Paris Shopping Tips
#1
Original Poster
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 227
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Paris Shopping Tips
Hi All! Preparing for my first trip to Paris in March. One of my favorite things about traveling is picking up little somethings, usually at a drugstore or grocery. I'm not asking about LV bags or Longchamp totes - more a great French face cream, or small food item. Maybe a handy gadget we don't see much in the US. Or the perfect layering tshirt. Things that are inexpensive, useful and French 
Thanks for your suggestions!

Thanks for your suggestions!
#3

Joined: Mar 2005
Posts: 1,333
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I love to get these little insulated bags at Maison du Chocolat (in the Louvre and around town, also at CDG). I got them last year and think they cost about 6 E. They’re a bronzy color with a little rope handle, very chic, fold flat. I give them as gifts, and use mine to carry lunch, wine or cheese.
You can see a photo on eBay if you google Maison du Chocolat insulated bag.
You can see a photo on eBay if you google Maison du Chocolat insulated bag.
#5
Joined: Sep 2016
Posts: 2,302
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Anything around the wine looks typical French.
A system to close the bottle after opening or a corkscrew or ...
I also like these foldable aluminum foils that you ploy and insert in the bottle so that you do not spill a single drop of the wine.
A system to close the bottle after opening or a corkscrew or ...
I also like these foldable aluminum foils that you ploy and insert in the bottle so that you do not spill a single drop of the wine.
#6
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 78,320
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My French friends always send Creme de Marrons in their Xmas package - never seen here at least in ordinary stores - Chestnut cream in strong metal packages. Available in France in any grocery or supermarket. Great on French bread.
#7
Joined: Jun 2016
Posts: 5,564
Likes: 12
http://www.e-dehillerin.fr/ I want to bring something home that was made in France not China so go here and buy gifts for myself and others. I love the Eiffel tower cookie cutters, wood utensils, pastry molds and other items. My husband bought an excellent kitchen knife one trip.
I also like to buy small prints or museum items. Go to Shakespeare and Company for books and ask for the stamp. They have great bags also.
I hit the small sample area in drugstores because I don't bring much but buy once there.
I also like to buy small prints or museum items. Go to Shakespeare and Company for books and ask for the stamp. They have great bags also.
I hit the small sample area in drugstores because I don't bring much but buy once there.
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#10
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 17,749
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I bought a whimsical whisk at Pylones on one trip, and every time I see it in the drawer it makes me smile. I also bought demitasse spoons at Printemps and loved them so much I went back on another trip and bought more of them.
#11
Joined: Jun 2016
Posts: 5,564
Likes: 12
mms, thought I was the only one into demitasse spoons. I love kitchen and cooking stores. A. Simon is another, 48 rue Montmartre.
I am a tourist and the writers living in Paris have always be an interest with many Americans. That little bookstore and now cafe are doing well.
Midnight in Paris help a bit with tourism in Paris also.
Avène products are very good for your skin.
I am a tourist and the writers living in Paris have always be an interest with many Americans. That little bookstore and now cafe are doing well.
Midnight in Paris help a bit with tourism in Paris also.
Avène products are very good for your skin.
#12

Joined: Jan 2012
Posts: 12,846
Likes: 26
The only store I religiously devote time in every visit to Paris is the BHV basement. Generally one might call it a home improvement store (the basement, not the whole store) but it's so much more. I'm usually on a quest for something in particular, last time it was the blue enamel house numbers. But I end up wandering for hours, it seems, looking mostly at hardware like knobs and drawer pulls, on & on. Take a list with how many knobs you might need to dress up a piece of furniture or a door or your kitchen...you get the drift. The beauty of these sorts of items is they take up next to no space in your luggage. I like kitchen gadgets too and you think of the place every time you use them.
BHV, 52 Rue de Rivoli, in the 4th.
BHV, 52 Rue de Rivoli, in the 4th.
#13
Original Poster
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 227
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Such good tips! Thanks for the store names - that is super helpful. mms and Macross I love kitchen stores too, I worked at a kitchen/gourmet store through college 
CaliGurl - great tip on the Goop article. Is that the dry shampoo you bought? I have very dark hair and have yet to find one that doesn't make my hair look grey so I'd love your thoughts.
Woinparis I will look for the foil spouts. We have a group of friends that we do a weekly Wine Wednesday get together with, so that may be the perfect souvenir for them!
Keep them coming friends!

CaliGurl - great tip on the Goop article. Is that the dry shampoo you bought? I have very dark hair and have yet to find one that doesn't make my hair look grey so I'd love your thoughts.
Woinparis I will look for the foil spouts. We have a group of friends that we do a weekly Wine Wednesday get together with, so that may be the perfect souvenir for them!
Keep them coming friends!
#18
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 3,179
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<i>The only store I religiously devote time in every visit to Paris is the BHV basement.</i>
I used to feel this way about the BHV basement but much has changed there and I no longer find it as interesting as it once was. Most of the little curiosities that were so wonderful to discover have been replaced with much more common or ordinary merchandise that will turnover and sell quickly.
Leroy Merlin has several very large stores which can be reached within Paris and it is there I find interesting hardware solutions at prices which are far lower than what one pays at the BHV basement.
https://www.leroymerlin.fr/
I used to feel this way about the BHV basement but much has changed there and I no longer find it as interesting as it once was. Most of the little curiosities that were so wonderful to discover have been replaced with much more common or ordinary merchandise that will turnover and sell quickly.
Leroy Merlin has several very large stores which can be reached within Paris and it is there I find interesting hardware solutions at prices which are far lower than what one pays at the BHV basement.
https://www.leroymerlin.fr/
#19
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 17,749
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Macross--I have only been into e-dehillerin once, and for some reason we got sidetracked shortly after we entered and left and never made it back. Thanks for the reminder to go back
Shaya--Look for kitchen dish/tea towels. They can be inexpensive, and using them daily is a fun reminder of the trip. I buy those and tablecloths, but of course those take up more room etc.
Shaya--Look for kitchen dish/tea towels. They can be inexpensive, and using them daily is a fun reminder of the trip. I buy those and tablecloths, but of course those take up more room etc.
#20
Joined: Dec 2005
Posts: 10,169
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Last time I looked, BHV had two hardware departments, the one in the basement and the one on the 3rd or 4th floor. The basement store was more utilitarian, the upstairs section more elegant as far as things like cabinet knobs and trim. The blue numbers sell out quickly and I can't always get what I want. They have great " curb your dog" and other signs too.
Last time I was there (summer, 2015) I bought a bleu de travail work jacket just like the late Bill Cunningham wore. I wear it out in the evening in tribute to him.
Back in the day, you could buy everything you needed to make a pair of shoes from scratch if you happened to know how to cut and fit a pair of shoes from scratch.
Last time I was there (summer, 2015) I bought a bleu de travail work jacket just like the late Bill Cunningham wore. I wear it out in the evening in tribute to him.
Back in the day, you could buy everything you needed to make a pair of shoes from scratch if you happened to know how to cut and fit a pair of shoes from scratch.

