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The above image is from Dancing Doc Design. Could you think of a better place to be right now!?!


Ohhhh Laduree!!! How my heart (or should I say stomach) yearns for a macaron from your legendary establishment! Why is everything that is Laduree so beautiful? It's from another time completely. Imagine another time when everyday things were of quality and times were more simple and pretty. Image via Flickr

Am I crazy or is the wall covering a copy of Marie Antoinette's Turkish boudoir in Fontainebleau??? What a wild coincidence, I just did a post on it yesterday and I've had this photo sitting around for months but never noticed.

Something has me drawn to parasols and umbrellas lately. I just love this image and I love the idea for a party. So easy, so chic! I think I'll do a post very soon on parasols, I have some images that are wildly beautiful!

I don't know why but I always wished I could have pulled off being a Red head part time. Unfortunately, I do not have the skin tone to even attempt it but I do love the look on others. So classic, unique, and stunning.

Finally, This dress that to me resembles the petals of a Peony. I adore it. If I could choose a different dress to have been wed in...it would be this one. Scrumptious!
Labels: 18th century, couture, Fashion, Fontainebleau, France, French, Garden, Laduree, Macarons, Madame du Barry, Marie Antoinette, paris, travel

Labels: 18th century, chanel, couture, culture, design, Fashion, France, French, Garden, History, Madame du Barry, Marie Antoinette, paris, Petite Trianon, Roccoco, Romance, shopping, travel, Versailles

9 Rue Madame, Paris, France
Phone: 01-4284-0300





Each bouquet comes wrapped in chic black paper with a poem tucked inside. Clients include Catherine Deneuve, Sofia Coppola, and the fashion houses Chanel, Givenchy, Gaultier, and Céline.

Marie Antoinette's tree in her treasured Hamlet has toppled from the severe storm that hit France and Spain. The tree survived the French Revolution, the years, and a devastating 1999 storm, but high winds have toppled a huge and ancient beech tree planted for Marie Antoinette over two centuries ago in the Versailles grounds.

"Imagine how an old tree in Versailles is vulnerable to the wind," gardener Alain Baraton told AP Television News on Tuesday. "That was all it took to cause the tree to fall and crash."
The 82-foot tall Purple Beech tree, one of the very last trees in the Queen's hamlet dedicated to her in the vast royal park, was felled Friday by a fierce winter gust.
The 223-year-old tree's collapse exposed a jumble of roots, dirt and grass, was the latest victim to the Queen's Versailles vegetation after her most loved Oak tree died in a severe heat wave (in 2003).

The beech(in case you love the Latin form: Facus Sylvatica Purpura) had its own plaque showing the year it was planted (1786). 10 years ago, it had been damaged but survived an even more destructive storm that knocked down thousands of trees at Versailles and devastated the grounds.
Following that storm, the tree's roots had grown moldy and shrunk, they could no longer hold the weight.
The beech will get an unceremonious and unroyal (however, Green)finish: It will be cut up and sold to paper makers.
Just as I was finishing this post I saw a report that said at least 21 people died in the winter storm that hit France and Spain last week and my thoughts and prayers go out to those families. Much more important than a tree. I had no idea in my little corner of the world that it had been so severe. I hope people will be able to recoup their land, their crops, homes, etc.
Labels: France, Garden, Marie Antoinette, Versailles





Labels: Baroque, France, Garden, Interiors, Madame du Barry, Marie Antoinette, paris, Roccoco, travel, Versailles










The Queen's famous portrait
Another new portion of the Petite palace open to visitors is the warming kitchen. This kitchen was used to warm the food brought from the main kitchen. The food was not prepared here as to not let the smell of cooking food permeate the Trianon while Her Majesty was enjoying her day. The executors of the grand refurbishment wanted to show the stark difference between the Noble Floor and the servants areas.




The Garden of the Trianon. "A furious Duc de Croÿ exclaimed in 1780 that 'the large green-house [the most costly and scholarly in Europe] has been replaced by tall mountains, a large rock, and a stream. Never have two acres of land been so totally changed, nor cost so much money.' In order to create her landscape garden, Marie-Antoinette changed everything. Between 1776 and 1783 architect Richard Mique built her a Chinese tilting ring, a Temple of Love, the Rock Pavilion, a theatre, and then the Hamlet. Receptions and nocturnal celebrations followed one after another, restoring to the Petit Trianon the spirit of the festivities that marked the early years of Versailles".
~From the official Versailles website



The view of the Temple of Love from her bedroom window.
There is so much one could write about the Petite Trianon alone, not to mention the other sites related to it. I could spend a week exploring everything! So I will leave you with this, a few morsels of information about this magical place.
Bisou Mon Amis!
Photos via flickr
Labels: 18th century, France, French, Furniture, Garden, History, Interiors, Madame du Barry, Marie Antoinette, paris, Petite Trianon, Roccoco, travel, Versailles