What does cool smell like? Miu Miu has an idea. Miutine, a new eau de parfum whose name references the French word for rebel, is irresistible. A warm, seductive blend of strawberry, vanilla, gardenia, rose, patchouli, and brown sugar, it was concocted by master perfumer Dominique Ropion. The bottle delivers even more style points—the rippled glass is inspired by the matelassé leather that the fashion house often uses in its most popular bags. We can’t promise it will give you the “It factor” of Emma Corrin, who fronts the campaign, but it’s not a bad place to start. ($172, sephora.com) —Ashley Baker

dine
Cafe Yaya
Tucked away from the hoopla that is the center of SoHo sits Cafe Yaya, one of the neighborhood’s best-kept secrets. The small restaurant, with Raymond Pettibon works lining the walls and midcentury-modern décor, is a quiet reprieve serving delicious, healthy takes on nostalgic classics. The menu features open-face sandwiches (we like the tuna-melt or roast beef) served with high-quality ingredients on thinly sliced sourdough, so as not to weigh you down. The freekeh-Manchego salad and malt-chocolate sundae are also not to be missed. (instagram.com) —Gracie Wiener

WATCH
AngelHeaded Hipster
The pioneering glam rocker Marc Bolan was a shooting star. Alongside his band, T. Rex, he created a generous handful of enduring, earwormy radio hits: “Twentieth Century Boy,” “Bang a Gong (Get It On),” “Cosmic Dancer,” and “Jeepster,” to name a few—before dying tragically in a car crash in 1977, just shy of his 30th birthday. The documentary AngelHeaded Hipster tells Bolan’s story through archival footage and interviews with, among others, Elton John, Ringo Starr, Gloria Jones, David Bowie (his friend and rival), and Bolan himself. The film is partly structured around the recording of the fine Hal Willner–produced Bolan/T. Rex tribute album of the same name, which makes for rewarding, if bittersweet, viewing. (That album would be the last from the gifted producer, who died in 2020.) Watching Willner at work in the studio with such talented Bolan interpreters as Beth Orton, U2, Joan Jett, Nick Cave, Lucinda Williams, Father John Misty, and Maria McKee is a poignant treat. (justwatch.com) —George Kalogerakis

VISIT
Anya Hindmarch x The Tuck Shop
Is there anything more satisfying about the back-to-school experience than the purchasing of new school supplies? Yes—procuring the wacky and delightful pencils, pens, notebooks, and other assorted accoutrements from Anya Hindmarch. At the Tuck Shop, her latest pop-up at the Anya Hindmarch Village, on Pont Street in London, all of these favorites are on offer, along with more novelty key chains (Diet Coke! Double Dip candy! Mini cherry-flavored Nerds!) than our hearts can handle. Those who can’t splurge in person can get in on the fun online starting with the Universal Bag, a versatile carry-all designed for fun-loving students of all walks of life. (anyahindmarch.com) —Ashley Baker

READ
Hirschfeld’s Sondheim
What do you get when you pair up Broadway’s greatest caricaturist with its finest composer? Hirschfeld’s Sondheim—a handsome collection of artworks by Al Hirschfeld chronicling the work of Stephen Sondheim over several decades, from West Side Story and Anyone Can Whistle to Follies and Merrily We Roll Along. The volume is subtitled “A Poster Book,” and, yes, there are 25 pages that can be slipped out and framed. But save your wall space—on the back of each poster is a fascinating capsule with information about the show and the drawing itself, such as Julie Andrews, the star of Putting It Together, being the actress Hirschfeld drew the most (55 times) or that Sondheim bought some of the originals. David Leopold wrote the illuminating text; Ben Brantley, the touching foreword; and Bernadette Peters, the introduction. She suggests listening to Sondheim’s music while looking at the posters, a crackerjack idea. ($39, alhirschfeldfoundationshop.org) —Jim Kelly

wear
Campbell’s of Beauly
Nothing stands up to the advent of autumn quite like a Shetland sweater. They’re light but warm, and hardy enough to last across the vale of years, which is why in the heyday of Ivy League dressing, everyone from J.F.K. and William F. Buckley Jr. to Mick Jagger owned at least one. For the first and last word in Shetlands, look no further than the good Scots at Campbell’s of Beauly, which has been nestled in the bosom of the Highlands since 1858. Aside from a tantalizing range of solid colors, Campbell’s makes a striped version that’s somewhere between a classic Shetland and a Rugby shirt. When layered under their Aigas field jacket, it will have you turned out like a young New Hollywood director. For those eager to get their rus in urbe on, may we suggest a pair of Campbell’s plus fours? Listen, don’t knock it till you’ve tried it. Just make sure to pair them with shooting socks, because no matter how good your calves looked on the Glorious Twelfth, they won’t be fit for public consumption by pheasant season. ($209, campbellsofbeauly.com) —Nathan King