![]() The Pierre Bergé-Yves Saint Laurent Foundation will occupy six of the city’s most illustrious institutions with an array of themed exhibitions, each touching on an aspect of the Saint Laurent legend which cleverly links to the museum's identity. While the Musée de Saint Laurent already feels a long-standing, integral part of Paris’ cultural anatomy, the infamous Parisian brand’s 60th anniversary ushers in a grand artistic partnership (albeit temporary). With opening times from 10am-6pm on weekends and 11am-5pm on Mondays (excluding August), this is weekend reverie for magpies, photography-buffs or simply those spurred on by the thrill of a bargain.Īddress: Marché aux Puces de Saint-Ouen, Avenue de la Porte de Clignancourt Transport: Metro: Porte de Clignancourt It’s best to attack it from Porte de Clignancourt (line 4 on the metro) – easy access to the market’s artery road, Rue des Rosiers. Located on the northern fringes of Paris, St-Ouen would require weeks, months perhaps to browse each and every stall and stand in 14 different areas of alleyways and warehouses – it’s vast. ![]() And it’s not all brass chandeliers and gilt mirrors, St-Ouen is a warren for all wims, from mid-century tables and vintage Chanel to coffee beans and psychedelic prints from the seventies. This is where London antiques dealers, collectors and those simply keen for a bargain come to scour the bedraggled relics of bygone eras that are tangled and scattered along table after table. It’s worth noting that cash offers can sometimes bag a bargain, and that the immaculately dressed shop assistants will not mince their words if you ask their opinion on that Burberry hat or Dior sunglasses.Īddress: La Boutique de Cara, 80 Rue de Turenne, 75003 Paris, France Website: come dressed in scruffs and wide-smiles, empty bags flung over their arms, waiting to be filled with various trinkets and treasures from the city’s sprawling Saint-Ouen flea market. These are clothes that tell stories and promise less damage to your wallet and your fast-fashion conscience. Rails strain with a mix of classic and more avant garde pieces from across the decades: Chanel jackets, Celine dresses and Chloé shirts, below them, vintage Gucci boots and Bally pumps that have walked Paris’ ‘Bobo’ neighbourhoods. This is the latter, a moth-free, beautifully curated boutique off Rue de Turenne in le Marais which remains one of Paris’ best kept secrets. There are consignment stores then there are consignment stores. Pick up something special at La Boutique de Cara Whether this is a relatively snappy one hour marvel or a drawn-out afternoon, fully-immersed in Bourdelle’s work and his own collection, this behind-the-scenes museum offers a glimpse of the capital’s artistic 19th and 20th century soul.Īddress: Musée Bourdelle, 18 Rue Antoine Bourdelle, 75015, Paris Website: ģ. On sunny days, art students perch in the pretty walled gardens with a sketchbook, doing their best to capture Bourdelle’s mastery on paper. Shards of light spill in through windows, catching the dust and illuminating artistic prowess – the intricate details in the clay, the skilled shading in charcoal sketches. His labyrinth of studios, workshops and gardens tell stories of artistic toil and experimentation in the form of plaster casts, sketches, bronzes and stone. This was once the heart of bohemian Paris, where the famous sculptor and artist, Antoine Bourdelle, worked, lived and taught his many students at the turn of the 19th century. Afterwards, spa-goers can ascend for Eiffel Tower views from the top deck while reclining in Dior deck chairs with a cocktail in hand – paradis!Īddress: Port Debilly, Paris, France Bookings: the idea of elbowing through the Louvre crowds makes you queasy, book into this charming, off-the-tourist-track museum in the 15th arrondissement. ![]() Choose between two massages (relaxing or energising) or two radiance-boosting face treatments as the boat slowly makes its way along the river. Up to five passengers can climb aboard for a two-hour slot, which starts in one of the four treatment rooms below deck (one is for couples). The cruise is a modern take on the historic Les Bains de la Samaritaine – stylish floating baths that sat on the Seine in the 1800s. When the deal is this heavenly – think plush furnishings, fluffy Dior robes and slippers, with the brand’s signature Rose de Granville scent filling the air (and that’s before your treatment has started) – it’s worth taking a trip to the French capital for this experience alone. Popping to the spa might not be first on your list of things to do when visiting Paris, but when Dior Spa Cheval Blanc takes to the waters to launch the fashion house’s first-ever spa cruise on the Seine, well, it’s time to make an exception.
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