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Going For Broke or How to Save Money
By Karen Fawcett
If
there’re two times a year I’m certain to hear from
www.bonjourparis.com readers, it’s during the winter and summer sales. I’m
surprised (considering the currency exchange) that people fly to Paris to save a
few dollars. But the savings are more substantial. I’m told there are great
deals to be had, especially at the city’s most expensive stores, where designers
reign supreme. Sonia Rykiel, Max Mara, Armani and many other even more
notables in the world of ready to wear and haute couture. One Bonjour Paris
shopper confided she bought so much in one boutique that she was able to
negotiate an extra 10% reduction before the detax.
She and her husband were in and out of the city so fast
that all they did was shop. And eat! They ate at some of Paris’ best
restaurants. Both were exhilarated over the purchases they were taking home.
They were using up so much energy negating gaining weight. Time was such an
issue that they always took the RER or the metro. Paris cognoscenti know it’s
the fastest form of transportation from here to there.
When they weren’t shopping, they were definitely eating;
Les Ambassadeurs, Market, Au Bon Accueil, Chiberta, and other restaurants of
note were among some of the places. This is a yearly pilgrimage this couple has
been making for the past eight winters!
I should add the couple is lovely and educated. But, Paris
is their shopping and eating Mecca. They go away on weekends and on other
vacations (ah, the baby-boomer generation) to New York City to get their fill of
theater and museums. Travel is part of their lives and a mutually shared love.
Inspired by their shopping spree, I decided to “do” the
soldes. (sales). I love shopping in other countries – it’s a cultural
experience. I don’t love shopping in Paris. First, since I’m a French resident,
I don’t qualify for the detax (approximately a 14% tax rebate for non-EU
residents leaving a member country.)
Second, I hate crowds and bargain hunters in French
department stores haven’t taken etiquette lessons. All is fair when it comes to
snagging a good deal and the sales personnel tend to be grumpy. I don’t blame
them, considering the pushing and pulling.
However, I needed a new lamp and took the occasion to climb
aboard the RER and shuttle across town. Rather than going up to the top floor of
the department store, I found myself on the lower level where children’s clothes
are stocked. (Grandmothers do that.) There was nothing worth buying at any
price.
I couldn’t help but notice that the adjoining department,
(interesting placement, eh?) is the lingerie department. Beautiful lingerie is
an indulgence many French women wouldn’t live without. My mother always told me
that even if I were wearing jeans; it was essential that my underwear be clean
and pretty. This was in case I was run over by a car, I’d look “like a lady”
when I was taken to the hospital.
Paris and Italy are known for their fabulous selections of
underwear. But, give me a break … a pair of underpants for 100 Euros and these
weren’t the most expensive. When I asked the saleswoman if she any which cost
less, she waved me away in a manner that conveyed that I was cheaper than cheap.
Clearly, there’s an incredible employee discount or she has a rich and sexy
lover. But, come to think of it, I didn’t see any such samples during our trip
throughout Asia.
By this time, my head was spinning. I decided I’d save my
underwear purchases for when I’m next in the U.S. T.J Maxx, Loehmanns and other
discount stores, where there are terrific selections and I won’t feel as if I
am breaking the bank. Besides, who needs all that lace that’s manufactured in
China and assembled in the EU?
Executives at French department stores admit their numbers
were down in 2005. The sales can make or break the year. Even though Americans
are ready to buy, you can’t help but notice groups of Japanese tourists, combing
the streets of Paris, holding multiple shopping bags. Frequently, there were
bilingual guides with them expediting the sales process and having the packages
delivered to hotels. I wouldn’t want to be after them in the detax line at the
airport. They have so many papers to hand the dounes (customs agents) who
are known to be curious and want to see the purchases.
Many people, especially business types, do their purchases
in the duty free section of the airport. Duty free is not profit free and unless
you’re buying liquor, cigarettes, cigars and perhaps, cosmetics (you’ll find a
somewhat limited selection), there are few if any bargains to be had before you
board the plane.
After my shopping spree, I was starving but didn’t have a
lot of time. After exiting the metro, I ended up in one of Paris’s ubiquitous
steak houses. The Hippopotamus (a part of the Flo chain) makes no pretensions.
You can eat there for 12 Euros at lunchtime and have some form of beef,
unlimited frites (French fries) and a glass of wine. It’s France’s
equivalent of a Wrangler Steak House.
Within minutes of being seated, a woman with snow white
hair of advancing years, marched into the restaurants and insisted on changing
tables not once but three times. She ordered and then complained when the steak
was a tiny bit overcooked. The waiter offered to replace the steak and the two
difference accompanying sauces (not comme il faut) and anything else this
iron-clad willed lady wanted. Rather than accepting, she declined - saying that
she was late for the sales where she was going to buy towels.
I knew I was home and was glad we weren’t going shopping at
the same time. There’s no way I could have competed with that over 80-year-old
woman. She might have beaten me with her cane.
© Karen Fawcett
Karen@BonjourParis.com
www.bonjourparis.com
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