Tuesday, November 26, 2013

À la prochaine Paris!

Well we have come to the end of our stay in Paris.  It has been a life changing experience for both of us.  We have never felt so alive than we did here.  The air, the FOOD, the art, the culture, the FOOD! There aren't enough good things to say.  We did our best to try to see everything we wanted to - some worked out - some didn't but all in all this was the perfect honeymoon.  Before we go we thought we would show you the apartment we stayed in (and from every angle) and a few pics from around the neighborhood.

The Apartment:  64 Rue Jean de la Fontaine

view of our front door... it was so heavy and COOL!  I loved it here!

Thank you Google Street View!  lol  We were on the very top with the uninterrupted balcony.

walking in the front door

i loved these tiles!

make a right after you go through the double door and you have a choice --
a million stairs or the tiniest elevator in the world!

this literally fit Jeremy and I and THAT'S IT! 
There was a little metal gate that closed behind you before it went up/down and Jeremy
would always be scared it was going to get caught on his butt! HA!

front door!

cutest little peep hole ever!

I am standing in the door way from the kitchen - the curtain on the right is where the front door is.

there were adorable antiques everywhere!  This was was full of tools and other odds and ends.

Standing in front of the front door looking to my left into the kitchen.  There was also a full sized fridge that made pigeon noises - Jeremy found this quite humorous.

standing in front of the dresser by the front door - looking into the dining room. Jeremy was eating - oops!

Our last dinner in Paris
Left over bouillabaisse and poulet roti from last night, the rest of our street sammies from lunch and the rest of our wine!


This is where we would go every evening to drink wine and people watch.  You can see one of our chairs on the terrace.

such a cool fireplace

a gorgeous antique hutch that acted as wine glass and platter storage

I fell in love with the blue doors going from the dining room to the living room

Here I am standing in front of one of the 2 doors going to the bedroom
another view from the dining room


view from the hallway in front of the front door

View of the bathroom from the hallway across from the other bedroom door.

the shower -- crazy!

view of the bedroom standing in the door way from the hall across from the bathroom

view from in front of the curtains in the bedroom to the living room

i wanted to steal this boat so bad!

Standing in the doorway by the boat looking into the bedroom.

This was an amazing apartment.  The best was hard as a rock but other than that we really enjoyed staying here.  We especially enjoyed our neighborhood!

A Boucherie near the apartment... we discovered an entire new section of our neighborhood the last night we were there!  We will be back to explore some more!

Notre-Dame-d'Auteuil near the Église d'Auteuil metro station. 
"Auteuil was originally a hamlet and commune with its own parish, and it was only in 1860 that it was merged back into Paris. The present church was finished in 1892, having been designed in the Romano-Byzantine style by the architectural practice of Joseph Auguste Émile Vaudremer, the diocesan architect."

detail of the Madonna and child at the entrance to the church
detail of the massive organ inside Notre-Dame-d'Auteuil

view of the organ inside Notre-Dame-d'Auteuil

Le Ribera is the brasserie we stopped at for espresso every morning.  They were so nice! 
We made sure to stop in and have one last cup and a goodbye before we left for the airport.
And of course Desgranges... The best quiche -- well the best pastrys we have ever and will ever have!
And of course our favorite view...

Side Note:  Every night when we got home we would turn on an amazing local jazz station and drink wine on the terrace.  One of the best souvenirs we have is an app called TSF Jazz that plays this station live (Paris time) through our phones. We listen to it almost every day and it takes us right back to this view and those awesome moments together. 

night view from our apartment terrace
We are forever grateful to everyone that contributed to our honeymoon registry.  Without you, this amazing trip wouldn't have been possible.  We appreciate everything and hope you know how much we love and appreciate you!

We left Paris with heavy hearts but knew that, no matter what it takes, we will be back. 
We lived our dream life for 10 whole days. 
We woke up to the sounds of people on the streets talking and laughing as they opened their businesses, we got lost, we wandered, we ATE, we drank, we enjoyed the city to its fullest, and above all -- we did it together.  

To Our Readers,
We send you all our love - and thank you for taking this trip with is all over again!

:: elizabeth and jeremy brown ::

                                    À la prochaine Paris!


(A special thanks to Kristina Frey for holding down the zoo/fort while we were gone)

Day 9 (Tuesday 11/5/13)

Today is our last full day in Paris.  We decide that a really yummy truly french brunch is in order followed by some art/culture at d'Orsay! We head back to the Montmartre area - this time we stay at the bottom of the hill - to a little place called Coquelicot.  Its a bakery and bistro and offers what looks to be an amazing brunch with tons of pastries.  We both order the Coquelicot brunch and it was more than we could have ever expected.

adorable wooden Pinocchio watches over the bakery counter

our view from the table

Umm Ill take one of everything please!

absolutely the best hot chocolate I have ever had!

stairs going to the 2nd floor

Smoked salmon on fresh baked bread with butter and a lightly dressed salad underneath, a soft boiled egg with bread to dip, a lemon madeline, french fry nuggets, housemade yogurt and fresh squeezed OJ.  Not bad for our last breakfast in Paris.

Jeremy enjoying his brunch - so cute!
This was an epic meal.  We proceeded to buy some lavender and cherry candies, a chocolate bar for my dad and a few snacks to take with us to d'Orsay.

I finally got a GOOD picture of the Metro station entrance! This was gorgeous and if you know me at all you know one of my favorite art movements was Art Nouveau and its everywhere you look here!



love how all the metro stations are do different - they all have their own little personalities
We are off to Musee d'Orsay!!
Here is a little history on the museum that we found really cool!

"The history of the museum, of its building is quite unusual. In the centre of Paris on the banks of the Seine, opposite the Tuileries Gardens, the museum was installed in the former Orsay railway station, built for the Universal Exhibition of 1900. So the building itself could be seen as the first "work of art" in the Musee d'Orsay, which displays collections of art from the period 1848 to 1914."

 It was really a gorgeous building...  I wish we had been able to take more pictures but there were no cameras allowed once inside the gallery spaces.  We even saw one of the guards pull a woman off to the side and made her show him that she was deleting all the pictures she took on her camera. YIKES!

exterior of the Musee d'Orsay
exterior detail of the architecture!
Since I wasnt able to take my own photo, I found this one of the interior so you could all see how amazing it was!
 There were several floors but we decided to start with the post-impressionists since Jeremy knew my love for Van Gogh.  The first piece we saw was La nuit étoilée.  Then his self portraits, then The Siesta, and so much more.


Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890)  La nuit étoilée  1888  Huile sur toile


Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890)  Self-Portrait  1889  Oil on canvas
There was a moment, when I stood in front of this painting... I was so overwhelmed.  I was mere inches away from his brush strokes.  I could feel the emotion that he painted with... I felt like my heart was going to explode as I felt tears streaming down my face.  I looked at Jeremy as he wiped my tears and all I could say was, "I never thought I would see these in person.. and here I am.  He was such a master and I am in such awe.  Im just overwhelmed."  

He smiled at me, "I know... I know."

We walked around in silence for the most part - from room to room just in total bliss - through the Gauguins, Seurats, the Rousseaus, the Pissarros... amazingly gorgeous paintings that have come to life right in front of us.  It was a dream come true for me.

We made our way up to the Impressionists area but not before taking in the AMAZING view from the top of the building!

view of Le Sacre Coeur from the main dining/cafe area

view of the gardens across the Sienne


There was so much to appreciate - inside and out of the musee.  It was hard to believe this was our last day here.

We walked through a great hall where the walls were lined with Monets, and Manets, and Degas', and Renoirs and Cezannes...  I didnt even know what to say.  There was so much to see and absorb. I think we could have stayed in that one room all day and not seen everything the way I really wanted to.

Paul Cézanne (1839-1906)  Apples and Oranges  Circa 1899  Oil on canvas
Edgar Degas (1834-1917)  The Ballet Class  Between 1871 and 1874  Oil on canvas
Edouard Manet (1832-1883)  Olympia  1863  Oil on canvas
And last but certainly not least...

Claude Monet (1840-1926)  London, Houses of Parliament. The Sun Shining through the Fog  1904  Oil on canvas
This is my favorite Monet... I don't know what it is about it, but it makes me happy every time I look at it.
And it was breathtaking to see in person.
This was an amazing museum... I could have stayed here all day. 
By the time we left it was around 3.  We still had to clean the apartment and pack.

We started walking down the street and Jeremy mentioned trying to make it back to the records store that was closed on monday and I have to admit... I lost it.  I picked a fight about how we didnt have time and that i felt guilty about not being able to go there... that there were other things I wanted to see that we didnt get to do...  And in the middle of the street I broke down.  I looked at him and I apologized for being so silly.  That deep down my anger was coming from the fact that we couldn't stay in Paris... that we were going to have to get on a plane and leave in the morning.  It hurt my heart to think of leaving and not knowing when we would come back.

After I pulled myself together Jeremy said something to me that really hit home with me...  he told me to look around, to take everything in and enjoy every last second we had, every last rain drop, every last bit of architecture and history and smell coming from the cafes...  And to never forget it.

I never will.  We never will.  And we try to keep it will us every day.

Side Note: There will be one more post of the apartment and some places around our neighborhood before we say goodbye!!!