Showing posts with label Paris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paris. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Paris vs New York

Since I've been all graduated since December and homework isn't consuming all my free time... I don't know what to do with myself when JP has to write papers all night or read massive case studies. 
So I've been decorating and re-decorating our apartment haha 
It seems a little silly I know, considering we're moving in a few months, but I figured I could try out some new ideas here, and if I like them then carry them over into our new space! 
(Wherever that ends up being... Keep your fingers crossed for us please! Apartment/duplex/basement shopping is hard.)

My newest project consisted of a total re-vamp of our picture wall, and I am quite a fan of how it turned out, mostly because it revolves around two of my favorite places:

Paris vs New York

Designed by a french-based graphic designer, these prints depict juxtapositional images side-by-side that capture the similar yet varied cultural phenomenons of the two cities.  
I am absolutely in love with them!

Total disclaimer -- the lighting in my apartment is terrible, so these pictures definitely don't do the project justice, please bear with me.

Old picture wall:

 New picture wall!

some of my favorite prints:
(although if we're being honest they're all my favorite so... It was really hard to pick just a few to photograph)






Friday, August 16, 2013

Concrete Jungle


 We finally made it home to Utah! 
After 13 flights (no baggage lost and only 1 flight was delayed!), 8 countries, and 2 months we made it into Provo late Saturday night (has it really been almost a week?! Time is FLYING) and ever since then it has been a whirlwind of getting unpacked, seeing family and lots of movies, hanging out with friends, going back to work, and getting ready for school to start. 
You know, real life kind of stuff. 
Which I'm not unhappy about. 
I happen to enjoy my real life quite a bit! :)

However, I've been going through the pictures from our European Adventure (that name seems to sum it up pretty well haha) and my goodness, we were certainly lucky to be able to do that. I'm so grateful that the timing worked out and that I was taught to save money from a young age (for real, I think that's the first thing I remember learning haha) so that JP and I could have this experience together! 
And because I completely agree with Audrey Hepburn when she said "Paris is always a good idea."

<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>

However, I have one more post of our trip! The very last stop was in New York City
There is nothing quite like New York. And you know what it is? It's the buildings, the people, the park, the food, the hustle and bustle, the taxis (so many taxis!), and it all blends together to make this wonderful place that feels and lives and breathes like nowhere else you've ever been. 
It's vibrant and beautiful and makes you stay out late so you can walk through Times Square after midnight and feel like you're a part of the city. 
It makes you want to buy banana pudding from Magnolia's Bakery and eat it next to Bethesda Fountain (Friends, anyone?)
It makes you want to eat pizza everyday and see broadway shows and get your makeup done at Saks 5th Avenue, because all of those things are absolute necessities right? 
As is visiting Doughnut Plant for NY's best donuts and Clinton St. Bakery for NY's best pancakes (right in a row, mind you).

Basically, this last little stop of our summer trip was absolutely perfect. 





















Thursday, August 1, 2013

Paris Faves:


Cafe:

Lina's
The perfect mix between modern-but-still-feels-like-you're-in-Paris, and plus -- they have free wi-fi and it's air conditioned! 
We're obsessed with all their sandwiches (you can build your own! That's unheard of in Paris!) and our favorite dessert they have is the raspberry white chocolate tart.
I think it's a chain but the one we always went to was in the 2nd arrondissement at 50 Rue Etienne Marcel!
I instagrammed our visit here if you want to check it out!

Bakery:
It's a toss up between Le Moulin de la Vierge in the 7th arrondissement (not a bad pit stop on your way to or from the eiffel tower!) and Legay Choc Boulangerie Patisserie in the 4th (literally a stone's throw away from the George Pompidou museum. Perfect afternoon in Paris: go to the Pompidou then go get as many pastries and baguettes as you can eat from this bakery.)
And yes, the second place is the gay-kery, and so a visit here is simultaneously entertaining [and a little scarring] AND delicious.


But let's be honest, you can't go wrong with hardly any bakery in Paris. 

Shopping area:
Get off at Les Halles or Etienne Marcel metro stop and wander! That whole area is fantastic for shopping. 

Best Ice Cream:
It has to be Berthillon and it has to come from one of the vendors on Ile de St Louis
And just accept the fact now that it's going to cost way more than you're comfortable paying for ice cream... and yes, you do need to get 3 scoops because France's definition of an ice cream scoop is about 1/4 the United States' definition of an ice cream scoop... 
But none of that will matter when you're like "WHOA" and realize you've never had pear ice cream taste this good (or salted caramel for that matter).

Traditional French Restaurant:
Au Pied du Sacre Coeur (in Montmartre, right below Sacre Coeur)
Amazing french food, atmosphere, and evening (it's really a french meal -- we were there for over 3 hours!)

Favorite view:
Another toss up... I love the view from the top of the Arc de Triomphe (you can see all the boulevards- including the famous Champs Elysees- and have a stunning view of the eiffel tower, not to mention you can watch all the cars below you trying to not get in a car accident while navigating the largest roundabout in Paris, sans lanes, called La Place de l'etoile. It's so entertaining, I could watch for hours.)

OR if you want a free view, head up to Montmartre and sit on the steps in front of the Sacre Coeur!
I mentioned in this post how much a love that part of the city. 

Strolling/hanging out: {Top 3}

We love the Tuileries!
For a variety of reasons:
a)  they used to be the French Royals backyard, so they're beautiful and if you're there around dusk it's incredibly magical, really I mean that.
b) there's been a carnival going on in the middle of them (see pictures of said carnival in this post) all July and they have the best licorice candies. JP and I somehow found ourselves walking through there a few times a week to buy these specific licorice ropes, they're that good. And we have no self control.

Okay and we LOVE walking along the Seine at night! Crisscrossing the bridges, waving to people on the boats (JP doesn't wave, I do, remember our attitude toward the boats from this post? :), and really just getting a feel of the city coming alive after the sun has gone down is so much fun. 
Also, if you're a runner (Yeah, I had great ambitions of getting into shape while I've been here and I could count the number of times I've actually gone running on my hands haha) you should run along the Seine or on the dirt path around the Eiffel Tower! Both are great views and not full of people. 

And last but not least, you have to, HAVE TO, go watch the Eiffel Tower sparkle
Grab some drinks and treats and go sit at the park (champs de mars) in front of the tower and starting at 10 PM, it sparkles every hour on the hour for about 5 minutes. It's magical. 
Everyone erupts into cheers when it starts and then it's like this mad race to enjoy it but also get as many good pictures as possible while it's still sparkling... Very entertaining to watch. 
JP and I would walk to the Eiffel Tower probably 5 times a week to watch it sparkle! (we live just a ten minute walk away, remember?)


And those are my faves! If you have any of your own, please add them in the comments! 
I found most of these places from recommendations from other blogs so please, share your knowledge and then it's a win-win! 

And that concludes our time in Paris! Which is sad/happy because next up is London for a few days! Hooray!

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

All good things come to an end...

... including magical summers where you live in Paris. 

JP's school program finished up this week and last night there was a closing social! 
Everyone came to say goodbye to each other and it was so much fun to hang out and mingle with all our new friends, plus it was in this amazing social club in the heart of Paris so I was loving every minute of it! :)
We are now on our way to London for a few days (!!!!!) and I'll be sharing some of my "Paris Favorites" tomorrow!











Sunday, July 28, 2013

Père Lachaise Cemetery

This place is easily one of my top five favorite places I have been in my life. 
I can't get enough of the quiet reverence and peaceful solitude that is abundant in them, I really can't.  
And this cemetery is the KING OF ALL CEMETERIES!

There is an incredible amount of famous and influential people buried in Pére Lachaise (it's known as the "grandest address in Paris") and I accidentally spent a good few hours one morning researching the people who are buried there (which I enjoyed far more than I should have haha) and then I got ahold of a map of the cemetery and mapped out all the graves I wanted to see (it would be so easy to get lost in there!) 
You can see a full list of everyone buried in the cemetery here!

I apologize for the picture overload, but I couldn't help myself. It was beautiful! And haunting, and soothing, and secluded and one of the best ways (in my opinion) to spend an afternoon!


Artist of my favorite painting, Raft of the Medusa.



Isadora Duncan's urn full of her ashes is placed here!


 Alright, so I suffered a bit of a disappointment at this stop: 
I heard years ago that it is good luck/a rite of passage/etc to kiss Oscar Wilde's grave while wearing lipstick and had decided that I would definitely complete that task sometime in my life.
So when I discovered that Oscar Wilde was buried at Pére Lachaise, I was so excited that I would actually fulfill this goal and even took like 5 whole minutes to decide which color of lipstick I should wear. 

When I finally arrived at his grave, much to my horror and disappointment, the good old historical society of Paris had put up glass walls around Oscar's grave and washed all the lips off :(
Some people still kiss the glass (see below) but I couldn't bring myself to do it! 
Life goal = crushed. 
But I bounced back rather quickly from this set back upon finding Gertrude Stein's grave just down the row!




They say that his grave is the most visited in the entire cemetery!


And last, but not least, Frederick Chopin: