shopping in rome
#1
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shopping in rome
Anyone have any suggestions for shopping in Rome? Our teenagers are particularly intereted in clothes, bags, jewellery, etc. We'd also be interested in checking our Roman department stores. We will be staying at a hotel on Via del Corso. Are we within walking distance of shops?
Thanks again for all the help. Our trip is getting closer and we're getting pretty excited!
Thanks again for all the help. Our trip is getting closer and we're getting pretty excited!
#3
Join Date: Mar 2003
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Via del Corso is ALL shops! Especially near the Spanish Steps. The length of Via del Corso from the Spanish Steps to the Piazza del Popolo is store after store. . . some pricier than others. They'll have a ball popping in and out. It is a teenager shopper's dream! I didn't see any department stores on my travels, but I'm sure they are around. Just wasn't looking. . .
Have fun! Happy shopping! I'm sad that I didn't get to do more while I was there. . . especially SHOES!
Have fun! Happy shopping! I'm sad that I didn't get to do more while I was there. . . especially SHOES!
#4
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There is a great store that sells gloves accross from the Spanish Steps. It is the size of a closet with great service and great prices. Also, the BATA shoe stores are very reasonable. There are not many department stores in Rome, but some very hip stores that teenagers will love with good prices.
#5
Join Date: Feb 2004
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The major department store chains are:
Rinascente - gorgeous, expensive
Upim - (if they have it in Rome)
cheap, though not at Wal-Mart level
Coin - mid to expensive range, good clothes
Oviesse - closer to Wal-Mart in price and quality, though it looks nicer
Via del Corso shops are great by expensive. Via Cola di Rienzo is cheaper for the same basic stuff.
best regards,
Deirdré Straughan
http://www.straughan.com
Rinascente - gorgeous, expensive
Upim - (if they have it in Rome)
cheap, though not at Wal-Mart level
Coin - mid to expensive range, good clothes
Oviesse - closer to Wal-Mart in price and quality, though it looks nicer
Via del Corso shops are great by expensive. Via Cola di Rienzo is cheaper for the same basic stuff.
best regards,
Deirdré Straughan
http://www.straughan.com
#7
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Load up your ATM Card:
Cola di Rienzo
Between Piazza del Popolo and the Vatican, this broad avenue is lined with upscale shops that many Romans prefer to those around Piazza di Spagna because the wide sidewalks and big display windows make shopping easier. Clothing, housewares, gourmet foods, books, and, of course, shoes and bags, along with a Coin department store---Cola di Rienzo has it all, in a high-to-medium price range. Street-corner stands deal in bargain shoes and glassware. Near the Vatican at the west end of the avenue, off Piazza Risorgimento, a score of shops sell religious souvenirs, many of them on Via di Porta Angelica. Via Ottaviano, north of Piazza Risorgimento, has narrower sidewalks and lower priced goods than Via Cola di Rienzo.
Old Rome: Pantheon and Via del Governo Vecchio
The narrow byways and gracious piazzas of Old Rome draw avant-garde shoppers. The secondhand shops of Via del Governo Vecchio are the place to browse for the clothing of yesteryear and for hand-me-down Trifari jewelry, but the street is also becoming more and more known for minimalist boutiques stocked with trendy chic. In May and October torches light the way on Via dei Coronari after dark, and shops are open late for the traditional antiques fair. Via Giulia and Via del Monserrato are also synonymous with art and antiques galleries.
Piazza Colonna and Piazza Barberini
The Rinascente department store, a large Rizzoli bookstore, and classic apparel shops for both sexes set a conservative tone for the lower edge of a hillside shopping district that takes in the more commercial areas of Via del Tritone and Via Barberini. Shoes, bags, classic clothing, and leather apparel, at varying price levels, can be found throughout the area. Via del Tritone has some medium-price and a few expensive shops offering various goods. On Via Veneto are a scattering of high-priced boutiques and shoe stores.
Piazza di Spagna
The most elegant and expensive shops are concentrated in the area fanning out at the foot of the Scalinata di Spagna (Spanish Steps). Via Condotti and Via Borgognona are lined with the boutiques of some of the leading names in high fashion: Armani, Versace, Prada, Mila Schön, and Gianfranco Ferré. From the bottom of the Spanish Steps and off to the right are Via Margutta, known for art galleries, and Via del Babuino, where the once-predominant antiques shops have had to make room for designer boutiques. Intersecting the top-price shopping streets are a number of streets that are lined with specialty shops and boutiques of all kinds.
Via del Corso
Like a single-aisle shopping mall, this historic thoroughfare attracts droves of Romans and tourists who overflow the narrow sidewalks onto the street, dodging passing taxis and buses. Crowds are elbow-to-elbow in front of display windows chock-full of clothing and accessories. Via Fontanella Borghese, between Via del Corso and the palace where Pauline Bonaparte Borghese lived, has a mix of boutiques and art and antiques galleries. Piazza della Fontanella Borghese, flanking the palace, is known for the permanent stalls selling prints and old books.
Via Nazionale
The merchandise is mainstream and prices are generally moderate along this wide thoroughfare near Stazione Termini. A host of shoe stores, handbag and luggage retailers, and off-the-rack clothing stores line the avenue. There's a Upim department store, too. The museum shop in Palazzo delle Esposizioni, the big neoclassical exhibition building in white marble about halfway along the street, has some interesting small objects that make good gifts or souvenirs.
Cola di Rienzo
Between Piazza del Popolo and the Vatican, this broad avenue is lined with upscale shops that many Romans prefer to those around Piazza di Spagna because the wide sidewalks and big display windows make shopping easier. Clothing, housewares, gourmet foods, books, and, of course, shoes and bags, along with a Coin department store---Cola di Rienzo has it all, in a high-to-medium price range. Street-corner stands deal in bargain shoes and glassware. Near the Vatican at the west end of the avenue, off Piazza Risorgimento, a score of shops sell religious souvenirs, many of them on Via di Porta Angelica. Via Ottaviano, north of Piazza Risorgimento, has narrower sidewalks and lower priced goods than Via Cola di Rienzo.
Old Rome: Pantheon and Via del Governo Vecchio
The narrow byways and gracious piazzas of Old Rome draw avant-garde shoppers. The secondhand shops of Via del Governo Vecchio are the place to browse for the clothing of yesteryear and for hand-me-down Trifari jewelry, but the street is also becoming more and more known for minimalist boutiques stocked with trendy chic. In May and October torches light the way on Via dei Coronari after dark, and shops are open late for the traditional antiques fair. Via Giulia and Via del Monserrato are also synonymous with art and antiques galleries.
Piazza Colonna and Piazza Barberini
The Rinascente department store, a large Rizzoli bookstore, and classic apparel shops for both sexes set a conservative tone for the lower edge of a hillside shopping district that takes in the more commercial areas of Via del Tritone and Via Barberini. Shoes, bags, classic clothing, and leather apparel, at varying price levels, can be found throughout the area. Via del Tritone has some medium-price and a few expensive shops offering various goods. On Via Veneto are a scattering of high-priced boutiques and shoe stores.
Piazza di Spagna
The most elegant and expensive shops are concentrated in the area fanning out at the foot of the Scalinata di Spagna (Spanish Steps). Via Condotti and Via Borgognona are lined with the boutiques of some of the leading names in high fashion: Armani, Versace, Prada, Mila Schön, and Gianfranco Ferré. From the bottom of the Spanish Steps and off to the right are Via Margutta, known for art galleries, and Via del Babuino, where the once-predominant antiques shops have had to make room for designer boutiques. Intersecting the top-price shopping streets are a number of streets that are lined with specialty shops and boutiques of all kinds.
Via del Corso
Like a single-aisle shopping mall, this historic thoroughfare attracts droves of Romans and tourists who overflow the narrow sidewalks onto the street, dodging passing taxis and buses. Crowds are elbow-to-elbow in front of display windows chock-full of clothing and accessories. Via Fontanella Borghese, between Via del Corso and the palace where Pauline Bonaparte Borghese lived, has a mix of boutiques and art and antiques galleries. Piazza della Fontanella Borghese, flanking the palace, is known for the permanent stalls selling prints and old books.
Via Nazionale
The merchandise is mainstream and prices are generally moderate along this wide thoroughfare near Stazione Termini. A host of shoe stores, handbag and luggage retailers, and off-the-rack clothing stores line the avenue. There's a Upim department store, too. The museum shop in Palazzo delle Esposizioni, the big neoclassical exhibition building in white marble about halfway along the street, has some interesting small objects that make good gifts or souvenirs.
#8
Join Date: Jun 2004
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You can always take them along the Via Condotti and the Via Veneto if you'd like to look at stuff you wish you could afford..actually you can probably afford a lot of it like those 900 EURO alligator shoes I turned down last May...but boy were they nice!!!
Enjoy your trip.
Enjoy your trip.
#10
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There is shopping everywhere. From thrift shops to over the top botiques. It is fantastic. Shoes, cashmere and silk ties seem to be the best deals. They will have no problem spending money. Have fun.