After gracing the shores of Porto Cervo, Cannes, and Capri, Giorgio Armani Mare drops anchor on the eastern tip of Long Island. The designer’s resort line, known for breezy silhouettes and refined neutrals, makes its final stop with a full takeover of Shelter Island’s beach and Chez Marie restaurant. Guests can shop the summer 2025 collection, including the sleek Vela men’s-wear capsule, while enjoying music curated by DJ Emmanuelle, beach games, Armani/Casa loungers, and, yes, a scoop of Armani-branded gelato. (from $790, armani.com) —Merritt Johnson

LOOK
Light, Sand, and Sea
Put together, the words “art” and “Hamptons” usually bring to mind Jackson Pollock, splashing paint in his studio near East Hampton. Or maybe you think of the Parrish Art Museum, in Water Mill. But as it turns out, there’s a whole community of living artists on the eastern tip of Long Island. Light, Sand, and Sea introduces us to 50 of them, taking us into their studios through the lens of the Peruvian photographer Jaime Lopez, and into their minds through interviews by the American journalist and curator Coco Myers. The art itself spans a wide range, from Michael O’Neill’s portraits of Hollywood mainstays to Alice Hope’s nature-inspired watercolors. Maybe you’ll even bump into one of them this summer, on a sunset walk on the beach after a visit to the Pollock house. ($60, vendomepress.com) —Jeanne Malle

WEAR
Vuori
“Now that is a fabulous dress,” said a salesman at a very pricey boutique as this AIR MAIL correspondent exited the fitting room. But—sorry!—it’s the one I was wearing when I walked in. Much to his horror, I had purchased it for the cost of a private Pilates session at Vuori, an athleisure brand out of San Diego. The Pose Modern Dress isankle-length, with a shoulder-flattering sleeveless cut and four-way stretch, and if you buy it in black, it might become the hardest-working item in your summer wardrobe. It looks great under a jacket or cardigan, can be washed in a hotel sink, and does double duty as a swimsuit cover-up. And on a plane? Magic. ($118, vuoriclothing.com) —Ashley Baker

DINE
Dante x Claridge’s
London isn’t exactly suffering from a deficiency of exciting places to eat and drink, but the city is still upping its game this summer with Dante Takes Claridge’s—where the beloved Manhattan bar collaborates with the British hotel’s restaurant. Linden Pride and Nathalie Hudson, the husband-and-wife team behind Dante, will preside over apertivo hour, serving classic cocktails (including the Chocolate Negroni “fountain,” which is as dangerous as it sounds) along with New Yorker temptations like sliders, seafood towers, and a bacon-topped burger, complete with American cheese. Expect the brunch crowd to storm the place on the weekends as buttermilk pancakes and banana bread are served alongside huevos rancheros and, yes, more cocktails. (sevenrooms.com) —Ashley Baker

BROWSE
Roadside Architecture
America’s roadside architecture—especially from the period after the First World War until the 1980s—is so vast, ephemeral, and historically important that you’d think its preservation or, at the very least, documentation would fall to a governmental agency. But as far as we know, it doesn’t. Fortunately, a Ventura, California–based woman with a Jean Seberg haircut and who is appropriately named Debra Jane Seltzer has made it her life’s work to capture photos of every roadside Greyhound station, car showroom, and giant pistachio in the country. (Her Web site contains about 75,000 photos.) Like most of the glorious things America’s ribbons of highway have to offer, RoadsideArchitecture.com is free. The signs section of the site is the most captivating, being organized by state and preserving for posterity the buzzing neon signs of places such as the Choo-Choo, in Des Plaines, Illinois, and Bingo’s Motel, in Wakefield, Michigan. (There’s also an option to view different categories of signs, like those for skating rinks, or those adorned with pizza chefs.) America may be getting regulated into wan electroluminescence, but the marvelous Ms. Seltzer and her pack of canine companions will not go gentle, or dimly, into that good night. (roadsidearchitecture.com) —Nathan King

READ
This Makes That
For years, the Chicago-based cartoonist Ivan Brunetti taught art in college; new work was rare. Thankfully, the artist behind the comic “Schizo” and a number of New Yorker covers continues to produce books for kids. His latest entry, This Makes That, follows a classroom as it devises lemon-powered L.E.D.’s, “unpoppable” soap bubbles, and more. The drawings are immensely likable—and immediately recognizable. “I have gone through life squinting at a very flat world,” says Brunetti, beset by “severe myopia.” But the cartoonist, a devotee of Charles Schultz, makes flatness a virtue. Brunetti’s geometric characters, drawn with templates, French curves, and other old-school drafting tools, are defiantly two-dimensional. They occupy a world in which cars yawn to accommodate large circular heads and tables rest on the page like unconstructed boxes. Discerning parents will want This Makes That for their four-to-six-year-olds. Connoisseurs of a master cartoonist will want it for their eyeballs. ($13.99, penguinrandomhouse.com) —Jason Guriel