#1
|
||||
|
||||
How to be chic and un-chic in Paris this summer
It's almost Bastille day and Paris has started the holiday shutdown so it's a good time for a few random tips on being cool in the French capital this summer.
The style of the season is nouveau modeste Le look for women: retro and slightly ethnic. The Sarouel (left picture) is tendance again this year, along with white everything and creole loop earrings. Footwear: espadrilles Castaner [below]. My teenage daughter and her western Paris friends also carry big hand-bags hooked permanently on their arms. Sunglasses (men and women). Persol only. Classic French marque. Never, of course, to be perched on top of the head Men: Anything as long as it does not include sneakers/trainers, sandals, shorts, trousers with big appliqué pockets, t-shirts with logos or slogans, back-packs, shoulder bags, or, heaven forbid, man capris [criminal offender on Champs Elysees in picture below]. Simple rule: Paris is an elegant northern city not a Med package resort Dog: English bulldog, known in French as le bouledogue anglais. The Jack Russel terrier is ending its reign as top four-legged Paris accessory. Car: Toyota IQ. Replaced the Smart as chic Paris wheels. Do not be seen near any 4x4 (SUV). Parking: give your keys to one of the hundreds of voituriers (valet parking attendants) who have multiplied around hip cafes and restaurants. You don't have to be a customer, just tip well. Top transport: bicycle. Le Vélib, the city's self-service bikes; are great but very 2007. An electric Solex is chic but a fixie [below] is better. The fixed-chain bicyclette is now fashionable even for women. Public transport: The municipal autobus is to be preferred to the smelly Métro, especially in light summer traffic. It's a more pleasant conveyance and you see the city. Films: Any with late comedy stars Louis de Funès, Jacques Tati or Bourvil [Picture: de Funès and Bourvil in le Corniaud] Hang-outs: La Réserve on the ground floor of the Bibliothèque Nationale. The terrace of Le Café de l'Alma on the avenue de la Bourdonnais [those two cited as top snob spots in Figaroscope] Sunday brunch at the Neuilly-sur-Seine market. Places not to be seen: The Champs Elysées, the Eiffel tower, the Fifth arrondissement, Paris Plage or anywhere along the central Seine banks. Any cafés and brasseries that display English-language menus or claim to have English-speaking waiters. Where Parisians holiday this year: Inland rural regions like Picardy, Lorraine, Ardèche and the Cévennes. Provence and the Mediterranean coast are to be avoided like la peste. Parisian pastimes on holiday: Fishing, bicycling, jeux de société (board games), listening to vinyl records, barbecue. charles_bremner/
__________________
|
|
|