New Yorker Selects Dozen Winners of Eustace Tilley Design Contest
The magazine’s signature dandy as reimagined by, from left, Julie Hecht, Michael Clayton, Gary Amaro, and Dave Hoerlein
With his moncole at the ready and a butterfly his constant companion, Eustace Tilley has been The New Yorker‘s dapper mascot since founding art director Rea Irvin sketched him into being in 1925. The magazine recently invited readers to put their own twist on the discerning dandy in its fourth Eustace Tilley design contest. And this year’s competition came with a bookish bonus: the grand-prize winner’s design printed on a Strand
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