Most viewed posts & pages
-
Recent Posts
- The Zone
- Zinc
- Twenty questions
- Cloches et clochers
- Péniche
- Entresol
- Chambre de bonne
- Rooftops
- A view of the pandemic (so far) in five masks
- Far from the Madding Crowd
- Places of healing
- Empty streets
- A pebble for Clare
- Petite Ceinture: Ring around the city
- Reduce. Reuse. Recycle. Reconsider.
- Early one morning
- It never hurts to ask
- Art Nouveau and Aerodynamics in Auteuil
- Postcards: Little windows into a vanished Paris
- The ugliest building in Paris
- Are you sitting down?
- Avoiding the crowds in Versailles
- Stepping back into the river
- A web of friends and a ceremony in a former corset factory
- Les petits bleus
What our readers think
Jan Whitaker on The Zone Parisian Fields on Rooftops Pat on The Zone wmonelson on Rooftops Parisian Fields on Rooftops Blogroll
- Armchair Parisian
- Bldg Blog
- Bonjour Paris
- Decoding Paris
- Eat and Two Veg
- French Girl in Seattle
- French News Online
- French Today
- Girls' Guide to Paris
- Invisible Paris
- Magic Lantern Show
- Notes on the visual arts and popular culture
- One quality, the finest
- Paris (Im)perfect
- Paris and I / Paris Set Me Free
- parisinsidersguide.com
- ParisPerdu
- Part-time Parisian
- Rue Rude
- Sound Landscapes Paris
- Spotted by Locals
- Taste of France
- The Paris Blog
Tags
- Adam Roberts
- Champs Elysees
- Eiffel Tower
- Eugene Atget
- First World War
- Georges-Eugène Haussmann
- Gustave Eiffel
- Gustave Rives
- Jardin du Luxembourg
- Les Grands Magasins Dufayel
- les Halles
- Montmartre
- Montparnasse
- Napoleon
- Napoleon Bonaparte
- Napoleon III
- Parc des Buttes Chaumont
- Parc Monceau
- Paris flood
- Paris metro
- Paris postcards
- Petite Ceinture
- postcards
- Stanley Loomis
- Val de Grace
Categories
Most liked posts & pages
Archives
Category Archives: Paris expositions
The ugliest building in Paris
In the last blog, I mentioned Gabriel Davioud, who is credited with designing some of the classic street furniture of Paris. I wanted to know more about him. That proved to be a challenge. The ordinarily helpful Gallica offered 25 … Continue reading
Posted in Paris architecture, Paris expositions, Paris history
Tagged Aquarium du Trocadéro, Charles Blanc, Charles Percier, Charles-Marie Widor, Exposition Universelle de 1878, Gabriel Davioud, Jacques Carlu, Joris-Karl Huysmans, Jules Bourdais, Jules Simon, Marcel Proust, Napoleon Bonaparte, Napoleon II, Palais de Chaillot, Palais du Roi de Rome, Pierre Fontaine, Trocadéro
11 Comments
A Doomed Attempt at Out-Eiffelling Eiffel
Even before its inauguration on March 31, 1889, the Eiffel Tower was world famous. Loved by some, reviled by others, it would be the world’s tallest building until New York’s Chrysler Building took the lead in 1930. Of course, as … Continue reading
Posted in Paris architecture, Paris expositions
Tagged Albert Brunel, American Architect and Building News, Charles Baillairgé, Edward W. Watkin, Eiffel Tower, Gustave Eiffel, London Stump, Max Am Ende, Neloah, Public Domain Review, Thames Iron Works and Shipbuilding Co., Tower Company Limited, Wembley
5 Comments
Finding Typewriter History in Paris
My five-year-old grandson doesn’t know what they are. Actor Tom Hanks collects them. And I am so captivated by their beauty and their astounding variety that I am writing a book about them, in collaboration with Martin Howard, another well-known … Continue reading
Posted in Paris expositions, Paris history, Paris postcards, Paris typewriters
Tagged 8 boulevard des Capucines, antique typewriters, antiquetypewriters.com, Antiquités Brocante Bastille, Bassin de l’Arsenal, boulevard des Capucines, Comte Charles de Villelume de Sombreuil, François Lambert, Frank Lambert, Grand Palais, Gresham College, Institution Millet-Ducloux, Jacques Offenbach, Joel Garcia Organisation, Lambert typewriters, Lambert water meter, L’Écho de Paris, Martin Howard, Nevers France, Paris Book Fair, Paris Exposition 1900, Paris International Antiquarian Book Fair, Peter Weil, Place de la Bastille, Pont-de-Beauvoisin, postcards, Remington, Remington Typewriter Co., Richard Polt, rue Vivienne, Sidney Hébert, Sir Thomas Gresham, Smith Premier No. 4, Smith Premier tyepwriter, stenographic machine, Stenophile, The Gresham, Tom Hanks, typewriters, typewriting class, typewriting school, Yost typewriter
14 Comments
Dateline Paris 1900: The Astounding Moving Electrical Sidewalk
In 1900, if you were lucky enough to have a ticket such as this one—and almost fifty million people did—you were in for an astounding treat. Paris and France went all out to make the Paris Universal Exposition the biggest … Continue reading
The Paris Gigantic Wheel and Varieties Company Limited
It was an intriguing postcard, titled simply “Paris. La Grande Roue” (Paris, The Big Wheel). I didn’t recognize it, but I liked it, so I bought it. Little did I know that this purchase at an antiques fair in Paris … Continue reading
Posted in Paris expositions, Paris history, Paris popular culture, Paris postcards
Tagged 1900 Exposition Universelle, avenue de Suffren, Blackpool, Columbian Exposition of 1893, Earl's Court, Eiffel Tower, Ferris Wheel, George Washington Gale Ferris Jr., H. Cecil Booth, La Grande Roue, Le Wonderland, Norman Anderson, Paris Gigantic Wheel and Varieties Company Limited, Sylvain Ageorges, Théodore Vienne, universal exposition, Victor Breyer, Vienna, Walter B. Basset
17 Comments