-
Most viewed posts & pages
-
Recent Posts
- Helping Lazarus rise again
- Cold cases: The snake-oil salesman and the thief
- The music master
- Hidden rivers, white queens, and squaring the triangle
- Look up
- The private life of a public man
- Double vision
- What to read in the bath
- The Emperor, the cabaret of women, an ill-advised gift, and the porcelain painter
- When bombs fell on Paris
- Words in the Métro
- A geranium in winter
- Funeral march for a dead parrot
- A St. Helena Lullaby
- The missing link
- Silent witnesses
- Eclairage Chauffage: Helen McNicoll and the painting of light
- A convent education
- Astérix and the lost streets of Montparnasse
- The boating party
- Up Stairs. Down Stairs.
- Beer and sandwiches from the Brasserie Dauphine
- A museum of images in a garden of peace
- Napoleon slept here
- Lorette
What our readers think
Parisian Fields on Helping Lazarus rise agai… Parisian Fields on Helping Lazarus rise agai… supernaturallytransp… on Helping Lazarus rise agai… supernaturallytransp… on Helping Lazarus rise agai… Nicola Jennings on Helping Lazarus rise agai… Blogroll
- Bonjour Paris
- Buttes Chaumont blog
- Days on the Claise
- Decoding Paris
- French Girl in Seattle
- French Today
- Invisible Paris
- One quality, the finest
- Paris (Im)perfect
- ParisPerdu
- Part-time Parisian
- Restauranting Through History
- Rue Rude
- Sound Landscapes Paris
- Spotted by Locals
- Taste of France
- The Paris Blog
Tags
- Bazar de l'Hotel de Ville
- Champs Elysees
- Charles Marville
- Eiffel Tower
- Eugene Atget
- French Revolution
- Georges-Eugène Haussmann
- Gustave Eiffel
- Gustave Rives
- La Samaritaine
- Les Grands Magasins Dufayel
- les Halles
- Louis XIV
- Montmartre
- Montparnasse
- Napoleon
- Napoleon Bonaparte
- Napoleon III
- Parc Monceau
- Paris flood
- Paris metro
- Paris postcards
- Petite Ceinture
- Stanley Loomis
- Val de Grace
Categories
Most liked posts & pages
Archives
Category Archives: Paris streets
A question of time
What do you remember most vividly about your first visit to Paris? For me, more than 20 years ago, it was the astounding range of merchandise in shops and galleries, the parks, and the cleanliness of the city. For a … Continue reading
Posted in Paris civic functions, Paris history, Paris hotels, Paris streets
Tagged Carl Albert Mayrhofer, Charles-Augustin Meurice, Compagnie Générale des Horloges Pneumatiques, Ernest Resch, Flood of 1910, Hotel Meurice, Jules Albert Berly, Paris Flood 1910, pneumatic clocks, rue Ste-Anne, Scientific American, Victor Popp
13 Comments
Nostalgic images of a vanishing city
Photographs of Paris in the snow were big news earlier this month. We are Canadians. As Gilles Vigneault sang of this country, “Mon pays ce n’est pas un pays, c’est l’hiver” (My country is not a country, it is winter). … Continue reading
Posted in Paris art, Paris nostalgia, Paris popular culture, Paris streets
Tagged commissionnaire, Curiosités de Paris, Edmond Morin, Franco-Prussian War, Grand Café d’Harcourt, Henri Boutet, Le Monde illustré, Neuvaine de Saint-Etienne-du-Mont, Neuvaine de Sainte Geneviève, omnibus, Serge Férat
12 Comments
A city street, a lamppost
It was the photograph that caught my eye from a high shelf in a bookshop. A street with a lamppost and the corner of a building; two men walking in opposite directions. It was only later that I registered the … Continue reading
Posted in Paris books, Paris civic functions, Paris postcards, Paris streets
Tagged du Gaz et de l’Eclairage, Dufayel, Frédérique Bousquel, Jacques Lusseyran, Jo Baker, Joseph Epstein, Journées du Patrimoine, Marcel Epstein, Mémoire de l’Electricité, Mémoire des rues, MEGE, Ronald C. Rosbottom, rue de Clignancourt, rue Ramey, Second World War
21 Comments
Footsteps and Sidetracks
I sometimes think that if I had it all to do over again, I would become a biographer. I’ve no interest in writing fiction when real life is so fascinating. Even in my day-job as a researcher, I love tracking … Continue reading
Posted in Paris art, Paris history, Paris streets
Tagged André Lurçat, Boulogne-Billancourt, Fernand Léger, Gabriel Loire, Georgia O’Keeffe, Henri Matisse, Lucie Brownlee, Mary Callery, Pable Picasso, place du Marché St-Honoré, Quai de Voltaire, Richard Holmes, rue du Belvédère, St. George's Church, Villa d’Alésia
14 Comments
Life on the rue du Ranelagh
By the time you read this, we will have returned from Paris, where we spent Christmas. Friends had graciously given us the use of an apartment on the boulevard Suchet in the 16th arrondissement. “Ah, le seizième ! C’est un … Continue reading
Rescued from oblivion
On the morning of April 12, 2016, three of us set out from this courtyard on an astounding walk through the Marais. But the story starts much earlier. In 1980, a sharp-eyed passerby spotted some photographs in a Paris dumpster … Continue reading
Posted in Paris architecture, Paris history, Paris markets, Paris quartiers, Paris streets
Tagged A. Cayeux, André Malraux, îlots insalubres, Creaphis Editions, F. Nobécourt, Janvier Graveur Estampeur, Le Pas Sage, Malraux law 1962, Marais, Marché des Enfants Rouges, Paris Marais 43, Paris Occupation, Patrice Roy, rue Michel le Comte, Second World War
30 Comments
Paris is a billboard
Viewed through the long lens of time, 19th-century photos of advertising broadsides glued to the sides of buildings seem so charming, so urban, so Parisian. But what if it were your wall, or you were the printer whose fine work … Continue reading
Geraniums by any other name
We are fairly laid-back gardeners. Our Toronto garden is small and shady, and nearly all the plants are perennials that come up every year on their own so we do not have to “put in” the garden every spring. We … Continue reading



















