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Analysis
The total number of IG users following @username on last update.
The total number of IG users that @username was following on last update.
Indicated the number of follower @username has for every user he/she follows.
Indicates how this user uses his/her Instagram account.
The number of photos in @username’s feed. It might not be the same as the total amount of photos posted over time as Instagram offers the option to delete a photo at any time.
The date when @username last posted a photo to his/her feed.
How often does @username usually post a new photo/video.
The average amount of likes a photo by @username gets.
Two users might have an average of 100 likes on their photos. One got 100 likes on every single one of his photos, while the other got 20 in most of them and 2000 in a couple. The first user will have a high consistency while the second one will have a low consistency.
A good consistency is always a good sign.
The average percentage of IG users who follow @username who like his/her photos.
A good engagement rate is a sign of a healthy and responsive community.
The average amount of comments a photo by @username gets.
The average percentage of IG users who follow @username who comment on his/her photos.
Two users might have an average of 10 comments on their photos. One got 10 comments on every single one of his photos, while the other got 2 in most of them and 200 in a couple. The first user will have a high consistency while the second one will have a low consistency.
A low comment consistency can indicate that the average amount of comments might have been affected artificially due to a promotion.
The average percentage of comments a photo gets in relationship to the likes.
popularity
6,742,786
628
mega influencer
@archdigest is a mega influencer with 6,742,786 followers.
content
6,414
nan% vs. nan%
845 chars
0
Oct 12
+ daily
@archdigest is incredibly active, publishing several times a day, with a poor use of captions and no use of hashtags
community engagement
37,930 / 0.56%
53%
144 / 0.00002%
51%
@archdigest's community is poorly engaged and very inconsistent. Watch out for an abuse of promotions or spammy hashtags
not good nor bad
very low
low
good
high
very high
History
30 days
90 days
all
date
followers
following
uploads
eng. rate
avg. likes
avg. comments
Oct 13
2,610
6,742,786
628
6,414
0.56%
37,930
144
Oct 12
53,155
6,740,176
625
6,412
0.55%
37,173
150
Oct 04
20,819
6,687,021
618
6,387
0.69%
46,008
178
Sep 30
24,955
6,666,202
617
6,375
0.6%
40,094
207
Sep 26
15,936
6,641,247
617
6,364
0.76%
50,767
240
Sep 24
8,830
6,625,311
617
6,358
0.62%
41,005
176
Sep 23
25,367
6,616,481
616
6,355
0.44%
29,119
109
Sep 20
6,123
6,591,114
615
6,346
1.15%
75,775
722
Sep 19
9,407
6,584,991
615
6,343
1.02%
67,218
671
Sep 18
10,978
6,575,584
615
6,340
0.84%
55,527
522
Sep 17
5,108
6,564,606
615
6,337
0.4%
26,562
100
Sep 16
4,351
6,559,498
615
6,334
0.37%
24,543
91
Sep 15
16,093
6,555,147
615
6,331
0.55%
36,044
137
Sep 12
4,960
6,539,054
615
6,322
0.58%
37,676
163
Sep 11
4,959
6,534,094
615
6,319
0.52%
33,683
146
Sep 10
4,640
6,529,135
615
6,316
0.57%
37,210
139
date
followers
following
uploads
eng. rate
avg. likes
avg. comments
Sep 09
5,268
6,524,495
615
6,313
0.49%
32,126
114
Sep 08
5,658
6,519,227
615
6,310
0.53%
34,463
120
Sep 07
6,668
6,513,569
615
6,307
0.48%
31,326
121
Sep 06
5,673
6,506,901
615
6,304
0.45%
29,062
123
Sep 05
4,423
6,501,228
615
6,301
0.56%
36,397
166
Sep 04
4,518
6,496,805
615
6,298
0.6%
38,882
179
Sep 03
6,254
6,492,287
615
6,295
0.7%
45,412
192
Sep 02
5,438
6,486,033
615
6,292
0.71%
46,331
173
Sep 01
5,346
6,480,595
614
6,289
0.93%
60,196
544
Aug 31
6,117
6,475,249
614
6,286
0.96%
62,369
551
Aug 30
5,917
6,469,132
614
6,283
0.92%
59,566
556
Aug 29
9,581
6,463,215
614
6,280
0.77%
49,909
413
Aug 28
4,797
6,453,634
614
6,277
0.65%
42,195
181
Aug 27
5,032
6,448,837
614
6,274
0.69%
44,284
179
followers vs
Feed
last 12
last 24
last 36
Jan 01 1970 GMT00:33
captions
While working on director Anthony Russo’s off-the-grid cabin, the @communedesign team responded with a scheme that balances pragmatic necessity with subtle nods to Shaker and Japanese design, Swedish and French chalets, and historic American mountain retreats. They replaced rotted redwood timbers with knotty cedar on the ceilings and reclaimed oak on the floors, and liberated the original stone fireplace from a straitjacket of paint accrued over many years. “Because of the size of the spaces, we had to make the most of every square foot, so the details became all-important. Our mantra was ‘utility with style,’” says designer Steven Johanknecht.
Take a tour of the home through the link in our profile. Photo by @stephenkentjohnson; text by @mayer.rus; design by @communedesign
hashtags
Jan 01 1970 GMT00:33
captions
“When I’m caring for my plants, I’m caring for myself,” muses Christopher Griffin (@plantkween). “Is my queen getting enough water? Wait, am I getting enough water?” Plants have been a lifeline for many New Yorkers during the pandemic—a source of inspiration and a form of personal and political expression. As a fresh crop of local green thumbs reveals, there has never been a better time to turn over a new leaf. "A little bit of wild in the city can bring us some sanctuary,” says landscape designer Shanti Nagel of @designwildny.
Meet the six plant aficionados taking over NYC at the link in our bio. Photos by @deirdredeirdredeirdre
hashtags
Jan 01 1970 GMT00:33
captions
No Twitter, no Instagram, no TikTok, no Fortnite. No viral videos, no FaceTime follies, no tedious group texts, no apps of any kind. The allure of director Anthony Russo’s (@anthonyrusso) off-the-grid cabin is undeniable. “The place is less than an hour from my office downtown, but you feel like you’ve traveled far, far away from Los Angeles. It’s a radically different reality,” says Russo. His getaway is one of a cluster of cabins in the San Gabriel Mountains built in the early 1900s as part of a program instituted by the U.S. Forest Service to encourage responsible land use. Accessing the site requires a 40-minute hike on unpaved foot paths that lead from a pack station down through the canyon. Anything that needs to be brought in, from groceries to building materials, must be transported by hand or pack mule. “The movers had to create handcarts to get all the material to the site. It took eight men hiking back and forth for days," says designer Steven Johanknecht of the firm @communedesign. It felt like a scene from 'The Ten Commandments.'"
Take a tour of the home through the link in our profile. Photo by @stephenkentjohnson; text by @mayer.rus; design by @communedesign
Though television producer Rosie Rockel (@rosierockel) was a first-time homeowner when she renovated her South London apartment, she was able to approach the project with some useful background experience. Rockel’s entertainment industry job has her working on the show "Grand Designs," a British home improvement series that highlights impressive, elaborate architecture. Perhaps that’s why she was so confident in her ability to design the kitchen remodel on her own. “I had a very clear picture of exactly what I wanted it to look like,” Rockel says. To bring lots of light into her semisubterranean space, she submitted multiple rounds of inventive blueprints to the local planning authority, but strict conservation laws only permitted her to construct a standard, conservatory-like extension with a glass roof (pictured here).
Take a full tour of the kitchen on @getclever at the link in our bio. Photo by @82mmphotography; text by @morganhannahg
hashtags
Jan 01 1970 GMT00:33
captions
Take a trip below deck on Bjarke Ingels's (@bjarkeingels) houseboat. Here, the boat's hull was transformed into a futuristic playroom for all ages, stripping away additions to reveal streamlined curves, adding porthole windows and a circular skylight, and treating the walls, floors, and ceiling as a kind of continuous white surface. Ingels and his partner, Rut Otero (@one_hummingbird) found the playroom’s Technicolor beanbags and pillows (handwoven by South African artisans out of scraps of T-shirt fabric) during a 2017 visit to Cape Town for the opening of the Thomas Heatherwick–designed Zeitz MOCAA.
Take a look inside the November issue cover story through the link in our profile. Photo by @pernilleloof and @thomasloof; styled by Julie Lysbo; text by @samuelcochran
hashtags
Jan 01 1970 GMT00:33
captions
In designer Beata Heuman's (@beataheuman) world, there’s no reason to have a standard-issue oven hood, to cite an example of her cheerfully contrarian aesthetic. In this sunny new kitchen, smoke-extract pipes are concealed within a copper sheath-cum-shelf that snakes across a wall like a smartened-up piece of industrial flotsam (pictured above). “In farms in Sweden, you see pipes clad in metal and which you can use for storage, too,” explains the designer, noting that the copper sheets, pieced together with matching nailheads, have “a lovely reflectiveness and will darken over time.”
Take a tour of the London home at the link in our bio. Photo by @simonuptonphotos; text by @adaesthete; styling by @saramathersstylist; design by @beataheuman
hashtags
Jan 01 1970 GMT00:33
captions
The palette in @ashleytstark's family home is reserved, preferring lush textures, rich materials, and subtle motifs over bold statements. “I’m surrounded by so much pattern and color in the showroom,” Kenner explains. “I always want my home to be more soothing.” Textiles are a big part of the equation, almost all of them Stark or Stark-owned brands and many of them prototypes she is testing out. “As I was developing the collection, I knew exactly what would go in each room,” she says. And the walls wear textiles too, some papered in faux bois, others covered in braided hemp or wool. Works of fine art, like a bold Beverly Fishman (@bev_fishman) painting in the dining room, deliver a few happy hits of color.
Take a tour of the Manhattan townhouse at the link in our bio. Photo by @douglasfriedman; text by @_h_mart_; styled by @colinking; architecture by @lichtenarchitects; interiors by @amanmeeks and @ashleytstark
hashtags
Jan 01 1970 GMT00:33
captions
When designer Faith Blakeney (@studiofaithblakeney) got her hands on this 1950s California ranch house, it was, in her words, “a total disaster.” After rejiggering the layout and opening the space up a bit, she chose a deep forest green (developed with @sydneyharbourpaints) to “bring good cheer and play to the space." Explore 8 kitchens that make a case for the earthy hue—and read more from @archdigestpro—at the link in our profile.
Words by @_h_mart_, photo by @jessicajalexander
hashtags
Jan 01 1970 GMT00:33
captions
During the head-to-toe renovation of her Manhattan town house, textile scion Ashley Stark Kenner (@ashleytstark) loved bringing her work home. "We’ll just fix it up a little bit," is what she initially thought. But at the first meeting with New York–based Lichten Architects (@lichtenarchitects), talk quickly shifted to “gut renovation.” As the senior vice president of design and creative director at the eight-decades-old textile titan Stark, she knew exactly what she wanted. And with a totally clean slate, she didn’t have to compromise.
Take a tour of the Manhattan townhouse at the link in our bio. Photo by @douglasfriedman; text by @_h_mart_; styled by @colinking; architecture by @lichtenarchitects; interiors by @amanmeeks and @ashleytstark
hashtags
Jan 01 1970 GMT00:33
captions
“As formal as some of the areas are in this home, it never feels overwhelming," says Melissa Rivers (@melissariversofficial) of her Santa Monica property. "There’s a warmth and light, a happiness. It’s definitely a happy home.” Windows were opened up to bring in light from a small courtyard that leads to the front door. “I love a house with light,” says Rivers. “And at night, this room just glows. It’s unbelievable.” Interior designer Martyn Lawrence Bullard (@martynbullard) added a platinum leaf ceiling to not only add glow to the space but also, he says, “to honor the fact that this was a sort of museum of Joan's collections.”
Take a tour of the Santa Monica home at the link in our bio. Photo by @jennapeffley; text by @arielfoxman; design by @martynbullard
hashtags
Jan 01 1970 GMT00:33
captions
"After working from home, it’s going to be hard to go into the office,” says a 30-something London media man who counts himself lucky to have spent a surprisingly blissful lockdown with his family. "There’s a real harmony about the place, but it’s not too serious; you don’t have to be on your best behavior. She has such a skill for stylishness but also how to make a home.” "She" would be Beata Heuman (@beataheuman), the Swedish-born, London-based It girl of the who transformed the circa-1903 redbrick charmer with architect Joseph Edwards. “Just when you get your head around an idea Beata proposed, another one turns up,” says one of the homeowners, who works in film and television and is used to spontaneous creativity, explains. “There was a lot of that. And we’d say, ‘Wow, okay, let’s try it.’ Most of the time, she was completely right.”
Take a tour of the London home at the link in our bio. Photo by @simonuptonphotos; text by @adaesthete; styling by @saramathersstylist; design by @beataheuman
“After my mom [Joan Rivers] passed, I felt it was just time for a change,” explains Melissa Rivers (@melissariversofficial) of her decision to sell her home in L.A.’s Pacific Palisades. Soon after, the television host and producer would purchase a nearby Mediterranean-style villa and team up with interior designer Martyn Lawrence Bullard (@martynbullard) to embark on a two-year remodel. “Melissa needed a new beginning,” says Bullard. “She lived in this very pretty house, but it was very kind of traditional. It was filled with lots of antiques and things she had inherited from Joan that were antique-y. Melissa wanted to create something light and bright with positive energy, something that could be just the right backdrop for some of these extraordinary things, including Fabergé eggs and Han dynasty pottery.”
Take a tour of the Santa Monica home at the link in our bio. Photo by @jennapeffley; text by @arielfoxman; design by @martynbullard
When designer Faith Blakeney (@studiofaithblakeney) got her hands on this 1950s California ranch house, it was, in her words, “a total disaster.” After rejiggering the layout and opening the space up a bit, she chose a deep forest green (developed with @sydneyharbourpaints) to “bring good cheer and play to the space." Explore 8 kitchens that make a case for the earthy hue—and read more from @archdigestpro—at the link in our profile.
Words by @_h_mart_, photo by @jessicajalexander
hashtags
analysis
This post got
141% more likes
compared to @archdigest's average. It uses
the average amount of hashtags
and its
caption is 41% shorter
62,526
249
Oct 10 2020 GMT12:05
captions
During the head-to-toe renovation of her Manhattan town house, textile scion Ashley Stark Kenner (@ashleytstark) loved bringing her work home. "We’ll just fix it up a little bit," is what she initially thought. But at the first meeting with New York–based Lichten Architects (@lichtenarchitects), talk quickly shifted to “gut renovation.” As the senior vice president of design and creative director at the eight-decades-old textile titan Stark, she knew exactly what she wanted. And with a totally clean slate, she didn’t have to compromise.
Take a tour of the Manhattan townhouse at the link in our bio. Photo by @douglasfriedman; text by @_h_mart_; styled by @colinking; architecture by @lichtenarchitects; interiors by @amanmeeks and @ashleytstark
hashtags
analysis
This post got
65% more likes
compared to @archdigest's average. It uses
the average amount of hashtags
and its
caption is 10% shorter
51,894
187
Oct 12 2020 GMT13:00
captions
No Twitter, no Instagram, no TikTok, no Fortnite. No viral videos, no FaceTime follies, no tedious group texts, no apps of any kind. The allure of director Anthony Russo’s (@anthonyrusso) off-the-grid cabin is undeniable. “The place is less than an hour from my office downtown, but you feel like you’ve traveled far, far away from Los Angeles. It’s a radically different reality,” says Russo. His getaway is one of a cluster of cabins in the San Gabriel Mountains built in the early 1900s as part of a program instituted by the U.S. Forest Service to encourage responsible land use. Accessing the site requires a 40-minute hike on unpaved foot paths that lead from a pack station down through the canyon. Anything that needs to be brought in, from groceries to building materials, must be transported by hand or pack mule. “The movers had to create handcarts to get all the material to the site. It took eight men hiking back and forth for days," says designer Steven Johanknecht of the firm @communedesign. It felt like a scene from 'The Ten Commandments.'"
Take a tour of the home through the link in our profile. Photo by @stephenkentjohnson; text by @mayer.rus; design by @communedesign
hashtags
#AD100
analysis
This post got
37% more likes
compared to @archdigest's average. It uses
inf% more hashtags
and its
caption is 43% longer
comments
91,267
362
Oct 10 2020 GMT18:00
captions
When designer Faith Blakeney (@studiofaithblakeney) got her hands on this 1950s California ranch house, it was, in her words, “a total disaster.” After rejiggering the layout and opening the space up a bit, she chose a deep forest green (developed with @sydneyharbourpaints) to “bring good cheer and play to the space." Explore 8 kitchens that make a case for the earthy hue—and read more from @archdigestpro—at the link in our profile.
Words by @_h_mart_, photo by @jessicajalexander
hashtags
analysis
This post got
151% more likes
compared to @archdigest's average. It uses
the average amount of hashtags
and its
caption is 41% shorter
62,526
249
Oct 10 2020 GMT12:05
captions
During the head-to-toe renovation of her Manhattan town house, textile scion Ashley Stark Kenner (@ashleytstark) loved bringing her work home. "We’ll just fix it up a little bit," is what she initially thought. But at the first meeting with New York–based Lichten Architects (@lichtenarchitects), talk quickly shifted to “gut renovation.” As the senior vice president of design and creative director at the eight-decades-old textile titan Stark, she knew exactly what she wanted. And with a totally clean slate, she didn’t have to compromise.
Take a tour of the Manhattan townhouse at the link in our bio. Photo by @douglasfriedman; text by @_h_mart_; styled by @colinking; architecture by @lichtenarchitects; interiors by @amanmeeks and @ashleytstark
hashtags
analysis
This post got
73% more likes
compared to @archdigest's average. It uses
the average amount of hashtags
and its
caption is 10% shorter
29,701
198
Oct 09 2020 GMT12:05
captions
“After my mom [Joan Rivers] passed, I felt it was just time for a change,” explains Melissa Rivers (@melissariversofficial) of her decision to sell her home in L.A.’s Pacific Palisades. Soon after, the television host and producer would purchase a nearby Mediterranean-style villa and team up with interior designer Martyn Lawrence Bullard (@martynbullard) to embark on a two-year remodel. “Melissa needed a new beginning,” says Bullard. “She lived in this very pretty house, but it was very kind of traditional. It was filled with lots of antiques and things she had inherited from Joan that were antique-y. Melissa wanted to create something light and bright with positive energy, something that could be just the right backdrop for some of these extraordinary things, including Fabergé eggs and Han dynasty pottery.”
Take a tour of the Santa Monica home at the link in our bio. Photo by @jennapeffley; text by @arielfoxman; design by @martynbullard