I’ve also started chronicling my life as seen from my bird feeder, something that started by accident—I’d get a an alert from my feeder that a visitor was caught on camera, or sometimes find myself part of a somebody else’s mise-en-scène: One day, a celebrity interview I conducted in the garden was captured at the glorious moment when a white-winged dove dined on a mix of meticulously chosen seeds; another video found me in a YSL wool tuxedo jacket watching four dark-eyed juncos captured during the Great Backyard Bird Count. Now, though, I’m tracking my sartorial and avian pursuits on the camera on purpose.
This season, fashion has also turned to feathers—for both design inspiration and fabrication. Sparrows and plume-like patterns were embroidered and beaded onto Matthieu Blazy’s featherlight chiffon creations for his first Chanel couture show (and today’s resort show employed feather-embellished lashes as part of the beauty look), and many of the models in Daniel Roseberry’s Schiaparelli spring 2026 couture show wore feathers—including some handmade out of silk (Zendaya and Law Roach found one of the pieces so compelling that she wore it while swanning through The Drama press tour). Peacock feathers were just one of the avian materials that Mohammad Ashi of Ashi Studio recently used. These couture pieces would, of course, be pure flights of fancy in my Park Slope backyard—but the ready-to-wear designs, which I’ve been trying out while gardening, drinking my morning latte, and even for a kind of meta fit check? Absolutely not a lark.
A Mourning Dove eats breakfast while I take a call.
Video by Margaux Anbouba
At Altuzarra, it’s a silky goose—not a silly goose!—overlay draped around the neck just like a stole, which I paired with a vintage Vuitton speedy and red wool trousers, and at Tory Burch, birds come in all shapes and sizes, with my favorite piece a beaded cardigan that displays a flock with wings outstretched. I’ve also been on the hunt for vintage references to fowls, snatching up a swallow-printed mini from Miu Miu’s spring 2010 show from Sweet Disorder Vintage. (I’ve also set an eBay alert for anything from Alexander McQueen’s 2008 spring collection, which was dedicated to fellow exotic bird Isabella Blow.) Amidst it all, my backyard cabal of cardinals, house sparrows, mourning doves, and blue jays joined in on the ever-evolving fashion show.
Recent studies have found that people who engage in birdwatching have improved brain function and mental health. Anybody who knows me well probably won’t attest to this hobby making me more sane, but I am happier since fully succumbing to the bird-brain lifestyle: Nothing gives me greater pleasure than watching robins nest in Prospect Park or a woodcock wiggle in Bryant Park. So yes, I am living out that mid-30s birding cliché—and chasing down rare birds, like the surprise trumpeter swan spotted recently on Manhattan’s East River for the first time ever. And if I’m wearing something cute while I do it? Even better.
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