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Tudor City

I recently moved to New York following my boyfriend’s footsteps. We are currently living in a charming place named after England’s Tudor Dinasty, Tudor City. The first time we came here looking for apartments, I was immediately fascinated by its neo- Gothic architecture, creation of the real estate developer Fred F. French. 

Once known as “Prospect Hill” and surrounded by slaughterhouses,  tenements and slums, Tudor City is now steps away from the United Nations Headquarter to the east and close enough to Grand Central and the Chrysler Building to the west.  Yet it still manages to preserve such quietness and serenity hard to find in this bursting city. 

But perhaps Tudor City’s most compelling attraction, and what makes residents and neighbors so proud, are it’s parks, known as Tudor City Greens. Located on either side of 42nd street, these gardens are a little oasis and provides us with stunning views. 

If you love movies as much as I do, and if you pay close attention, you might catch a glimpse of this wonderful place in films such as The Godfather, Taxi Driver, The Bourne Ultimatum, The International, all Spider-Man movies and so on.

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Bill Cunningham New York

Fashion is the armour to survive the reality of everyday life. I don’t think you could do away with it. It would be like doing away with civilization.

I hadn’t heard of Bill Cunningham until I bumped into a documentary featuring his life and work throughout New York City. I googled him right after I finished watching it only to find out that I was probably the only person who wasn’t aware of who he was. Bill Cunningham is as much a part of New York City as yellow cabs and morning bagels. 

This fashion photographer, mostly known for his streetstyle photography, has been documenting the fashion scene for the last 50 years. As designer Oscar De la Renta pointed out: “More than anyone else in the city, he has the whole visual history of the last 40 or 50 years of New York. It’s the total scope of fashion in the life of New York”.

All the way through the film, we learn that Cunningham is very private about the details of his life. Wikipedia tells us he’s a Harvard dropout who turned into journalism and published his first pictures, along with one of Greta Garbo, in the Times. From them on he has continuously been taking pictures, and if you are lucky enough, you might catch him in his signature blue coat riding his bike on the streets of New York.