Burberry is bringing back our dearest Lilibet. To mark the centenary of Her Majesty’s birth, the fashion house has teamed up with the Royal Collection Trust on a capsule collection that channels Queen Elizabeth II’s wardrobe: from a lightweight-cotton gabardine in holly green to—our favorite!—a gold-plated brooch in the shape of a corgi. All in all an adequate reason, if any, to proudly exclaim “Long live the Queen!” once more. ($585, burberry.com) —Carolina de Armas
watch
Deep End
In New York—a city desperate for third spaces—bathhouses have emerged as an intimate way to meet new people. (See here.) But before Othership and Akari Sauna, the 1970 film Deep End foretold this trend in a much creepier and surrealist manner. It takes place in Swinging London, where a precocious, teenager, Mike (John Moulder-Brown), becomes infatuated with the older Susan (Jane Asher) at the bathhouse they work at. What unfolds is a sleazy cat-and-mouse game of unrequited obsession set against a backdrop of vivid Wes Anderson–like interiors, leaving one to think there must be something in the water. (amazon.com) —Maggie Turner
spritz
Le Labo
As the world around us transitions out of winter heaviness to the airy and light spring, so does my daily perfume. Violette 30, the newest addition to Le Labo’s Classic Collection, presents Technicolor in a bottle. Inspired by the rarer, shadow-seeking white violet, the fragrance pairs verdant-green floral notes with white tea, cedarwood, and a touch of guaiac wood. It’s a scent both familiar and unknown, embracing the multitudes and promise of the season. ($240, lelabofragrances.com) —Gracie Wiener
read
Returning
Nicholas Lemann is not one for small topics. He wrote about the great Black migration from the rural South to the urban North in The Promised Land and about American meritocracy in The Big Test. He has met his best subject yet in Returning, a sweeping yet intimate history about his family and his full-hearted embrace of Judaism, a religion that marked his German forebears when they arrived in Louisiana in the 1830s but was downplayed by his own father (a noted New Orleans attorney whose desire to be part of his city’s hierarchy forced him to bargain with its anti-Semitism). Lemann places three generations under the same microscopic attention he has brought to all his work, and in this case the payoff—elegantly chronicled and abetted by his second wife, Judith Shulevitz—allows him to finally find his home. ($35, amazon.com) —Jim Kelly
listen
Love Story
First released in 1991, Lenny Kravitz’s “It Ain’t Over ’til It’s Over” is having a major resurgence after being featured in the premiere of Ryan Murphy’s John F. Kennedy Jr.–Carolyn Bessette saga, Love Story. The show’s two leads, Sarah Pidgeon and Paul Anthony Kelly, are captivating, yes, but the real magic lies in the soundtrack. Music supervisor Jen Malone (of Euphoria, Wednesday, and Beef) has done more than curate songs; she’s brought back the 90s, layering pop hits, ballads, and alternative-rock anthems from Sade, the Cranberries, Radiohead, and Mazzy Star. (To name just a few!) The playlist feels as intimate as a mixtape an ex spent hours perfecting—and still hits the jugular years later. The finale may have aired this week, but you can relive the show’s most magnetic moments by adding it to your queue—because it seriously isn’t over ’til it’s over. (spotify.com) —Gabriella Maestri
sip
Ammos
A martini, to me, is only ever made with gin. A new brand of vodka has me convinced, however, that a juniper-less martini can really hold its own. Housed in a truly handsome ceramic bottle with a real Summer Lovers (1982) vibe—plus, when emptied, you can rather brilliantly buy less expensive refill cans—Ammos is inspired by the Aegean coastline. Crafted with aromatic, sharp, and zesty Vakhalou lemons and naturally dry-cured and briny Turkish black olives, the cocktail is among the freshest I’ve ever had. ($82, ammos.vodka) —Spike Carter