logo
On the Podcast: Vogue Editors Dish Out Style Advice

On the Podcast: Vogue Editors Dish Out Style Advice

Vogue13-05-2025
For the last few months, Vogue's senior fashion news editor Laia Garcia-Furtado has been leading the Addressed column: a weekly one-stop-shop for style advice and our tips for getting dressed. Using runway moments, real-life trends, and celebrity styling, Laia has discussed everything from cargo pants to the WWS (working woman's shoe, duh) to how to de-grandma your brooch—no offense to grandmas!
On this week's episode of The Run-Through With Vogue, our hosts Chloe Malle, Chioma Nnadi, and Nicole Phelps invited Laia on the show to answer some of Vogue app users most pressing questions. They shared their knowledge on the best ways to confidently wear color if your default is all black (according to Chloe brown is the new black!), and the best way to stay chic during the ultra-hot New York summer days. The group also gave advice to a student transitioning to a professional setting who doesn't want to look 'frat basement chic.' According to Chioma, using the opposite theory or mixing high and lows is the way to go: 'My general rule of thumb, you can wear sneakers with a suit. When I'm wearing, jeans and a T-shirt, then I'll make sure that I'm wearing a proper shoe, a heel.' Listen to the episode here, and don't forget to download the Vogue app and find our Style Advice section to submit your own question.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Did Hayley Williams just leak a 17-track new album on her website? Here's what we know
Did Hayley Williams just leak a 17-track new album on her website? Here's what we know

Yahoo

time15 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Did Hayley Williams just leak a 17-track new album on her website? Here's what we know

Rock 'n' roll songstress Hayley Williams shocked fans on July 28 by leaking 17 new tracks to her website. The Paramore singer, who is a Nashvillian, has kept her followers on the edge of their seats over the past week. On July 23, she debuted her new tune "Mirtazapine" on Nashville Public Radio WNXP. Days later, Paramore released a deluxe version of their 2005 debut album "All We Know Is Falling" with an archival EP from 2006. Now, Williams has inconspicuously released an album's worth of music on accessible with a code. "Submit the exclusive Good Dye Young 16-digit access code that was sent to your inbox," a pop-up on the website says, prompting fans to enter digits sent to them by Williams' hair product line. "Check your inbox for an email from Good Dye Young, if you don't have an email with a code, maybe ask a friend for theirs," it says. From there, fans can access an old-school desktop with MP3 files of Williams' tunes and click play on an audio player. The website also features a "misc" folder. Its contents include a video of the band performing in 2017, some lyrics scrawled in a coloring book, a photo of a 'Hayley Williams is my favorite band' t-shirt and an audio clip of a child saying 'I'm sorry that you're going through something hard.' What is the code to access Hayley Williams' new record? The code is available to customers who have purchased the new Good Dye Young shade Ego, according to Instagram comments. Williams' fans have also shared the code on a Reddit page and various social media posts. What new songs are on Hayley Williams' website? Kill Me True Believer Blood Bros Negative Self Talk EDAABP Mirtazapine Ice in My OJ Brotherly Hate Zissou Dream Girl In Shibuya Discover Channel Love Me Different Hard Whim Glum Disappearing Man I Won't Quit on You Audrey Gibbs is a music journalist with The Tennessean. You can reach her at agibbs@ This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Hayley Williams leaks 17 songs to her website. What we know Solve the daily Crossword

After a divorce, these parents rebuilt a new life with their own tiny homes
After a divorce, these parents rebuilt a new life with their own tiny homes

Yahoo

time15 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

After a divorce, these parents rebuilt a new life with their own tiny homes

Mom-of-three Michelle Taylor made a big move to a small rural town in Georgia fresh on the heels of her divorce. In the process, she said goodbye to her 1,800-square-foot house and hello to her new home: A two-story shed from Home Depot that measured only 256 square feet. Seeking a fresh start, Taylor bought 10 acres of land in Georgia, with a semi-furnished, 16x16 shed already on the property. With just one bathroom, a living room, a kitchen, and no bedrooms, the challenges of making that space work for a family of four were abundantly clear. So Taylor and her dad got busy renovating. Taylor is one of many to take a leap of fate into a tiny home, a movement that continues to gain momentum. Many big-name retailers are aware of the trend and have begun selling small houses, complete with bedrooms, bathrooms, and kitchens. Amazon has a two-story portable Prefab (meaning premade) house for $40,000, and a one-story 'Luxury Tiny Home' for $9,280. Home Depot, too, sells tiny homes for anywhere between $20,000 and $100,00, with costs varying based on the size you get. Sure, it may sound enticing since the cost of a tiny home is often less than the mortgage on a house, depending on location. But what's actually the big appeal about these small spaces? For starters, Taylor says it's much easier and cheaper to maintain than her nearly 2,000-square-foot house. ' After only an hour, I can have the entire house clean, top to bottom,' she tells The Independent. 'Living here also kind of minimizes the amount of stuff that you own, which, in the long run, is a benefit because you're not spending as much time, energy, or money maintaining and keeping everything.' Still, after renovations, the home is significantly larger than when Taylor purchased the property. When Taylor moved into the Home Depot shed in 2021, it sat like a treehouse, with a deep deck underneath. So she converted that deck into the bottom floor of the two-story shed, making it a three-story tiny home. She also added more square footage to the top floors of the house. 'We wanted to give enough room for the boys to have individual bedrooms,' she explains. 'The kitchen and the living room are one room combined on the second floor. And the bedrooms are all on the first and third floors.' With time, patience, and hard work, Taylor's shed became a four-bedroom, two bathroom home, with the top two floors measuring at 384 square feet and the first floor at 256 square feet. It wasn't an easy transformation for Taylor, especially with her children, who are teenagers now, living in the home during the renovations. And while it's not picture-perfect yet — Taylor still plans to paint her children's bedroom walls and put up the trim — the space has everything her family needs. Meanwhile, father of three Jeremy Collins, based in Murphysboro, Illinois, took a similar approach to fulfilling his dream of building a tiny home. Following his divorce last year, Collins began transforming a high-cube shipping container, measuring 320 square feet, into a one-bedroom home. The small space is equipped with a stackable washer-dryer, 60-inch windows, a full bathroom, a kitchen, and a living area. Currently, he's living a few miles away from the yet-to-be-completed home, which will be finished with the help of his teenage twin sons, who stepped in to do some of the manual labor earlier this year. Collins has never been attracted to the idea of buying a tiny home online, since essentials like installing gas, plumbing, and electricity are not included in the purchase. The house may also be trickier to assemble and have much smaller rooms than usual. So, the Illinois native argues that he's getting more bang for his buck by building the space himself. 'When you get those homes online, there are no appliances. It's missing this and that,' he says. 'It's not something that could keep you for 20 to 30 years. And when you add up what you actually need to make it a living home, that number supersedes what it would cost to build one. My home is built on sustainability, low maintenance, and low overall cost.' This way of living and thinking is only expanding, with the global tiny home market valued at $21.93 billion in 2024, according to Business Research Insights. The market is expected to grow to $29.9 billion by 2033. The cost of building a regular home in the U.S. in April 2025 was $503,800, according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. And that's a huge investment that many tiny home builders have never had to consider. Collins says he spent an average of about $36,700 to build his tiny house throughout the last year, with plans to sell it for anywhere between $59,000 and $69,000 — and he already has an interested buyer. However, he still absolutely sees value in building another home to live in one day, or multiple houses for more people to reside in. ' I used to live in an almost 5,000 square foot house with 10 acres. When I got divorced, I had to put all that stuff in storage, and I moved to a place that was a small apartment,' he explains. 'Now I realize that in a tiny home, in a rural town, I spend more time with my kids. I'll hit the kayak more because I don't have all the distractions and stuff.' Taylor, too, sees the financial benefits of having a tiny home, since it was cheaper to renovate the Home Depot shed on her plot of land than to buy a small home online. With utilities and Wifi included, Taylor pays only $600 to $800 a month to maintain her tiny home. She knows that this price is a steal, despite her $25,000 investment in renovations. 'I spend less a month on everything like utilities, or updating my curtains, than I would on a two-bedroom apartment,' she said. As a result, Taylor is now financially able to go on hiking and camping trips throughout the year with her children, without having to worry about working 80 hours a week to pay the bills. Add that to the fact that her skills as a handywoman are also paying off in the business of tiny homes. On her property, she's renting out a second tiny house that she built from scratch; a perfect space for one person. Outfitted with a couch, utilities, kitchen appliances, and internet included, she charges renters between $600 and $800 a month. Inside her former Home Depot shed-turned-home, Taylor's found both financial and personal benefits that she didn't have in a bigger space. 'My kids have their own room and privacy, but if they want to do any physical play, they have to come downstairs or go outside," she said. "So I feel like I see my kids more than my friends, who have 2,000 square foot homes, see theirs.' Solve the daily Crossword

'Rick and Morty' Season 8 streaming: How to watch before it premieres on HBO Max
'Rick and Morty' Season 8 streaming: How to watch before it premieres on HBO Max

Yahoo

time15 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

'Rick and Morty' Season 8 streaming: How to watch before it premieres on HBO Max

Season 8 of the Emmy-winning animated series Rick and Morty, about a mad scientist and his grandson's adventures across the universe, aired on Adult Swim this summer, but fans of the show won't be able to catch it on HBO Max until September 1. The entire 10-episode season will arrive on streaming that day, but if you don't want to wait that long to watch, you've got options. Every episode of Season 8, starring Ian Cardoni, Harry Belden, Sarah Chalke, Chris Parnell and Spencer Grammer, is currently available on the Adult Swim website if you have a cable (or eligible live TV streaming service) login. Don't have cable? Read on to find out how to stream Rick and Morty Season 8 with the help of a VPN. When does Season 8 premiere on HBO Max? Season 8 of Rick and Morty lands on streaming in the U.S. on Sept. 1. What channel is Season 8 on? Rick and Morty airs on Adult Swim, and Season 8 is currently streaming on While several episodes are available for free, the whole season is only available if you have a cable login. How to watch Season 8without cable: There are several ways you can watch Rick and Morty without cable. Adult Swim is offering a 24/7 Rick and Morty marathon on their site for the time being, so you can go online to watch episodes without a cable login, but they're not on demand, so you won't be able to choose which episodes you watch when. Warner Bros. Discovery has also confirmed that episodes will be available to stream in the U.S. on HBO Max, but not until Sept. 1. Season 8trailer: Where to watch past episodes of Rick and Morty: While the new season of Rick and Morty won't be immediately available on HBO Max (you'll have to wait until it arrives on Sept. 1), you can catch the past seven seasons on demand on the platform now. How to stream Rick and Morty with a VPN: If you don't have cable but still want to stream Season 8 of Rick and Morty before it drops on HBO Max, all it takes is a VPN. By using a VPN, you can access the whole season of Rick and Morty and stream episodes on demand at your convenience on the Australian version of HBO Max (though you'll still need your U.S. subscription to watch it). Just set your VPN location to Australia to gain access. A VPN (virtual private network) helps protect your data, can mask your IP address and is perhaps most popular for being especially useful in the age of streaming. Whether you're looking to watch Friends on Netflix (which left the U.S. version of the streamer back in 2019) or tune in to overseas broadcasts, a VPN can help you out. Looking to try a VPN for the first time? This guide breaks down the best VPN options for every kind of user. More ways to watch Rick and Morty:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store