Few visitors look beyond Paris when it comes to flea markets, but keen collector Eddi Fiegel shows you can find treasures all over France
I have a confession to make. I have a passion for all things vintage. Well, nearly all things. Furniture – yes; crockery, chinaware, silverware and glassware – yes; clothes – very definitely yes. Not to mention a sub-passion, if you like, for gilt-edged mirrors and elaborate chandeliers. Consequently, I love nothing more than spending a weekend rummaging around a French flea market.
Wherever you are in France, it is not hard to find a huddle of sellers, displaying their often-random wares to the strains of an accordionist or crackly Charles Trenet records while a bunch of like-minded souls sift their way through the goods in search of a bargain.
Over the years, I have unearthed a Pompadour-style display case that still garners compliments from friends, a spectacular soleil mirror, some gorgeous picture-sleeve EPs by Françoise Hardy, and a 1920s velvet opera coat.
Unlike in Britain, where the announcement that you are heading to a car-boot sale can still sometimes be greeted with disdain, over the Channel, it is considered a standard pursuit.
The flea market in France has more the caché of an antiques market, mixed in with a little rough-and-ready sawdust and the thrill of a Sunday at the races. You never know, there is always the chance of unearthing some rarefied gem at a knock-down price. It happened to a British couple who bought a spider plant at a car-boot sale for a pound, only to discover the plain-looking planter it had come in was a rare piece of Lalique crystal worth around £20,000.
Denne historien er fra January 2018-utgaven av France.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent ? Logg på
Denne historien er fra January 2018-utgaven av France.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
Paindemic In Paris
For American actor and writer Alexander Burnett, a shortage of bread at his local boulangerie was one of the biggest challenges of lockdown in his adopted home city
VEULES-LES-ROSES
Between the white cliffs of the Côte d’Albâtre and the bucolic landscapes of the Pays de Caux, discover a village that combines coast and country,
Taking the BISCUIT
France is known for its exquisite pâtisserie and extravagant gâteaux but the not-so-humble biscuit deserves recognition too
PICTURE PERFECT PISTE
After a decade away from the slopes Janet Brice finds her ski legs in val d'arly, a hidden gem in the shadow of Mount Blanc
Let there BE LIGHT
Lyon’s annual Fête des Lumières brightens up the darkest of December nights in spectacular fashion, finds David Atkinson on a winter visit to the Rhône capital
Shop ‘til YOU DROP
In the first of our new Insight guides, Helen Parkinson delights in the French shopping experience
Floating YOUR BOAT
Spending a day on the River Seine in Paris, Heidi Fuller-love samples some of the city’s top entertainment that can be enjoyed afloat
Creamy Dijon Chicken With Bacon And Spinach
Enjoy this hearty dish from Bisous & Brioche, a cookbook shot on location in Burgundy
A Moveable Feast
Philip Sweeney embarks on a voyage gourmand along the Vallée de la Gastronomie travelling from Dijon to Marseille
BOND RETOUR 7
To celebrate the return of everyone’s favourite globe-trotting British intelligence officer in No Time to Die, Helen Parkinson rounds up five of James Bond’s top cross-Channel escapades