It’s a seat! It’s a storage container! It’s a toolbox! The German luggage heavyweight, Rimowa, has teamed up with Vitra, the Swiss furnishings manufacturer, on a collaboration that design aficionados will struggle to resist. The Aluminum Stool is a mobile cube on wheels with an upholstered seat and interior that’s full of compartments to store your matchbook collection, Augustinus Bader serums, or secret alcohol stash. Its companion piece, the Aluminum Toolbox, is a Vitra classic designed in 2010 by Arik Levy and made of recycled plastic reimagined in Rimowa’s signature material. Go ahead and buy both, if humanly possible. (Only 1,000 stools and 100 toolboxes were manufactured.) At any rate, they can be admired in person at an installation on the Vitra Campus in Weil am Rhein, on display through June 7. (from $2,700; rimowa.com) —Ashley Baker

VISIT
Ferragamo x Topping Rose House
The East End of Long Island is shaping up to be a shopper’s paradise this summer, especially for those who love Italian style. From July 11 to 13, Ferragamo is popping up at the Studio at the Topping Rose House hotel in Bridgehampton with an enticing assortment of ready-to-wear, shoes and bags, and other accessories from creative director Maximilian Davis’s pre-fall collection. True aficionados should make sure to stop by the hotel’s swimming pool, which will be decorated with towels, umbrellas, and pillows emblazoned with the house’s Gancini print—in trademark Ferragamo red. Go ahead, give your followers FOMO. (toppingrosehouse.com) —Ashley Baker

sparkle
Fiametta
For Fiametta founder Merill Hollander, a member of the L.G.B.T.Q.+ community, creating a Pride-inspired jewelry collection was a cathartic experience. Combining old-world sophistication with modern style, the seven individually numbered and meticulously crafted charms feature spinel, sapphire, ruby, or emerald—sourced from women-led cooperatives, mines, and cherished heirlooms. The fine pieces not only look good but also do good, with a portion of the proceeds from the collection benefiting the Ali Forney Center, a shelter for queer youth. (from $4,920; fiametta.com) —Gracie Wiener

WATCH
Families Like Ours
Dystopia doesn’t always start with nuclear annihilation or a virus that turns people into zombies. In Families Like Ours, the slowly rising North Sea forces Denmark to follow Holland’s example and—in an orderly and civilized manner—evacuate the entire country. France will take some of the refugees; Germany and Poland, already overwhelmed, not so many. The least connected end up in Romania. The series focuses on the dynamics of one Danish family and the stripping away of their—and our—delusions about climate change, status, exile, and separation. It’s a tense family drama that is remarkably well imagined and absorbing. And it comes with a bonus point. The series refutes two of Donald Trump’s bigger lies: that climate change is a hoax and undocumented immigrants are depraved. (netflix.com) —Alessandra Stanley

freeze
Ecozoi
Since moving to the U.K., I’ve grown to retroactively appreciate the easy access to ice cubes I once took for granted while living in the States. Don’t ask me why, but ice still seems like a fairly new technology here—only requested at pubs by hard-to-please Americans like myself. (The iceless, room-temperature gin-and-tonic I was once served at a reputable establishment in London still haunts me.) So, if like me you feel that there’s no such thing as too much ice in the freezer, then I highly recommend the Ecozoi ice-cube tray. Initially catching my eye with its groovy, old-fashioned, easy-release handles, it quickly convinced me that it was the Cadillac of its genre after my first go. Since it’s made from stainless steel, the water freezes quicker, and it’s both BPA-free and machine-washable. This summer, I’ll be making cube-size popsicles to keep cool. ($64.95, ecozoi.com) —Spike Carter

Read
Realms of the Round Table
Long before literary heroes Harry Potter and Robin Hood, there was King Arthur and his knights, Celtic legends whose tales have enchanted, frightened, and amused us (hello, Monty Python!) for centuries. In Realms of the Round Table, John Matthews has collected a trove of stories—some never translated into English until now—that bring a fresh perspective to Camelot. There is a certain comfort in the rhythm of so many of these stories: woman in distress seeks out a knight to help her, and knight goes forth bravely into battle, and then sometimes marriage ensues, sometimes not. Matthews’s commentary, placing these tales in the context of the Arthurian legend, plus John Howe’s superb illustrations make the book worthy of Merlin’s magic. ($34.98, amazon.com) —Jim Kelly