The people, punters and posers are probably the most interesting things on display at the London Fashion Week exhibition.
Drinking vodka has never been as glamorous at the Grey Goose BAFTA after-party...
Trendspotting: “Antarctica, Robert Falcon Scott and extremophiles”
Both a violent, immensely comical take on the crudely competitive, bestial nature of men, and a parable about the triumph of truth and love over deceit, trickery and self-interest, Penelope is 85 minutes of your life you won’t regret.
From next Monday, you can sell a minute of your time to artist Brian Lobel down Brixton Village Market.
Fashion, Oscar worthy films, camellias, mid-winter revels, family fun and a birthday party for Rihanna.
This week's on-sales include an ageing showbiz legend, reunited indie-punkers - and a bespectacled ex-tea-shop-owning vegan.
Cave by James Wilton, Palimpsest by Laura McGill and Virus by Richard Bermange.
Meet Sparkadia, our musical artist of the week.
Check out the shortlist for the Brit Insurance Design Awards at the Design Museum: they're the Oscars of the design world.
The Book of the Dead comes alive tonight in an evening of free events at the British Museum...
New graffiti cleverly suggests Stealer's Wheel lyrics.
‘If you don’t like shoes, it’s going to be a very long evening’.
Double Falsehood, (or, Was It Will? to give it our preferred subtitle) comes to the New Players Theatre following a successful run at the Union earlier this year.
Fashionable, frugal, February fun...
Indulge your ears in dark, cinema-like surroundings...
A world class staging of one of the greatest operas ever written.
Our guide to getting a piece of Fashion Week action.
A pitch perfect performance evokes a dusty, sun-drenched, mildly hungover Saturday afternoon in the Midwest.
Following last weekend's radio sit-com, the ICA goes live again with experimental music from today until Sunday.
See the sites of London; help the homeless.
What do white women and tampons have in common? What is long and hard on a black man? Race drama Clybourne Park ponders these questions and more.
The week ahead in literary London: festivals at the LSE and YARNfest, book swaps for grown ups and smaller people, Liz Lochhead and Andrew Motion provide a big name poetry fix, a housewarming party and a man called Zolan Quobble.
Sleigh Bells unleash a furious torrent of unidentifiable death metal during their NME Awards Show at Heaven.
Londonist
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