
Odette, a direct‑to‑consumer fashion brand founded in 2021, announced a June 2026 launch of a kidswear line and an aggressive rollout to 100 exclusive brand outlets by FY ’28. The company already operates over 35 stores across major Indian metros and is...
Hilton Enters Mongolia with the Signing of Conrad Ulaanbaatar, Marking a New Chapter for Luxury Hospitality in the Capital
Hilton announced the signing of Conrad Ulaanbaatar, its first property in Mongolia, a 227‑room luxury hotel within the mixed‑use Eco Tower in the capital’s central business district. The hotel is slated to open in 2028 and will feature four dining venues,...

Introducing The Definitive, 172-Page, Ultimate Music Guide: Yes
Kelsey Music Publishing has launched a 172‑page “Ultimate Music Guide” dedicated to progressive‑rock icons Yes. The hardcover arrives just before the band’s 2026 Fragile tour in the UK and is sold through the retailer’s online shop. Inside, readers find an...

“Tree Work” By Photographer Reave Dennison
Reave Dennison’s new series “Tree Work” showcases 29 silver‑gelatin prints documenting maritime and forestry labour in British Columbia, captured over five years while he worked as a log salvor and arborist. The exhibition opens at Pale Fire in Vancouver on March 19 and...

Portraits of Human Connection
Emmet Gowin’s new exhibition, *Baldwin Street: Photographs 1966‑1994*, opens at Pace Gallery in New York, showcasing three decades of intimate family portraits taken on his childhood street in Virginia. The body of work captures everyday moments—children at play, kitchen scenes,...

Inside MSC Cruises’ Partnership with ORCA to Strengthen Marine Research
MSC Cruises is launching its inaugural Alaska season in summer 2026 with a science‑led partnership with marine‑conservation group ORCA. A dedicated Marine Mammal Observer will be stationed on the upgraded MSC Poesia to identify whales in real time, guide navigation,...
March 13, 1989: Quebec Goes Dark
In March 1989 a series of intense solar flares—including an X4.5 on March 10 and an M7.3 on March 12—produced coronal mass ejections that struck Earth on March 13, triggering a massive geomagnetic storm. The storm drove aurorae visible as far south as...

Base Training Isn’t Just for Beginners—9 Other Instances Where It’s the Appropriate Plan
Base training, a low‑intensity mileage buildup, is often dismissed as only for beginners, but experts say it’s a cornerstone for runners at any level. The article outlines nine scenarios where returning to a base phase—after a race, burnout, extended time...

NASA Begins Building Nuclear-Powered Dragonfly Drone for 2028 Launch to Saturn Moon Titan
NASA’s Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory has started building and testing the Dragonfly rotorcraft, a nuclear‑powered drone destined for a 2028 launch to Saturn’s moon Titan. The car‑sized craft will use a radioisotope power system, marking a shift from solar‑driven...
Growing Crystals Tiny and Large
Researchers at Rice University confirmed that Thomas Edison’s 1879 carbon‑filament bulb unintentionally produced graphene when a 110 V current was applied for 20 seconds. Building on James Tour’s Flash Joule Heating method, they replicated the process, showing a cheap, rapid route...

Call for Entries: Northern Animation Network
The Northern Animation Network launches its 2026 call for entries, allowing animators to submit a single short‑film entry that will be considered by four major Nordic and Baltic festivals—Fredrikstad, Viborg, REX, and BLON. The initiative uses a shared FilmFreeway account,...

Institut Quantique Joins Qblox Excellence Center Program to Advance Distributed Quantum Computing
The Institut quantique at Université de Sherbrooke has become a Qblox Excellence Center, integrating Qblox’s modular control electronics into its Quantum FabLab. The partnership targets distributed heterogeneous quantum computing, aiming to build scalable, fault‑tolerant architectures across superconducting, spin and hybrid...
The Story Behind Iran’s only Van Gogh: ‘At Eternity’s Gate'
Vincent van Gogh’s 1882 lithograph *At Eternity’s Gate* – one of only seven surviving copies – resides in the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art after passing through Rockefeller, dealer Eugene Thaw, and Farah Pahlavi. The print, inscribed by Van Gogh in English, later...
Retailers Are Boarding The Airport Retail Boom
India’s airports are evolving into major fashion destinations as passenger traffic tops 350 million annually, driving a surge in non‑aeronautical revenue. Retailers such as Marks & Spencer, Levi’s and luxury houses like Hugo Boss are expanding storefronts across existing and upcoming terminals, despite rents...

Great New Prog You Must Hear From Devin Townsend, Green Carnation, Midge Ure, Teramaze and More in Prog's Brand New...
Prog magazine has introduced a brand‑new "Tracks Of The Week" column, curating seven fresh progressive‑rock releases for fans to stream and vote on. The series highlights a charity single, “Do You Wonder?”, which raised money for Amnesty International and topped...

Newshapes Share Gorgeous New Track ‘Falling Away’
Scottish alternative outfit newshapes has dropped “falling away,” a track that fuses two decades of British emo, pop‑punk and heavier rock elements. The band says the song continues the narrative begun on “baptise,” reflecting a year of challenges and a...
Not Just Dollars, Euros and Pounds: Tefaf Speaker Sets Out Art’s Deep Value for Wellbeing
Daisy Fancourt’s new book *Art Cure* provides scientific evidence that arts engagement dramatically improves mental health, halving the ten‑year risk of depression and doubling symptom improvement when combined with standard therapy. Using longitudinal cohort data, biological markers and the UK...

Ministry of Awe Transforms Philadelphia Bank Into New Immersive Experience
Ministry of Awe, an immersive art experience, opens March 14 in Philadelphia’s Old City, housed in the historic 1870 Manufacturer’s National Bank. The six‑floor, 8,500‑sq‑ft venue showcases large‑scale installations, soundscapes, robotics, and AI‑enhanced environments created by Meg Saligman and over...

Katie Harris of the Road Chose Me on Blending Human and Vehicle- Powered Adventures
The Overland Journal Podcast featured Katie Harris of Road Chose Me discussing how she merges human-powered trekking with vehicle-based overlanding across Australia, Iceland, and Tunisia. She shares personal stories of hiking the Camino de Santiago with her young daughter and...

The Vibrant '90s Color Palette Experiencing a High-Fashion Resurgence
Fall 2026 fashion weeks across the four capitals revived the bold, primary‑rich color palette of the 1990s, featuring violets, teals, fuchsias and mustard yellows. The trend, first hinted by Saint Laurent’s 2025 collection and earlier streetwear icons such as Nike and...

13 of the Best Ever Vintage Oscars Beauty Looks
Dazed Digital curated a gallery of thirteen iconic Oscar‑night beauty looks spanning the golden age of Hollywood. The collection showcases the evolution of red‑carpet makeup, from classic winged liner to bold, sculpted brows. Each image highlights how timeless techniques continue...
Parkinson’s Research Reaches “Pivotal” Stage, but Barriers Remain
Parkinson’s research has entered a pivotal phase, driven by deeper disease insights and advanced models such as patient‑derived iPSCs. Despite a pipeline of potential disease‑modifying therapies, funding shortfalls and outdated trial endpoints continue to impede progress. Parkinson’s UK’s Virtual Biotech...

One of London’s Most Spectacular Houses Is Opening to the Public Next Month
The Cosmic House, a Grade I‑listed post‑modernist residence in Kensington, will reopen to the public from April 22 through December, operating on Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. Built between 1978 and 1983 by Maggie and Charles Jencks with Sir Terry Farrell, the house...

These Are the Farms You Need to Visit for the Best Strawberry Picking in California
Spring ushers in California’s brief but vibrant strawberry season, prompting dozens of farms to open U‑pick fields for the public. The article highlights four standout locations—Carlsbad Strawberry Company, Kenny’s Strawberry Farm, Tanaka Farms, and Three Nunns Farm—detailing their acreage, operating...
7 New Albums Out Today: The Black Crowes, Kim Gordon, James Blake & More
This week’s Release Day Picks spotlight a wave of new LPs from veteran and emerging acts alike. The Black Crowes return with *A Pound Of Feathers*, recorded in eight‑to‑ten days in Nashville, while Kim Gordon’s *PLAY ME* features Dave Grohl on drums....

Find India’s Forgotten Jewels in Usha Balakrishnan’s New Book ‘Silver & Gold - Visions of Arcadia’
Usha R. Balakrishnan’s new volume *Silver & Gold: Visions of Arcadia* documents hundreds of Indian folk and tribal silver‑and‑gold ornaments, many drawn from the Amrapali Collection in Jaipur. The book blends art‑historical, anthropological and archival research to present a vivid picture of 19th‑20th‑century rural...

What Does ‘Sawabona’ Mean? And Why Does It Matter to Your Team?
The article argues that being truly seen at work fuels belonging, which in turn drives engagement and performance. Deloitte’s Global Human Capital Trends shows 79 % of firms value belonging, yet few feel equipped to deliver it. Hitachi Energy’s Nina Bressler...

The Best Recent Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror – Review Roundup
A new roundup spotlights five standout titles across science‑fiction, fantasy and horror, ranging from Neil Jordan’s memory‑laden Irish saga to Cameron Sullivan’s historic Beast of Gévaudan re‑imagining. The list also revives Naomi Mitchison’s 1952 fairy‑tale classic, showcases Christopher Buehlman’s Black...

My Mother’s Best Advice: You’re Allowed to Enjoy Nice Things
Emma Beddington recounts her mother’s mantra that everyone is entitled to enjoy nice things, a lesson forged in a modest upbringing and expressed through frequent treats, travel, and small luxuries. The essay links this personal permission to indulge with broader...
People with Social Anxiety Are Less Likely to Experience a Post-Sex Emotional Glow
A recent study published in Cognitive Behaviour Therapy compared 54 adults diagnosed with social anxiety disorder (SAD) to 54 peers without the condition. Both groups reported similar numbers of sexual encounters over a three‑week diary period, indicating that SAD does...
Argonne-Led AI ‘Adviser’ Accelerates Robotic Design of Advanced Electronic Materials
Argonne National Laboratory’s team unveiled an AI “adviser” that monitors and optimizes machine‑learning algorithms during autonomous experiments, dramatically speeding the discovery of mixed ion‑electron conducting polymers. Integrated with the Polybot robotic lab, the adviser reduced the experimental space from over...

The Tricky Business of Faerie Bargains by Reena McCarty
Reena McCarty’s debut, The Tricky Business of Faerie Bargains, fuses American frontier myth with fae lore, following Poppy Hill, a century‑old returnee thrust into the modern legal world of faerie contracts at Carter Lane. The novel details a post‑World‑War legal...
“I’ll Worry About Health Later”… Until Later Shows Up
The article warns that a singular focus on maximal lifts often leads to pain, injury, or burnout, forcing lifters to confront health issues later. It argues that true strength is the ability to keep lifting over a lifetime, not just...

You’re Invited to Damson Madder’s “Appreciation Society”
British photographer Siân Davey’s new exhibition opens at London’s Forty Two gallery on March 20, showcasing her SS26 collection through images of niche hobbyists—mudlarkers, birdwatchers, roller skaters. The show immerses visitors in authentic settings, featuring accessories and a curated indie...

Why We Fail to Notice Climate Change
Lake Champlain in northern Vermont, once frozen almost every winter, now freezes only sporadically, reflecting the region’s rapid warming. A July 2025 study in *Nature Human Behaviour* found that presenting climate data as binary (freeze vs. no‑freeze) makes people perceive change...

Marmozets Announce UK Headline Tour
British rock band Marmozets announced a UK headline tour in June 2026 supporting their upcoming album CO.WAR.DICE, set for release on May 22. The tour includes seven intimate venues across Sheffield, Oxford, Northampton, Portsmouth, Bournemouth, Leicester and London, with tickets...

Nat Faulkner: The Stuff of Photography
Nat Faulkner’s 2026 Camden Art Centre exhibition reframes photography as a chemical and physical act rather than a purely visual one. Installations like *Aperture (Iodine)* use iodine‑filled panels to bathe the space in amber light, while *Aqua Fortis* and *Moth‑catcher*...

Arrows In Action Share Slick New Track ‘Stop Talking’
Arrows In Action announced a deluxe edition of their 2025 album “I Think I’ve Heard This Before,” slated for release on April 24 through Nettwerk. The package introduces the new single “Stop Talking,” a neon‑bright pop‑rock track that mixes synth‑driven...
Immutep Investors Spooked by LAG-3 Failure in Lung Cancer
Australian biotech Immutep saw its ASX shares tumble more than 88% after the independent data monitoring committee recommended halting its pivotal phase‑3 TACTI‑004 trial of the LAG‑3 inhibitor eftilagimod alfa (efti) in first‑line non‑small cell lung cancer. The trial, which...
Increased Spacing Between Solar Module Rows Boosts Agrivoltaics Viability
U.S. researchers at Colorado University introduced an economic framework that evaluates how wider spacing between solar photovoltaic (PV) rows can make agrivoltaic systems viable for large‑scale, mechanized farming. Simulations on a 160‑acre Colorado site across potatoes, onions, sugar beets and...

Audible Expands Platform to 11 New Markets, Including Sweden
Audible announced at the London Book Fair that it will launch its subscription service in eleven new markets—Belgium, Egypt, Ireland, the Netherlands, Poland, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, South Africa, Sweden, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates—through a partnership with local Amazon...

Out of the Blue? How the Colour of Light Could Be Used to Treat Mental Illness
Researchers at St Olavs Hospital in Trondheim equipped one half of a psychiatric intensive‑care ward with blue‑depleted evening lighting while the other half kept standard lighting. In a randomized trial of 476 short‑stay patients, the circadian‑adapted ward showed greater clinical improvement...

M&S Sweeps YouGov Fashion Brand Rankings
Marks & Spencer (M&S) captured the top spot in YouGov’s latest UK fashion brand rankings, leading both consumer consideration (52.4%) and perceived quality and value categories. The brand posted the strongest year‑over‑year improvement in consideration, up 1.6 points, and has...

Two Epic Thru-Hiking Memoirs Just Dropped. Here’s What You Should Read.
Early 2026 saw the release of two standout thru‑hiking memoirs: Heather Anderson’s *Farther*, chronicling her eight‑month, 8,000‑mile Calendar Year Triple Crown, and Derick “Mr. Fabulous” Lugo’s *A Fabulous Thru‑Hike*, recounting 3,100 miles on the Continental Divide Trail. Anderson’s narrative mixes...