Years before I started as an accessories assistant at Vogue, my mom and I would go to see the Costume Institute exhibitions together, and it became a tradition I looked forward to every summer. We’d meet at the uptown 6 train platform at Grand Central, head up to Museum Mile together, press on our Met entrance stickers (and reminisce about the old times when they used pins), then make our way through the exhibition. We’d often check out a few other galleries along the way, typically searching for the Robert Venturi Chippendale chair my mom is certain lives somewhere in the American Wing (spoiler alert, we’ve never been able to find it), then head to the roof for a glass of rosé while we rested what we like to call our “slow-museum-stroll legs.” The day is not over, however, until we stop at the bookshop on the way out to pick up a copy of the exhibition’s catalog.
Collecting books has been important to my family since before my time, and the house I grew up in was basically held up by wall-to-wall bookshelves. There were side tables made from overflowing stacks, and every coffee table had a few on display. My own collection of Met mementos started the day we visited “Punk: Chaos to Couture” and has grown each year since, from one volume featuring the remarkable ball gowns of “Charles James: Beyond Fashion” to the electric and exaggerated “Camp: Notes on Fashion.” Now as a market editor, I look forward to walking up the steps again for this year’s show, “Karl Lagerfeld: A Line of Beauty,” and, of course, picking up the newest catalog for my personal collection.