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Shopping In
Paris
Paris has a reputation for being an expensive city
to shop in. Don't believe it! Paris can be a great places to shop for clothes,
art, antiques and many other items you didn't know you needed. The trick to
getting a bargain in Paris is to know where to look and when to
go.
When to Shop in Paris
When it comes to timing your
shopping spree, it pays to pay attention to the season.
By French law, stores are only
permitted to have sales twice a year, once in winter and again
in summer. These
periods usually start in the first week of January and the second week
of June, but for the serious shoppers, the winter period offers
better opportunities, as there are far fewer tourists around to snap up the
bargains.
These
sales periods, known as ‘les soldes’, are huge events in their own right,
as all the major department stores and many of the smaller establishments slash
heavily at their prices. Many stores make 30% or more of their yearly sales
during these periods, which shows just how much gets sold in those few weeks!
Best of all, even the major designer labels Louis Vuitton, Chanel, and all the rest of
that crowd sell off their inventory at attractive discounts, which often deflate to ridiculous
lows (anywhere from 30 to 50 to even 70 percent) as the days go by.
Where to Shop in Paris
Chanel, Dior, Yves Saint Laurent,
Pierre Cardin…these are the legendary fashion houses, the ‘grand couturiers’,
arbiters of taste for much of the last century and the reasons why, despite the
competition from upstart American and British houses, and rival Italian
designers, the international fashion industry today still centres very much on
the 8th arrondissement, where these formidable names have their
emporiums.
Most of the fashion houses both
the French ones and their international counterparts are on the dizzyingly
fancy Avenue Montaigne and the Rue du Faubourg Saint Honore near
the Elysees presidential palace. For those with even a passing interest in
fashion, a visit to these palaces can be rewarding, at the very least for
experiencing first hand the heady world of high fashion, where dresses really
will cost half a year’s salary. Men are also catered to, as most of the houses
will offer designer men’s wear at equally stratospheric prices.
 If these works of arts are a
little too much to handle however, no fear Paris is filled with little fashion
boutiques where you won’t find dresses featured in Cosmo or Vogue, but are
created with the same passion and attention to detail which characterises all
French design, but at more earthly prices.
The adjoining 1st and 8th
arrondissements are the best for high-class shopping, and the
fashion-conscious but budget restricted Parisians themselves go to get their
fancy togs at the Saint-Germain des Pres district on the left bank. Other
places to go are the trendy rue des Francs-Bourgeois for clothes, the
rue de Seine and rue Jacob for antiques and art, the list goes on…
Further down on the scale of
classiness, but infinitely more practical, is shopping in the grands-magasins,
or department stores and when the French say grand, they really mean colossal. Of these massive shopping emporiums, the most famous are those on Haussman boulevard in the 9th arrondissement, the most prestigious of
which is Galeries Lafayette (above right), where you can get what amounts to Chanel
or
Dior design knock-off for a third of the price. Incidentally, the Galeries
Lafayette is an attraction
in its own right, as it is housed in a splendidly
classical building under an even more splendid cupola.
If you don’t like what you see at
Galeries Lafayette, you can hop down the street to Printemps, erstwhile
rival and purveyor of more goodies than you’ll ever have money to buy. Other
grand-magasins well worth a look-see are Le Bon Marche in the 7th
arrondissement, which is especially famous for its food halls and roof garden,
and La Samaritaine in the 1st arrondisement, a store which
prides itself on being the place where ‘on trouve tout’. For even more
bargain hunting, you can also hit the hypermarket chain stores, where the
distinct drop in glamour is thankfully accompanied by a distinct drop in price.
If you’re the kind that can’t
stand high priced fashions and would rather dig for treasures in the flea
markets, you’re in luck Paris has some of the best flea markets in the world,
where you can pick up Art Deco-era mirrors and eighteenth century snuff boxes
for a song. There are dozens of minor flea markets every week in Paris, but the
best ones are undoubtedly the Saint Ouen, Porte de Vanves and Porte de
Montreuil flea markets, which are in the 18th, 14th
and 20th arrondissements respectively. These are the most historic
markets, descendents of the ancient markets where royals once sold off their
flea-ridden garments (which was, incidentally, how the phrase flea market came
about) to the populace.
Tips on Shopping in Paris
To really get the most out of your shopping experience, don’t
expect it to be like shopping back home. A lot of the friction between tourists
and French sales staff is because of cultural differences in how each
thinks about shopping: whereas in most countries, a shop is unconsciously
considered a public arena, in France shops are considered an extension of the
shop-owner’s personal space, so the same etiquette rules apply as if you
were visiting someone else’s home no slovenly dressing, no fingering the
displays, no loud conversations and most importantly of all, greeting and
thanking the sales staff. Following these simple rules can make a huge
difference in the level of service you’ll enjoy in Paris, or really anywhere in
Europe.
Timing plays an important part
in getting the best deals in Paris. The
usual shop hours are Monday to Saturday
from 10am to 7pm, but
Monday tends to be fairly slow and many shops will not
even open until after Monday lunchtime. Many shops will also take up to 2 hours
for lunch, so don’t expect to do any lunchtime shopping. On Sundays, few shops
are open except the open-air markets and the grand-magasins.
The best time to go is in the mid-morning and mid-afternoons.
The
best day of the week to shop is on Monday, when dealers want to unload all the
weekend's unsold merchandise. Thursday is the best day for late-night shopping,
as most stores will stay open to 9 or 10pm.
In open-air markets, try to go mid-week, when it
is less crowded and the prices are lower, especially in the half hour before the
market closes, when the stall keepers are rushing to unload their stock.
If you’re not an EU resident, don’t forget to ask for a "détaxe"
form, to claim a refund on the sales tax if purchases exceed a certain level
(usually about EUR 300 in any one establishment); this form should be presented
to customs upon leaving France. You're required to show the goods at the
airport, so have them on you or visit the Customs office before you check your
luggage, and you should expect your refund within about six weeks. All refunds
are processed at the point of departure from the European Union (EU), so if
you're going to another EU country, don't apply for the refund in France.
To avoid VAT refund hassles, ask
for a Global Refund form ("Shopping Checque") at a store where you make a
purchase. When leaving an EU country, have it stamped by Customs, after which
you take it to a Global Refund counter at one of more than 700 airports and
border crossings in Europe. Your money is refunded on the spot.
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