Couleurs Soleil Bed & Breakfast Paris
19 Rue Oberkampf Paris, Île-de-France, 75011, France
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Paris, Baby, Alexandra and last couple of days.
... way. The baby was still in her pajamas when we got there so we changed her, ate some food then quickly left the house – she was being fussy. We walked to Luxembourg Gardens and played there for a while. We had a little snack and Adrien and I wrestled which seemed to get her very excited. Then I pretended to be a baby and sit in her stroller. She wasn’t sure what to make of that. Alexandra needed us to babysit her while she went to a meeting in her ...
Wanderings....
... be thinking about a lot while I'm here.
Tomorrow I think I will go to the Musee Carnavalet, which is a free museum about the history of Paris, and then maybe in the afternoon I will go to Père Lachaise. I don't really care about seeing Jim Morrison's grave, but it seems like one of those things people do when they're in Paris, so why not? Apparently it's very pretty and calm, so we'll see.
Just don't expect me to be kissing Oscar Wilde's tombstone. That would be gross.
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In Search of the Golden Scissors 4: Franck Provost
... At some point, I noticed that her hands were shaking a bit and I realized that she might have actually been somewhat nervous. I wasn't exactly sure why, but my guess was it was the language thing. At any rate, this just made me feel sorry for her and a bit more empathetic. Despite her nervousness, whatever the reason, she did a lovely job on both my cut and color. My bangs ...
The City of Lights
... wall inside the church that separated the masses from the curia. Something I didn’t know was that there was quite a social scene inside the church during the middle ages, so much so that the curia built an interior wall to have some piece. The third was the chapel that contained all of the alter used for Napoleon’s coronation. I made a mental note on this one to compare it to the painting of that event hanging in the Louvre. The last time we were here we went up the towers ...
Musée du Louvre
... along with many other visitors) could only admire the actual painting from a few yards through a bullet-proof glass. On the wall opposite to the Mona Lisa was the massive painting of Veronese The Wedding Feast at Cana, and to be honest, I found this painting more captivating than her much debated smile. I guess it's just a matter of taste. I loved the Egyptian antiquities along with the Greek and Roman antiquities ...


