But as soon as we arrived it was clear that we were way out of our league. The market is actually fifteen markets with over 3,000 stalls that went on for blocks and blocks. It was mindbogglingly huge, and without a map we were totally lost! It is enormous, and such conglomeration of buildings, tents, booths, and everything in between. We would be walking by booths with some of the finest quality antiques, turn a corner, and suddenly it was only cheap t-shirts, and rock CDs - a completely different (and a bit alarming) crowd. It was on the outskirts of town, and a very seedy neighborhood. We found our way back to the really cool stuff.
Everything was very expensive, and we realized quick that we would not be making any purchases here that day. But pictures are free (when I could sneak them - most vendors don't want you taking pictures) and almost as fun, and take up no room in my suitcase.
Just LOOK at a tiny bit of what we saw there!

Just look at that gorgeous chandelier! It was huge (hmm, I wonder if it was the one from the opera house?) And that huge garden urn, and the statue. I loved the big metal architectural whatever-it-is around the front of the stall.

LOOK! This is what I would have brought home if I had a the Euros! It is an old palette! I bet it was just like the ones Monet used. What wonderful pieces of art originated on that? Wouldn't that be great in my studio? And the child dress form, and giant clock face. How cool! I had a really hard time walking away from this!
Walking around it was like the perfect garage sale I have seen in my dreams, where the there is so much cool old stuff that I don't even know where to begin. Only this is way bigger than I have ever even dreamed, and the prices are way higher than the quarters and dimes I like to pay for the stuff in my dreams.
That place was the Paris Flower Market - another place I really wanted to visit! It was just down the street from Notre-Dame and in the Ile de la Cite.
Not only did they sell flowers, but plants, seeds, gardening tools, and other fun French stuff, all in a light-filled covered market.
I about died when I saw these! As much as I love chairs, I really, really, really LOVE printed tablecloths!!!
These were wonderful! Just look at those bright colors. I wanted the lemon one, but ended up buying a red one with lavender and sunflowers (both very French)! They were not cheap, but definitely more in our price range than anything at the antiques market.
This specialty shop sold orchids and carnivorous plants. See the fly trap pouches hanging down from the plant on the bottom left. Very interesting. The orchids were spectacular, and smelled so sweet!
Walking through this shop, with all the bird houses and feeders overhead was so fun! I brought home one of the round birch one's with the thatched roof. I had to have it because it reminded me of the French countryside.
It was wonderful to walk through the flower market with so much to see. It was so relaxing and different from the rest of the pace of Paris - a little oasis of green in the very heart of the city!





Great old door. I want to go inside!
This corner cafe was spilling over the top with flowers. Love it.

These pretty press boxes were all over town. They displayed movie posters and such. I just loved the scalloped and domed tops. Everything is fancied up in Paris!
I think it is interesting how all the cafe seats face the street. Perfect for people watching. See that man and woman running into each other at the stoplight? Oops!

The walls inside are lined with chocolate molds. How charming!

Behind this pretty blue store front were a variety of embroidered linens and pretty bric-a-brac.

An engraver displays his handiwork.
My favorite were the pie servers, top right, that looked like dogs. I really wanted the fabulous Eiffel Tower cheese grater hanging in the window, but Dennis poopooed the idea. I'm so glad my parents picked up one though!
Another chocolate shop. Parisians love their chocolate. Who can blame them? Their chocolate was delectable.

Another pretty linen shop.
We happened upon the Grand Epicerie of Paris - Au Bon Marche, a huge department store with the entire ground floor being a gourmet food shop! It was enormous, and had EVERYTHING!
The Grand Epicure was a delight to walk through. It had an immense collection of food items from France all all over the world. We sampled some lemon curd that left my mouth absolutely watering!
Fruited tarts, and who knows what else. They all look wonderful! How would one ever choose just one treat?
A display had the funnest pasta I have ever seen! Little rainbow hats, and black and white striped fettucini! We really enjoyed our stroll through the premier gourmet food store in Paris, the birthplace of gourmet food. Bon Apetit!

We finally found it! Poilane, the bread store that Nathan had begged us to visit.
What a delightful place! Poilane is celebrated for their round whole-grain sourdough loaves , and proudly boast that they have never made a baguette.
The loaves are huge. The dough is made from nothing but stone ground flour, water, sea salt, and slow rising natural yeast then baked downstairs in huge wood-fired ovens, and brought fresh upstairs to the tiny shop. The crust is thick and hard, and the inside is soft and delicious!
They also sell little round scalloped thin tea cookies called punitions or punishments. We couldn't help but bring back a big bag of punishments to the boys, who probably deserved them.

The unwrapped loaves were lined up on both walls. They are marked with their trademark "P" for Poilane. You don't have to buy a whole loaf. The bread is sold by weight. You tell the lady how much you want, and she grabs a loaf off the shelf, slices off a chunk, and weighs it. Dad got us half a loaf for later, and we bought an entire round loaf to bring home to the boys. It was heavy! It must have weighed 5 lbs! Good thing there was room in the suitcase.


What a treat! We were glad Nathan sent us on a wild goose chase to find this place. Not only was it a real treasure, but the hunt through the fabulous shopping streets was equally as fun!
Mom was thrilled to find her initials on an old building. We don't know what they stood for. Zola is a French name, and the French people loved that her name was Zola!
Our final stop in Paris was Rue Cler, a busy pedestrian street in an upscale residential neighborhood where we could get a good sense of the everyday life of Parisians in their traditional neighborhood. It is lined with all the fresh food shops that one would need for daily food shopping.
The vegetable shop had a fresh and beautiful selection of even out of season produce. By law they have to display the country of origin, and most came from France.
The Fromagerie, or cheese shop was a wonder to behold! So many cheeses in every shape, size and texture! Semi circles, sphere, wedges, and even pyramids. The shapes denote the region of origin. Pyramids are from the Loire Valley. With so many choices, how does one even begin to choose?
We asked the vendor in his white lab coat for a suggestion of the perfect cheese to eat with our bread, and he selected a small white cylinder of goat cheese, not too strong, not too mild. He was very nice, and delighted when we showed him that his shop was features in our Rick Steve's Paris guide. He read it in English, and it made his day!
Across the street was the Poissonerie, or fish shop. We went inside and discovered that there was no fishy smell at all. It was very clean, and the selection of seafood laid out beautifully on the ice was terrific.
There were several flower shops. I think the French love flowers as much as they love bread and chocolate (I must be French!) We saw many Parisians heading home with bunches of flowers to brighten their apartments.
We were sucked into the boulangerie where the pretty pastries called out to us. We knew they must taste as good as they looked by the line at the counter. Mom and I both picked out some green pistachio eclairs and tiny tarts. We picked Dennis up something that resembled an apple cream cheese danish. We don't know what it was, but it look delicious. I just loved how they packaged up our heavenly morsels for us in the little pyramid package with a ribbon handle. Too pretty to eat!


Our trip began and ended with flowers, and we saw lots of flowers and gardens on the whole trip! All of them were wonderful!
That evening, on our drive back to the hotel we made one very last stop at the big grocery store by our hotel. It was located inside a big modern shopping mall next to Disneyland. (it was strange to be walking a grocery cart down a shopping mall.) We shopped there several time on our trip, since we did most of our own cooking. It is fun visiting a foreign grocery store. Of course they had huge selections of breads (they sold baguettes in lots of 5 and 10),butcher meats, deli meats, cheeses and vegetables. The milk in France was amazingly good! Even the grocery store pastries were better than anything I've tried in the US. Once we bought a sampler pack of different pastries. They were all amazing!
So sweet!
White dresses and choir boy robes and unupholstered chairs just waiting for some toile!
But as completely overwhelmed and lost and intimidated as I was there, I would love to go back someday (only this time with a map of the place and a few thousand Euros in my pocket, and only with my girlfriends. (Dennis was not much fun here.) It was fascinating to see what kind of cool stuff is out there!
But after a while we were feeling completely overwhelmed by so much to see as well as so much to pay, that we finally had to call it quits and walk away empty handed. After all, it was our last day in Paris and we hadn't bought anything yet, and decided that before our time ran out, we better go to a place where we could actually afford something.
Not only did they sell flowers, but plants, seeds, gardening tools, and other fun French stuff, all in a light-filled covered market.
This specialty shop sold orchids and carnivorous plants. See the fly trap pouches hanging down from the plant on the bottom left. Very interesting. The orchids were spectacular, and smelled so sweet!There were also green herbs and colorful vegetables for the garden.
When the sun was shining, it was beautiful!
This shop in the flower market sold flowers outside, and fun Frenchy French trinkets inside.
Walking through this shop, with all the bird houses and feeders overhead was so fun! I brought home one of the round birch one's with the thatched roof. I had to have it because it reminded me of the French countryside.
It was wonderful to walk through the flower market with so much to see. It was so relaxing and different from the rest of the pace of Paris - a little oasis of green in the very heart of the city!On our list of shops and markets to see was the bread store that Nathan's French teacher insisted we visit on our trip, so we set off to find it. We got to the general area on the left bank and found parking under the Saint Sulpice church - made famous in the DaVinci Code - where the albino expects to find the holy grail by smashing through the floor with a huge candlestick. Well, we couldn't help but peek inside. Very different from the gothic churches we have been seeing with it's Romanesque pillars, curved arches, and lots of light.
The showpiece of the church was the magnificent organ. There were posters advertising wonderful organ concerts.
The church was surrounded by scaffolding so we didn't get a good look at the outside, but here is the fountain that was out in front.
We started on our walk searching for the tiny bread shop on an obscure street. What fun in was to marvel at the architecture!
Great old door. I want to go inside!
But more fun than looking up at the architecture, was looking in the windows of the shops!
We soon discovered that the only affordable shopping in Paris was window shopping - and luckily we could afford that.
I thought this was another chocolate shop, but it was a children's boutique.
We were drawn into this store by the bright colors and the crowd of customers, and once we were there, we couldn't leave. It was so fun! Everything in the store was a practical, everyday item, that had been transformed into something purely magical and fun! Hair brushes, pencil sharpeners, soap dispensers, all cleverly made into fun objects of usable art. Dust brooms that looked like ballroom dancers, staple removers that were crocodiles, and magnetic paper clip holders that looked like little birds, with the paperclips being the wings and tail.
My favorite were the pie servers, top right, that looked like dogs. I really wanted the fabulous Eiffel Tower cheese grater hanging in the window, but Dennis poopooed the idea. I'm so glad my parents picked up one though!It was a fun, fun store, and I was happy to find it online at www.pylones-usa.com. Take a second to check out the delightful colorful and clever products. The perfect place to find a fun gift for someone!
We kept being drawn back to the pastry counter just to drool over the sweet confections.
Just look at those rose petals on the ground, and the peeling old cafe tables, and the ROSES!

See how tiny the shop is! And how crowded! I read somewhere that this one shop make 20% of all the bread in Paris! Wow, they really are popular!
And notice the half loaf of bread on the shelf, waiting for the next customer who can't use a whole loaf.
The bread was so beautiful! I just love bread! And Dad who just loves baking bread was fascinated by it all.
It was getting late on our last day in France, and the shops were starting to close.
We asked the vendor in his white lab coat for a suggestion of the perfect cheese to eat with our bread, and he selected a small white cylinder of goat cheese, not too strong, not too mild. He was very nice, and delighted when we showed him that his shop was features in our Rick Steve's Paris guide. He read it in English, and it made his day!In an small epicerie (fine food shop) we bought a wooden rake tool for making genuine crepes for only 2 Euros.
We were sucked into the boulangerie where the pretty pastries called out to us. We knew they must taste as good as they looked by the line at the counter. Mom and I both picked out some green pistachio eclairs and tiny tarts. We picked Dennis up something that resembled an apple cream cheese danish. We don't know what it was, but it look delicious. I just loved how they packaged up our heavenly morsels for us in the little pyramid package with a ribbon handle. Too pretty to eat!The funniest thing in the whole store was the international foods aisle. There was a large rack for each of the different countries, with a large sign above with the name of the country. On the Great Britain rack there were marmalades and other English delicacies, and on the Italian rack were Italian sauces and such. I had to laugh when I saw that the huge United States rack was filled top to bottom only with Dr. Pepper and Oreos! That's our culinary contribution to the world! Oh my, I wish I had my camera!
There was a whole aisle of chocolate bars. I was making my selection and a local shopper stopped me, "No,no. Not that one. This one. The BEST!" she smiled as she pointed out the only brand choice in her mind of great chocolate. They are chocolate loyalists there in France.
They sold Nutella in huge jars there, and we consumed plenty of that chocolatey stuff. Mom and I discovered, almost accidently, a white chocolate spread that was just TOO AMAZING for words. That is what we ran back into the grocery store for that last evening, just as they were closing. We had to stock up on more chocolate bars, Nutella, and that heavenly white stuff for our trip home. (How I wish we had bought MORE!)
In all of our shopping that day, we hadn't bought much, which was fine, but now I regret that we mostly window shopped, and didn't walk into more pretty shops. As always, shopping with the hubby kind of hinders a girl. He cringed whenever it looked like I might want to walk into a pricy shop, or kept walking and completely disappeared with the credit card. He doesn't quite understand my need to linger, look, and get inspired even in stores that I can't afford. I gather so much inspiration in shops like that, and spending money is not my aim. Oh well. Truth is, we didn't have a lot of time, and our trip was quickly coming to an end. But I will come to Paris again... maybe a museum-hopping, boutique-shopping girls-only trip. Wanna come?

5 comments:
Your pics are so wonderful. I love the green doors and the knockers.
Heck yes I do! But I'm guessing that if Paul had a hard time with 3 days at convention, he might blow a gasket with a girls-only trip to France! Give me a few years!
If I could I would flee from my dirty house and go to Paris right now!!!! what a beautiful place. Although your photos are amost like being there.
Unbelieveably beautiful. A sweet hush of quiet entered my house when I looked at your pictures of the shops in Paris (I didn't know I could hold my breath that long-maybe swimming pools should have your pictures of Parisian shops on the bottom of them and I could qualify for the next Olympics.) Everything is too magically good to be true. Thank you, thank you for our window into France.
HOLY cow Rachelle. A: Tell me those chairs were as expensive as they should have been so we won't feel as sick that you couldn't just throw a few in your suitcase. They were all AMAZING.
B. HOW did the boys do all of this shopping? Are they that well trained?
C. HOW long must this post have taken you... wow. And to make all of the photos big? All in the name of that blurb book later-- so worth it.
This was such a beautiful, colorful post... wish I was there!
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