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 Alfred Shaheen's influence beyond the Hawaiian shirt

Alfred Shaheen's influence beyond the Hawaiian shirt

The upcoming exhibit 'HI Fashion: The Legacy of Alfred Shaheen' in Honolulu looks at the designs, and the man, that came to symbolize the good life in Hawaii.

 Antiquing for a wedding ring on Hawaii's Big Island

Antiquing for a wedding ring on Hawaii's Big Island

The Big Island's antiques shops are full of the usual Hawaiiana, but a wedding band for hubby? No such luck, until two sea turtles show up. The result? Titanium.

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In Hawaii, a royal crypt

Find the spirit of Hawaii's past monarchs at Mauna Ala mausoleum in Honolulu....

Find the spirit of Hawaii's past monarchs at Mauna Ala mausoleum in Honolulu.

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Travel letters: Santa Barbara's wonderful wine country

Plus, dropping U.S. restrictions on Cuba travel, the horrors of Rome's airport and unfriendly immigration officials at LAX.

I am a subscriber and an online reader. I look forward to the Travel section. Seriously, it is one of the first sections I dive into. Today's write-up about Santa Barbara is wonderful, and I got lost in it like a good book ["It's Ripening on the Vine" by Christopher Reynolds, Oct. 7]. As fall finally arrives, it will be a short trip by rail from San Diego County.

I appreciate the great writing and am considering a weekend trip there.

Christopher Carmichael

Santee, Calif.

After reading Reynolds' description of the inns in the Los Olivos area, I feel compelled to put in a word for the ForFriends Inn. My husband and I stayed there for a getaway weekend last month and found the property and rooms beautiful and the innkeepers wonderfully friendly and charming. The casual music on the patio in the evenings and the opportunities for conversation (or privacy if you prefer) that ForFriends offers is perfect. We loved the rosemary popovers at breakfast and the inn dog Smitty too.

Jan and Jared Stallones

Corona

Lift restrictions on travel to Cuba

It is ironic that for all U.S. Sen Marco Rubio's (R-Fla.) preaching about freedom, the U.S. is the only country whose citizens face endless restrictions on visiting Cuba ["Backlog for Cuba Permits Eases" by Christopher Reynolds, Oct. 7]. Why shouldn't we be free to travel and to spend our own money in that country if we so choose?

Walter Davison

Valley Village

Rome's uncivilized airport

I recently made a trip to Croatia and Italy and had to change flights through Rome. What a nightmare. Its airport must be one of the most mismanaged on this planet. I have traveled in Third World countries and the Fiumicino Airport is beyond belief.

The arrival area is dirty, the bathroom facilities unclean and the immigration officers rude and spend a lot of time talking to each other.

The holding area for passengers trying to clear immigration was like a pen for cattle, no crowd control and about 500 people trying to merge into three lines prior to getting to the window. We were waiting more than an hour in a holding area that was over 90 degrees, with no ventilation, women with babies in arms, children on the floor and many elderly with no relief from standing for that length of time. It was a riot in the making, but fortunately the crowd was more civilized than the immigration officers who could care less.

Love Rome but hate the airport.

Pat Palmer

Long Beach

Less-than-welcoming return to the U.S.

I returned from Italy on Oct. 5 of this year. I am a naturalized U.S. citizen born in Mexico. I presented my passport to the control officer and upon receiving it, he asked me whether I had a driver's license. I said yes, and he demanded that I show it to him. I asked why, and he aggressively demanded it. I had to search for the license and showed it to him, and then he asked whether I had ever been arrested. Is this going to be a routine series of questions from our immigration officers at LAX?

Roberto Rodriguez

Long Beach

The lure of Mauna Kea

The lure of Mauna Kea

HILO, Hawaii — About 11,000 feet up Mauna Kea, a dormant volcano on the Big Island of Hawaii, a plaintive-looking young couple stood...

 Crystal Bridges art museum is reshaping Wal-Mart's hometown

Crystal Bridges art museum is reshaping Wal-Mart's hometown

BENTONVILLE, Ark. — To meet Gilbert Stuart's "George Washington," Norman Rockwell's "Rosie the Riveter," Andy Warhol's "Dolly Parton"...

 Nevada Weekend Escape: Virginia City, Twain territory

Nevada Weekend Escape: Virginia City, Twain territory

It's often said that good writers have to find their voice. If that's so, Samuel Clemens found his in Virginia City, Nev. While working...

The funky beat of musical New Orleans

The funky beat of musical New Orleans

NEW ORLEANS — The cab careened past Washington Square and onto Frenchmen Street. It was close to 10 p.m., and the neighborhood was...

In Ireland, optimism is in the air

In Ireland, optimism is in the air

DUBLIN, Ireland — There are no people on Earth as romantic as the French. No one is punctual like the Swiss. The Germans have...

Our favorite summer vacation photos from readers

Our favorite summer vacation photos from readers

You went to some fantastic places this summer, as evidenced by the more than 1,500 photos submitted for this special reader-driven issue. We...

 A stroll through history at Virginia's Berkeley Plantation

A stroll through history at Virginia's Berkeley Plantation

A place of beginnings and endings, Berkeley Plantation, about halfway between Richmond and Williamsburg, Va., is part of your life. Each...

Rosenbaum House: Frank Lloyd Wright in Alabama

Rosenbaum House: Frank Lloyd Wright in Alabama

In the depths of the Depression, architect Frank Lloyd Wright developed a housing style called Usonian. These middle-class homes were...

Ft. Snelling: Citadel on a Minnesota bluff

Ft. Snelling: Citadel on a Minnesota bluff

Begun in 1819, Ft. Snelling at the time was the remotest military outpost on the American frontier. (Now it's just a mile from the...

 The Old South at New Orleans' Hermann-Grima House

The Old South at New Orleans' Hermann-Grima House

"What's that?" Visitors often ask that in New Orleans, which is a trove of unexpected juxtapositions. Just steps off the French Quarter's...

Pittock Mansion: French Renaissance showplace in Portland, Ore.

Pittock Mansion: French Renaissance showplace in Portland, Ore.

The Pittock Mansion, a 16,000-square-foot French Renaissance-style masterpiece, reigns atop a 1,000-foot bluff overlooking the city of...

Vizcaya Museum & Gardens in Miami shows a keen eye for detail

Vizcaya Museum & Gardens in Miami shows a keen eye for detail

The breeze off Biscayne Bay and playful fountains cool Vizcaya's elaborate gardens even on a sweltering summer day — not that...

Weekend Escape: Historic Benicia, Calif., a Bay Area artists' haven

Weekend Escape: Historic Benicia, Calif., a Bay Area artists' haven

Benicia, a small waterfront town in the Bay Area often overlooked by travelers, is an elixir for big-city angst. Less than an hour from...

History lives in the Yucatán

History lives in the Yucatán

YUCATÁN PENINSULA, Mexico — What's the Mexican drug-war body count now? 47,000? Ever since the killings began to escalate in...

Travel Briefs

Letters: Gems of Santa Barbara County wine country

Regarding "It's Ripening on the Vine," by Christopher Reynolds, Oct. 7: As a visitor to the Santa Ynez Valley before the days of Indian gambling, before Neverland Ranch and before vineyards and wineries, I always thought of Solvang as the...

Travel letters: Ireland's siren call

Irish eyes truly smiling