![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() “But to actually repackage it and reframe it as a cosy sensibility allowed me to draw upon a lot of knowledge that I didn’t know I had.”ĪLSO IN BOOKPAGE: Gift books for homebodies “I always thought I was quite lazy, really, and I just liked staying in,” Weir tells me. As we settle into our Facetime conversation over the Atlantic, she’s loose-limbed and relaxed, throwing her elbows onto the table in front of her and resting her head on one hand. (And that’s cosy with an s, mind you, as the queen intended.)ĭespite her impressive resume, Weir feels like your most engaging and comfortable friend, the one you curl up with on the couch, glass of wine in hand and a movie on the television to half-watch as you laugh and chat into the night. Weir is the editor-in-chief of the London Evening Standard’s weekly magazine, a former senior staffer at British Vogue and the author of Cosy: The British Art of Comfort, a book for anyone who worships at the altar of wool blankets, rain on roofs and noses in books. “I’m an 84-year-old granny!” Laura Weir says with a laugh, but if that were true, she’d be the most posh granny you’d ever met. Laura Weir distills all her wisdom about how to be comfortable, contented and snug. ![]()
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