EditorialPlants with purple coloring like lavender, at the new queer garden at the Alice Austen House in Staten Island, May 24, 2023. (Michelle V. Agins/The New York Times)
EditorialThe mixing of a Sunken Harbor Club blue zombie, which uses organic blue-green algae powder and food coloring, in Downtown Brooklyn, April 7, 2023. (Gus Aronson/The New York Times)
EditorialThe mixing of a Sunken Harbor Club blue zombie, which uses organic blue-green algae powder and food coloring, in Downtown Brooklyn, April 7, 2023. (Gus Aronson/The New York Times)
EditorialThe mixing of a Sunken Harbor Club blue zombie, which uses organic blue-green algae powder and food coloring, in Downtown Brooklyn, April 7, 2023. (Gus Aronson/The New York Times)
EditorialThe mixing of a Sunken Harbor Club blue zombie, which uses organic blue-green algae powder and food coloring, in Downtown Brooklyn, April 7, 2023. (Gus Aronson/The New York Times)
EditorialRachel Lamas shows coloring pages for Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.) and Stacey Abrams, the Democratic candidate for Georgia governor, during a campaign event for Warnock in Monroe, Ga., Nov. 3, 2022. (Nicole Craine/The New York Times)
EditorialChildren whose families fled the fighting in eastern Ukraine work on coloring Easter eggs at an emergency shelter for internally displaced people in Lviv, Ukraine, on Friday, April 15, 2022. (Finbarr O'Reilly/The New York Times)
EditorialA woman adds natural food coloring from beetroots to dough during a baking workshop in the Sahrawi settlement in the Algerian desert, Jan. 26, 2020. (Matteo de Mayda/The New York Times)
EditorialA coloring page of Sen. Elizabeth Warren's golden retriever, Bailey, on a campaign office wall in Cambridge, Mass., on Jan. 14, 2020. (Elizabeth Frantz/The New York Times)