Issue link: https://www.balharbourdigital.com/i/726108
Michael Reynolds is a New York-based creative director. Reynolds joined the editorial staff of Vogue in 1990 where he spent six years before joining House & Garden as a senior style editor. In the mid '90s, Reynolds helped to conceive and launch Wallpaper*, where he continues as its American editor. He's also a contributing editor to Architectural Digest and Cultured. For this issue he produced our fine jewelry feature, "Pile It On," with photographer Anthony Cotsifas. Fanny Singer is a writer, curator and passionate home cook based in London. Most recently she has illustrated and co-authored with her mother, Alice Waters, the cookbook "My Pantry" (Pam Krauss Books). Since 2015, Singer has written on arts and culture for WSJ. Magazine, where she is a contributing editor. With fellow curator Mariah Nielson, Singer is launching a small clothing and design brand called Permanent Collection in September. Her forthcoming culinary memoir, "Home," photographed by Brigitte Lacombe, will be published by Knopf in 2018. "I love following fashion but try to avoid investing too much in trends. I'm most looking forward to bundling up in one of the outerwear pieces from Permanent Collection." Seppe Tirabassi is a fashion stylist based in New York City. Born and raised in Portland, Maine, he began his career assisting stylist Ronald Burton and continues to work with Sarah Gore Reeves. Tirabassi has worked alongside photographers including Patrick Demarchelier, Giampaolo Sgura, Russell James and Gilles Bensimon. In this issue, Tirabassi brings us the best of the Fall collections in "Too Good to Be True." Photographer and painter Frances Tulk-Hart lives in New York City, where she is also in a band, Franco + Rossi Are Love Taps, with her husband. Her work often appears in The New York Times, Teen Vogue, Purple magazine and British Vogue. For her first assignment for Bal Harbour, the former- stylist-turned-photographer shot on location in the Hamptons. "This shoot was inspired by the free spirit of the artist Lee Krasner, who in 1945 moved to the Hamptons with her husband, Jackson Pollock," she says. "At 4:45 in the morning, 30 minutes before call time, I stepped on a nail and the most spectacular storm opened up on us. As my producer on the shoot said, 'The universe gave us lemons, and we made lemonade.'" Contributors 44 BAL HARBOUR REYNOLDS: FRANÇOIS DISCHINGER