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39 Best Travel Tuesday Deals on Hotels, Flights and Cruises

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Cyber Week is no longer just for gift shopping and tech deals — it’s also a chance to save on travel. Travel Tuesday is the latest addition to the holiday sale blitz, and it’s picking up steam: McKinsey & Company reported that online searches for “Travel Tuesday” increased 500% from 2021 to 2023, anticipating all-time high interest this year. Now that the big day is here, we’re seeing more travel deals than ever.

But all those deals come with a lot of fine print. I worked with Good Housekeeping‘s travel expert, Karen Cicero, to sort out the 39 best deals on flights, hotels, cruises and luggage, including a few of our 2025 Family Travel Award winners. Many of these deals have been live since Black Friday, but are peaking today. (For example, JetBlue and American Airlines both added domestic flight routes for under $100.) You’ll want to book ASAP to score the best value; many deals end tonight, and those remaining will wrap up by the end of the week.


Travel Tuesday Hotel Deals

Atlantis Paradise Island

  • The deal: Save up to 30% off bookings for January 2 – June 30, 2025 at The Coral, The Royal, The Cove and The Reef (AKA, four of the resort’s five towers).
  • Book by: December 6
  • What our testers loved: Testers were blown away by Atlantis’ special experiences, including up-close animal encounters, waterslides and a kids’ club with a giant dollhouse and cooking classes.

Atlantis Paradise Island, Bahamas

Ava Resort Cancun

  • The deal: The new Ava Resort Cancun, a Family Travel Award-winner, is offering special rates starting at $297 per night for travel through December 20, 2025.
  • Book by: December 6
  • What our testers loved: “The resort truly offers something for everyone,” said our tester, who visited with her spouse and three grown children. “It’s a great spot for a multigenerational trip.”

Beaches Resorts

  • The deal: Enjoy up to 65% off rooms, plus up to $1,000 in credit to apply to your vacation (up to $400 off your resort stay + $600 off flights, when booked through Beaches).
  • Book by: December 3, for travel through December 3, 2025
  • What our testers loved: Beaches Turks & Caicos won a Family Travel Award for being a “kids’ paradise” for ages 2 to 12, since all kids’ amenities and activities are included in the price.
  • The deal: Take up to 50% off select hotels, up to 25% off rental cars and up to 20% off attractions, no codes needed.
  • Book by: December 4, for travel through December 31, 2025
  • The deal: Take up to 25% off on rooms at select Disney Resort Hotels in early 2025. See the full list of properties and dates here.
  • Book by: No end date specified; promotion applicable to most nights from January 1 – April 30, 2025.

Expedia

  • The deal: Expedia members (it’s free to join) can take 30% or more off thousands of hotels.
  • Book by: December 4, for travel through December 15, 2025.

Fontainebleau Las Vegas

  • The deal: If you’re planning a trip to Las Vegas in 2025, the year-old Fontainebleau property is offering 40% off (or 45% off for Fontainebleau rewards members).
  • Book by: December 3, for stays through November 30, 2025

Hotel Tonight

  • The deal: Save an extra 10% off the hotel booking app that offers last-minute rooms wite code “HTSTAYCAY.”
  • Book by: December 3
  • The deal: Take 30% or more off hotel stays via Hotels.com when you travel before December 15, 2025.
  • Book by: December 4

Hard Rock

  • The deal: All-Inclusive Resorts: Take up to 50% off at all-inclusive properties such as Hard Rock Hotel Cancun and Hard Rock Hotel Punta Cana. Hotels: Take 20%-30% off all hotels room rates.
  • Book by: December 6, for stays from December 15 – August 31, 2025
  • The deal: Get 20% off select hotels across the United States and Canada. In addition, the Hilton Los Cabos Resort lets you save up to 40% off.
  • Book by: January 5, 2025 for Hilton hotel stays through April 30, 2025; December 6 for Hilton Los Cabos Resort stays through October 13, 2025
  • What our testers loved: Los Cabos, as a destination, won a Family Travel Award for its access to charming towns off resort property, like San Jose del Cabo, which has cute shops with crafts from local artisans.

Hyatt Hotels

  • The deal: Take 20% off at participating hotels and resorts with code “SAVENOW.”
  • Book by: December 9, for stays through April 30, 2025

InterContinental Hotels Group

  • The deal: Massive hotel chain IHG is offering 25% off for rewards members and 17% off for everyone else.
  • Book by: December 3, for stays through April 30, 2025
  • What our testers loved: We’re big fans of the Kimpton Santo, a centrally-located hotel in San Antonio, one of our award-winning family destinations. “There is a wide variety of activities for all tastes and ages,” said our tester.

Marriott Bonvoy

  • The deal: Marriott Bonvoy is offering its largest discount ever: Members can save 25% off weekend stays at participating hotels when booked through the app. Or, book online and save 20%.
  • Book by: December 3, for stays from December 1 – January 20, 2025
  • What our testers loved: This deal applies to several Family Travel Award-winning and tester-favorite properties, including:

Sheraton Waikiki Beach Resort, Honolulu, Hawaii

  • The deal: Get 30% off 2+ night stays at all Omni properties.
  • Book by: December 4, for stays through May 26, 2025
  • What our testers loved: Two Omni properties won Family Travel Awards this year, both in our Mountain Getaways category — the Omni Homestead, known as “America’s oldest resort,” in Hot Springs, VA and the Omni Barton Creek in Austin, TX. Testers enjoyed the child-friendly feel and Southern charm.

Omni Homestead Resort, Hot Springs, Virginia

Priceline

  • The deal: Take 20% off select hotels, as much as 20% off rental cars, and more. Just look out for the sale icon when searching for your booking. Browse all deals here.
  • Travel Tuesday flash deals:
    • Take 30% off when you bundle your flight and hotel booking
    • Get up to $2,000 cruise cash to spend on board with your cruise booking
    • Take an extra 15% off hotels when booking in the Priceline app with code “TRAVELTUE15
  • Book by: December 3 for flash deals; No end date specified for 20% off deals

Resort Pass

  • The deal: Get $50 off bookings of $200+ using code “BFCM2024.”
  • Book by: December 3
  • What our testers loved: Resort Pass is a day-guest booking service that won a Family Travel Award for its peak staycation potential. “We spent $80 for two adults and two kids to get a day pass to the resort pool with slides and a lazy river about an hour from our house,” one mom said. Beyond daycations, our testers noted that the service would come in handy when staying with relatives — prime for a family fun day this winter break!
  • The deal: Take an average of 10% off stays of 7+ nights and an average of 20% of stays of 28+ nights. Discount will vary slightly based on location. Select the “weekly discount” or “monthly discount” filters on Vrbo to search for these savings.
  • Book by: December 3
  • The deal: Take up to 65% off bookings, plus, get up to $1,000 of resort credit + $500 of flight credit on stays of seven nights or longer.
  • Book by: December 3, for stays through December 3, 2025
  • The deal: At at any Wyndham property worldwide, members can get 30% off stays of two nights or more, and non-members can save 20% off two-night stays.
  • Book by: December 6, for trips through March 31, 2025

Ava Resort Cancun, Mexico


Travel Tuesday Flight Deals

  • The deal: Score $440 round-trip flights to select European destinations, including Dublin, Amsterdam, Paris, Frankfurt, Edinburgh, Barcelona and more.
  • Book by: December 4, for travel from January 7 – April 9, 2025

NurPhoto//Getty Images

  • The deals:
  • Book by: December 3
  • The deal: Low-cost airline Breeze just got even cheaper for Travel Tuesday: use code “EPIC” for up to 60% off base fares.
  • Book by: December 3, for travel through September 2, 2025
  • The deal: Delta is offering special prices on select domestic and international itineraries. (Take note: Last year, Delta’s only offer was on Premium Cabin seating.)
  • Book by: December 4, for travel from January 7 – February 28, 2025, or March 18, 2025 for Europe
  • The deal: Take up to 50% off one, two, and five-year memberships to Going, a discounted flight booking platform and app. Regular membership prices start at $49/year

Hawaiian Airlines

  • The deal: If you’ve been dreaming of a tropical escape to Hawaii, you can book for as little as $99 one-way from San Diego or $229 one-way from New York (see full list of fares here).
  • Book by: December 3

Jet Blue

  • The deal: During the Cyber Fundays sale, select domestic travel starts at $49. See full list of fares here.
  • Book by: December 4, for travel from December 9 – April 8, 2025

PLAY

  • The deal: Take 30% off flights to Iceland, Copenhagen, Paris, London, Amsterdam and Berlin.
  • Book by: December 3, for travel between December – May 2025 and September – October 2025 (in other words, summer bookings are excluded)
  • The deal: Take up to 30% off base fares with code “CYBERSALE.”
  • Book by: December 5, for travel from January 7 – March 5, 2025 (domestic) or May 22, 2025 (international).
  • The deal: Take 80% off base fares with code “80PCT” for Tuesday and Wednesday flights.
  • Book by: December 3, for travel from December 10 – February 26, 2025
  • The deal: United members get exclusive access to special milage pricing for 25 destinations.
  • Book by: December 6

Travel Tuesday Cruise Deals

  • The deal: Save up to $900 off per stateroom, plus, $50 deposits and eligibility for free room upgrades (pending availability).
  • Book by: December 4

Celebrity Cruises

  • The deal: During Celebrity Cruises’ Travel Tuesday sale, take 75% off your second guest’s fare, plus up to $800 off per stateroom (this will come in handy if you’re traveling with a group and booking multiple staterooms!).
  • Book by: December 3, for sailings through May 10, 2027

Holland America

  • The deal: Take up to 25% off cruise fares, plus, $25 deposits, get prepaid gratuity and get free fares for your third and fourth guests on 800+ select itineraries.
  • Book by: December 5

Norwegian Cruise Line

  • The deal: Take up to 50% off select cruises. See list of itineraries here. Plus, get $500 in on-board credit for $250 at time of booking.
  • Book by: December 2
  • The deal: Save up to 40% off all MSC cruise fares, inclusive of Wi-Fi and a basic drinks package, plus get up to $500 in onboard credit.
  • Book by: December 3, for sailings through 2026
  • What our testers loved: The MSC Seascape ship is our favorite in MSC’s fleet for a family vacation, winning a Family Travel Award for its expanded kid and teen offerings.

Princess Cruises

  • The deal: Take up to 50% off cruise fares on select itineraries, plus 50% off deposits and up to $500 of onboard credit.
  • Book by: December 3
  • What our testers loved: “All the staterooms on the Sun Princess feel more luxe than those on older Princess ships,” said our tester, who celebrated her daughter’s graduation with a sailing from Athens to Barcelona.
  • The deal: Book select cruises with 80% off second sailors (good for couples) or $99 per person, per night (good for groups).
  • Book by: December 3, for sailings through November 2026

GH Family Travel Awards

Travel Tuesday 2024 lands just a few weeks after Good Housekeeping announced its third-annual Family Travel Awards, in which over 150 consumer testers embarked on real-world travel to experience and evaluate the best destinations. We’re thrilled to see that many of our tested winners are included in this year’s Travel Tuesday deals.


Cyber Week luggage deals

We extensively test luggage here in the Good Housekeeping Institute, and have been covering all the best luggage deals through Cyber Week. After all, if you’ve booked a trip, you’re going to need gear to get you there!

Heath Owens (he/they) is the Deputy Editor for Hearst Magazines’ central commerce editorial team, where he leads content strategy and production. He specializes in product testing and sales and deals coverage, with the ultimate goal of helping readers shop smarter. When he’s not at his desk or running around New York City to preview the latest product launches, he’s probably catching up on the Real Housewives of Everywhere™ and tending to his plant children, or, as of late, training for a marathon. 

Karen is a seasoned journalist who specializes in travel, book, lifestyle and food coverage. Cicero has visited almost every state with her family (look out Wyoming, she’s coming for you next!). She has spoken at several travel industry conferences, including PRSA and the Mid-Atlantic Tourism Alliance and was previously the senior editor at Parents. A mom who goes overboard for all the holidays, Cicero lives in the Christmas city itself: Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. 



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Every burning question about naked cruise ship holidays

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Like regular cruises, just with less clothes (Picture: Getty Images)

We all want to let our hair down on holiday. But some people are letting everything go, even their underwear.

Nude cruises – or ‘nakations at sea’ – are booming, as a growing number of travellers leave their inhibitions at home.

But, if you’re picturing a sweaty free-for-all on deck, or passengers hooking up left, right and centre, think again. 

Travel company Bare Necessities has been taking passengers sans clothing on week-long cruises to the Caribbean and beyond since 1991.

The demand has risen dramatically over the last 30 years. The first-full nude cruise began with a 30-passenger dive boat in the Bahamas, now they operate 2,000 person cruises on huge Vessels ran by top cruise companies like Carnival and Holland America.

And from departure to dock, they’re non-sexual. In fact, naturist cruising comes with its surprisingly strict rules.

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Curious? Metro looks at six unexpected things that happen on a nude cruise. 

1. Do all passengers have to be nude?

Despite what the name suggests, you’re not actually required to strip off.

While many passengers will be clothes-free while sunbathing, swimming or lounging around, you won’t get booted off for covering up. 

Bare Necessities welcomes newcomers, and there’s a casual and accepting vibe.

However, the website does warn that most passengers find themselves more relaxed and withholding less of who they are without the barrier of clothing. Got it.

2. Is clothing ever required?

If you’ve booked a nude cruise, you might be tempted to pack light. But don’t go overboard: you’ll need to bring a few bits along with you. 

On Bare Necessities cruises, clothing is required in certain areas. That includes the dining room, where all meals are served.

According to the website, casual attire is fine, but you can’t use bathrobes to cover up.

Nude cruises have strict towel policies (Picture: Getty Images)

Passengers must also cover up while docked alongside a port or beside other ships in a port.

When the ship is at sea, or anchored in a port, it’s fine to bare all, unless an announcement has been made to say otherwise. 

So, bring a full suitcase (and plenty of sunscreen).

3. Are the staff nude too?

If you’re expecting everyone to be in the buff, you’ll be disappointed.

Staff members, including cruise singers, cleaners, and the Captain, are all clothed, so it’s never a fully nude cruise. 

You might be stark naked while ordering a piña colada, but the bartender will be fully dressed. 

4. Do cruises even use towels?

One thing you can probably leave behind is a towel. 

Cruise operators ask passengers to always sit on a towel if they’re naked, whether it’s on a sun lounger, a bar stool, or eating at the cruise buffet. 

Towels are provided as an unofficial naturist dress code throughout the ship. There’ll be fresh beach towels in your room and stacks of smaller towels on board.

5. Everyone’s just having sex, right? 

No. At least, not blatantly. 

You can expect normal cruising activities on board (Picture: Getty Images)

Since there’s nudity involved, many passengers assume things might get a little frisky. But you’re on the wrong cruise if you’re expecting anything like that to happen. 

Naturist cruises are different to swingers of Lifestyle cruises, which allow sexual exploration and intimate encounters. (There are plenty of companies that offer this style of cruising, if that’s more up your street).

Sexual behaviour in public spaces is prohibited and will get you kicked off.

Lingerie, fetish-wear and ‘excessive’ genital jewellery are also banned, according to Bare Necessities’ rules. The goal is about body positivity, nothing else. 

6. Do the usual cruise activities still take place?

From dance classes to karaoke, pool games, music and excursions, a nude cruise still offers all the classic cruise activities, just minus the clothes.

Although you’ll probably not see any conga lines or line dancing without a single item of clothing on. 

When do passengers have to be clothed on a nude cruise?

On Bare Necessities nude cruises, there are a few situations that require clothing, including:

  • When locals come aboard smaller charters to perform
  • While docked in port
  • In the main and specialty dining rooms 
  • During the Captain’s reception/ introduction 

Do you have a story to share?

Get in touch by emailing MetroLifestyleTeam@Metro.co.uk.



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Tom McKinney to take Radio 3 Breakfast listeners on a road trip across Gloucestershire and Somerset

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BBC Radio 3 Breakfast is on the road again this August, as Tom McKinney presents a week of live broadcasts, taking listeners on a journey through Gloucestershire and Somerset, culminating in a weekend of BBC Proms performances in Bristol.

Inspired by Tom’s passion for nature and birds, Breakfast presents its usual selection of the best music to start the morning, while visiting some of the most famous wetlands, forests and sites of cultural interest across Gloucestershire and Somerset. Live performances by local musicians and contributions from naturalists and historians help bring the journey to life, telling stories of the rich heritage of the area.

The road trip starts at Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust Slimbridge, on the River Severn Estuary, and continues to Westonbirt National Arboretum near Tetbury. The programme then travels to Bath with a broadcast from the city’s renowned Grand Pump Room, and then to the Bishop’s Palace & Gardens in Wells. One last stop in Tyntesfield – the Victorian revival country house and estate near Wraxall – heralds a weekend of BBC Proms performances at Bristol Beacon on Friday 22, Saturday 23 and Sunday 24 August.

Through the week, listeners join Tom on a canoe ride along the waterways in Slimbridge, a 13-metre-high treetop canopy walkway in Westonbirt, and a wander around the rooms and gardens at Tyntesfield estate. In Bath, Tom visits the Grand Pump Room – the city’s cultural and social heart for over 200 years – and composer and astronomer William Hershel’s house, where he discovered the planet Uranus. From there, Tom travels to Wells, exploring the 14 acres of gardens of The Bishop’s Palace (and encountering its famous bell-ringing swans) and the cathedral to discuss its rich musical history.

The week of live broadcasts from Gloucestershire and Somerset culminates in the BBC Proms weekend from Bristol Beacon, including five concerts, all broadcast on BBC Radio 3 and BBC Sounds: a collaboration between Paraorchestra and award-winning duo The Breath (22/08 – Beacon Hall); a live edition of Late Junction with presenter Verity Sharp (22/08 – Lantern Hall); the Danish National Vocal Ensemble with music by Bach, Ethel Smyth, Nielsen and more (23/08 – St George’s Bristol); Britten Sinfonia conducted by Tess Jackson, with violinists Zoë Beyers and Miranda Dale (23/08 – Beacon Hall); and an exploration of Italian composers with the Orchestra of Welsh National Opera (24/08 – Beacon Hall).

Previous Radio 3 Breakfast road trips have seen the programme travel through the North East of England, lough-to-lough across Northern Ireland and coast-to-coast through the Scottish Highlands, follow the Rivers Ure and Ouse to the Humber in Yorkshire, and journey along the River Severn from Wales into England and back. Breakfast has also come live from forests in Co. Down, Hampshire and Snowdonia.

Tom McKinney, BBC Radio 3 Breakfast Presenter, says: “I am very excited to present my first ever Breakfast road trip. Across the course of what’s set to be a very special week on Radio 3, I look forward to sharing gentle sounds of waterways, rustling leaves and morning birdsong with audiences at home, as well as discovering more about some of the area’s landmarks and musical traditions. This is shaping up to be a true feast for the ears!”

Sam Jackson, Controller BBC Radio 3 and BBC Proms, says: “Keeping up with Breakfast’s tradition of regular UK road trips celebrating local culture, history and nature, we are delighted to present a week of live broadcasts across Gloucestershire and Somerset, all leading up to a packed weekend of BBC Proms at Bristol Beacon. We invite listeners from across the UK to join us for what promises to be a glorious journey, enjoying the opportunity to experience the atmosphere of wetlands, forests and historical buildings as we begin the morning on BBC Radio 3”.

BBC Radio 3 Breakfast from Gloucestershire and Somerset will be live Monday 18 – Friday 22 August, 6.30-9.30am and available on BBC Sounds.

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An art-filled road trip from Chicago to Detroit

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To drive through Detroit is to move through a landscape shaped by both its storied industrial legacy and its long-standing creative community, where generations of artists have turned the city’s factories, urban prairies and waterfront into a living canvas.

The third installment of the WBEZ and Chicago Sun-Times visual art road trip heads east to Detroit and its smaller neighboring cities, where the materials of the past — steel, brick, salvaged wood — aren’t just inspiration but building blocks in a vibrant cultural landscape.

DEARBORN: Arab American Heritage and next-level cashews

Before delving into Detroit, first stop in Dearborn, a suburb that offers a cultural experience rooted in industrial history and Arab American heritage.

The Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation houses iconic objects from American life. “It’s just huge, like the size of an airplane hangar,” said Shelley Selim, the Mort Harris Curator of Automotive, Industrial and Decorative Design at the Detroit Institute of Arts. “There’s a Buckminster Fuller Dymaxion House there, and the Eames ‘Mathematica’ exhibition that they designed for a World’s Fair for IBM.” Next door, Greenfield Village recreates streetscapes from centuries past, with historic homes, steam engines and a glassblowing studio where visitors can watch artists at work.

Arab American communities have been rooted in east Dearborn for more than a century. Many families arrived in the early 20th century to work for Ford and other automakers. In 2023, it became the country’s first city with an Arab American majority.

AlTayeb remains a favorite for Lebanese breakfast platters. The fatteh stands out — layers of toasted pita, chickpeas, warm yogurt, pine nuts and olive oil. Portions are generous; flavors are bold, earthy and bright. For a hearty lunch, try the combo platter at James Beard Award-winning Al Ameer, which includes a generous spread of chicken tawook, lamb kofta, shish kebab, falafel and perfectly fluffed rice.

Before leaving town, Hashem’s Nuts & Coffee Gallery offers a fragrant stop. Shelves are packed with Middle Eastern spices, roasted coffees, and hard-to-find blends like ras el hanout. Selim makes regular trips to the shop where she stocks up on jumbo Brazilian cashews.

DETROIT: A city of space, memory and imagination

The Detroit Institute of Arts (DIA) houses one of the country’s most significant public collections. At its center is the Diego Rivera Court, named after the renowned Mexican painter and muralist who vividly portrayed social inequity, labor struggles and industrialization. “It rewards you every time you look at it,” said Selim. “There’s even a cheat sheet in the tile floor — little carved labels tell you what each panel depicts.” Rivera’s 1932 fresco of the Ford Rouge Plant stretches across four walls and grapples with the tensions between machines, myth, labor and land.

Nearby, “Quilting Time,” a large mosaic by Romare Bearden, pays tribute to communal labor and visual abstraction. “It is just a really stunning representation of community, of women coming together,” Selim said. “And the abstraction of the quilts is just spectacular.”

East of the museum, the Shepherd — a decommissioned Catholic church — has been converted into a contemporary art space by Library Street Collective, a Detroit-based organization known for turning historic buildings into community cultural hubs.

The current Shepherd show, “The Sea and the Sky, and You and I,” centers artists whose work “reflects on histories of landscape.” Among the works are three sculptures by Detroit artist Scott Hocking, who built the pieces from salvaged materials collected at a nearby marina. The artist “considers the cultural memory of the city and the material memory of the city,” said Allison Glenn, a Detroit native who curated the show.

The show, which runs through Aug. 30, also includes work by Midwest sculptor and activist Jordan Weber, whose installation features a spliced GTO Judge — a muscle car originally built by Black assembly line workers — emerging from the floor like a buried relic. The sculpture echoes Weber’s ongoing collaboration with Canfield Consortium, a local nonprofit in the East Canfield neighborhood, which has long grappled with industrial pollution from nearby auto factories. There, Weber installed an air-quality beacon and plans to plant a conifer forest to absorb airborne pollutants.

Public art like Weber’s builds on a long legacy of community-based arts efforts in Detroit. One of the most recognizable is The Heidelberg Project, started in the 1980s by artist Tyree Guyton, who transformed his family’s former home — and eventually two surrounding blocks left in disrepair after the 1967 uprising — into a colorful, ever-evolving wonderland.

For a different kind of spin through history, Submerge is home to the techno label Underground Resistance. Glenn calls it “the world’s first known techno museum.” The space includes a basement record store and rotating tours led by Detroit music legends like Jon Dixon and Cornelius Harris.

Across town, on the city’s West Side, the Dabls Mbad African Bead Museum spans an entire block. “The founder, Olayami Dabls, really appreciated the symbolic and cultural significance of beads within the African and African diasporic communities,” Selim said. “It’s a really cool artist-created environment.”

John K. King Used & Rare Books, located in a former glove factory just west of downtown, feels suspended in time. “Every sale is handwritten down in a ledger,” said Selim of the DIA. Pull-cord lights and floor-to-ceiling stacks make the browsing feel both intimate and endless. “You’ll always find something unique and interesting.”

Round out the day at Paramita Sound, a downtown wine bar and listening room that pairs vinyl sets with high communal tables and natural wine. “Even if you don’t want to talk to anyone,” said Glenn, “you’ll be socializing.”

BLOOMFIELD HILLS: Midcentury icons and palatial grounds

Set on more than 300 acres of landscaped grounds and landmark architecture, Cranbrook Art Museum in Bloomfield Hills beckons as a design destination and a place to wander. “People just explore the grounds for landscape architecture and sculpture,” said Laura Mott, chief curator of the museum. “It’s really just one of the gems of America.”

The current show, “Eventually Everything Connects: Mid-Century Modern Design in the U.S.,” is an ambitious exhibition that revisits the midcentury design canon. “We’ve done a lot of work excavating individuals who are diversifying American modern design,” said Mott. That includes a “textile forest” that hangs from the museum ceiling and walls and features works by such designers as Alexander Girard, Ruth Adler Schnee and Olga Lee. The show is on view through Sept. 21.

Cranbrook’s buildings themselves are also part of the draw. The museum was designed by Eliel Saarinen and opened in 1942. Visitors can also tour the Saarinen House, where Eliel and Loja Saarinen lived while the Cranbrook academy was established, or book a visit to Frank Lloyd Wright’s Smith House, one of Michigan’s best-preserved examples of Wright’s Usonian homes.

Bonus: Where to Stay

For those making a weekend of it, ALEO Detroit offers a low-key, art-forward stay in Detroit’s East Village. Warda Bouguettaya, a James Beard Award–winning chef, runs the breakfast program, and the on-site bar Father Forgive Me opens in the afternoon. “The balcony is right above the bar,” said Glenn. “It’s like your backyard, but with better lighting.” And funky, orange wine.

Or try The Siren Hotel, which offers a gilded, atmospheric experience. Set in a former 1920s high-rise, the chic design leans maximalist: velvet upholstery, terrazzo floors and heavy drapery.

Elly Fishman is a journalist and author whose work explores immigration, incarceration and American culture, including the arts. Her writing has appeared in the New York Times, GQ, Rolling Stone, WBEZ Chicago, among others. She is currently working on her second book, forthcoming from HarperCollins.





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