Another famous shopping Paradise is the famous Selfridge’s, on Oxford Street, where on the ground floor you will see all the main beauty shops from Clarins to Rubinstein and where the friendly and impeccable beauticians will tell you their latest tips on how to look smashing. The main fashion houses from Milan, London, NY and Paris are also represented.
Archive for November, 2009
Selfridge’s
Saturday, November 28th, 2009Harvey Nichols
Friday, November 27th, 2009Located in the same posh area of Kensington you will find Harvey Nichols with fashion collections from all over the world, also from less known designers. The posh place to shop, loved by all the London Society people.
Harrods
Wednesday, November 25th, 2009It’s worth taking a walk through Harrods even if the security staff instruct you how to carry your day pack. Glazed Edwardian tiles set off food displays to make you sweat, with glazed pies, fresh-cream chocs flown in from Belgium that very day, and pies housing game you’ve never heard of. Anyone for a lark’s tongue vol-au-vent? The toilets are sumptuous, and the pet shop’s good for a laugh.
Covent Garden
Monday, November 23rd, 2009Covent Garden was once a vegetable field attached to Westminster Abbey, became the low-life haunt of Pepys, Fielding and Boswell, then a major fruit and veg market, and is now a triumph of conservation and commerce. The car-free piazza is surrounded by designer gift and clothes shops and hip bars and restaurants. Stalls selling overpriced antiques and bric-a-brac share the arcaded piazza with street theatre, buskers and people-watchers
Smithfield
Saturday, November 21st, 2009Smithfield is the last-surviving produce market in Central London. It’s Europe’s largest wholesale meat market and no place for faint-hearted vegetarians. Early weekday mornings, Smithfield is a hive of activity. Many of the local pubs open from the middle of the night to cater for the stallholders unsociable hours, so assuming you can pass yourself off as a Cockney meat seller (just douse yourself in blood and practise saying ‘wotcha guv’), there’s always the chance of an early-morning pint with your fried breakfast.
Portobello Market
Saturday, November 21st, 2009The colourful Portobello Market is London’s most famous street market, best seen on a Saturday morning before the gridlock sets in. It’s full of antiques, jewellery, ethnic knick-knacks, second-hand clothes and fruit and veg stalls. Petticoat Lane is East London’s celebrated Sunday morning market, but it’s overrated, overpriced, and appeals only to those so bleary-eyed from the night before that they think they need broken chocolate bars, ugly trinkets and cut-price cans of Ajax. Brixton Market is a cosmopolitan treat made up of a rainbow coalition of reggae music, slick Muslim preachers, halal meat and fruit and vegetables. Its inventory includes wigs, homeopathic root cures, goat meat and rare records.
Camden Markets
Saturday, November 21st, 2009The huge Camden Markets could be the closest England gets to free-form chaos outside the terraces of football stadia. They stretch between Camden and Chalk Farm tube stations, incorporating Camden Lock on the Grand Union Canal, and get so crowded on the weekends that you’ll think you’re in the Third World. The markets include the Camden Canal Market (bric-a-brac, furniture and designer clothes), Camden Market (leather goods and army surplus gear) and the Electric Market (records and 1960s clothing).
Greenwich Park
Monday, November 16th, 2009Plant your feet in two different time meridians at the Royal Observatory in Greenwich Park. Nearby is the world’s biggest, emptiest and most expensive bouncy castle, the Millennium Dome, which is now closed as a tourist attraction.
Hyde Park
Monday, November 16th, 2009Huge Hyde Park used to be a royal hunting ground, was once a venue for duels, executions and horse racing, and even became a giant potato field during WWII. It is now a place of fresh air, spring colour, lazy sunbathers and boaters on Serpentine Lake. Features of the park include sculptures by Jacob Epstein and Henry Moore, the contemporary Serpentine Gallery and Speaker’s Corner.
Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew
Sunday, November 15th, 2009At the Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew, there are 300 acres of beautiful gardens, with six glasshouses to visit including the Evolution House. The Gardens are open daily from 9.30am. Closing time varies according to the time of year, but it’s not earlier than 4pm or later than 7.30pm. For exact times call the Gardens on 020 8940 1171.
Admission to the gardens is £5 for adults, £2.50 for children; during the last hour before closing, there is a reduced rate of £3 for all visitors. Kew Gardens are closed 25 December and 1 January.
The nearest Underground station is Kew Gardens and you are also within easy reach of Richmond with its riverside pubs, antique shops, village green and royal park.
