EditorialSir Roger Moore?s James Bond tuxedos, Hollywood Walk of Fame plaque and celebrity-packed Gucci address book all part of auction of late actor?s personal items
EditorialOfficials are urging consumers to properly store the Sit N’ Stand Double and Ultra strollers with model numbers beginning with “SS76” or “SS66.” (U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission via The New York Times)
EditorialDouble-Sided Pendant with Jesus and Virgin, Cameo: 1700/1800, mount: 17th century, European, France, Hardstone, gold, and enamel, 6.7 ? 4.4 cm (2 5/8 ? 1 3/4 in.).
EditorialDish with Chinese ladies in a fenced garden and flowering plants near a rock, Deep porcelain dish with a lobed edge, painted in underglaze blue. On the flat in a medallion a Chinese lady (long list) on a horse in an enclosed garden. Opposite her anothe...
EditorialSaucer-dish with horses in a landscape, Porcelain dish with round wall, painted in underglaze blue. On the flat four horses in a landscape with rocks and a tree, the rear with four galloping horses in a landscape with rocks and a tree. Marked on the un...
EditorialDish with Chinese ladies in a fenced garden and flowering plants near a rock, Deep porcelain dish with a lobed edge, painted in underglaze blue. On the flat in a medallion a Chinese lady (long list) on a horse in an enclosed garden. Opposite her anothe...
EditorialAn image of the planet Earth captured on Sept. 21 by the LICIACube spacecraft, which will photograph the DART mission’s collision with the asteroid Dimorphos. (ASI/NASA via The New York Times)
EditorialGoblet with the inscription: DER BURG'REN LOVE AND TROU IS SAFELY SHELLS FOR ONE / THAT PEACE AND FREEDOM Dares to leave, with sheath, Goblet with trunk with profiled nodus including a leg with hollow facets on double ring. The base is flattened with a...
EditorialA satellite image provided by NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University with an arrow pointing to a double crater, roughly 28 meters wide, on the surface of the moon that is the crash site of a forgotten rocket stage that struck the far side of the moon in March of 2022. (NASA/GSFC/Arizona State University via The New York Times)