ReQaf
Standart Issue 42
Standart Issue 42
Standart Issue 42 lingers with the theme of transition—right in time for spring.
We're interested in what passes and fades, and in what strangely persists. The rituals around coffee endure not because they are permanent, but because they are practised.
We start with an essay on the peculiar comfort of decent coffee at airports, those liminal places where taste, time zones, and identities blur. We travel further to an origin profile in Zambia, trace evolving coffee rituals in Cairo, Egypt, and end in Venice, a city that—like coffee itself—has learned how to live with constant change.
Taking off, we sit down with Spanish artist and designer Jaime Hayon, make a spirited defence of pumpkin spice, and step inside El Minutito in Mexico City, a cafe that feels like wandering into a sci-fi novel for your daily cup.
Along the way, we meet barista and running obsessive Romain Wyndaele to talk speed, caffeine, and why runner's high might be a myth, compare London's street scenes and shopfronts across time, and explore the long, intertwined history of coffee and reading.
Couldn't load pickup availability
