Lancome Day Two

When I agreed to participate in this Lancome affair, it was all very secretive, but there were two things I knew: 

1.  I knew there would be an opportunity to “interact” with a brand spokesperson.

2.  I also heard we would be eating at Le George which was enough for me.  I called up my mother and said, “I’m going to eat where Kate Hudson goes in Le Divoooorce!”  When she first meets her lover for lunch it is at Le George with her SO CAYUTE Katie Holmes bob.  This movie makes my brain turn into a marshmallow peep and start oozing out my ears.  I especially like the part where Isabelle goes shopping for lingerie with her bad French, and they ask her what size she is, and she opens her trench and the saleswomen start laughing.  “Ah oui!  Petit!  Petit!”  Oh Isabelle, would I could hold you in my arms at that moment.

So we bloggers show up at Le George, which is a restaurant on top of the Centre Pomidou.  (The German girls from Les Mads told me they recognized it from their French textbook, which is so funny.  I think every French textbook has a picture of this museum; it's the one with all the pipes on the outside, in Lego colors).  The view of the city from the top floor is heartbreaking.  Sometimes people email me about France, people who haven’t had the best encounters with French people.  And I show them exhibit A of why the French are allowed to be a leetle snobby.

Img_4860

And then it was time for lunch!

Img_4865

Img_4879

I sat with Edouard from Paris Lancome, Elizabeth from New York's Lancome office, and Ann from Blogdorf Goodman.  We somehow got into a discussion about the improper use of English words in the French language.  One of the American girls mentioned receiving something in the mail, and I had to clarify for Edouard that it was “la poste,” because the French, if they receive something “par mail,” that means, BY EMAIL.  They’re funky like that.

This got me started on all of the other English words that the French use wrong.  I limited the discussion to words that end in “ing,” because the French love them some “ing” when they’re getting ready to misappropriate:

Continue reading "Lancome Day Two" »

Lancome, Day One

I am no longer able to step into the Hotel Costes without thinking of David Rakoff.  He came to Paris with an American magazine to write about the Couture shows, which he recounts in Don’t Get Too Comfortable.  He never mentions the name of the hotel he stays at, but it is so clearly the Costes.  His driver warns him on the way there, “The people at this hotel are very beautiful, so if you want something, you must ask twice.”  When he arrives in the dark lobby, he describes the beautiful guests draped “bonelessly” over the furniture, an observation he follows with, “Toad-like, I hopped over to reception.” 

If you’re wondering what you see when you first walk in, this is a picture I took from the reception area, looking behind me.

Img_5036

The man checking in before me--early 30’s, handsome, cool sneakers-- calmly gets his room assignment.  And then in the accent of an American who has spent a lot of time abroad, with the slight upward lilt at the end, he asks, “Did a package arrive for me?”  There are packages at the end of the table; one is indeed his.  He tucks it elegantly into his leather manbag, and pads away with the receptionist to find his room.  I imagine in that moment that there has never been a day in his life when things have not gone smoothly for him: packages are always there; his room is always ready; his manbag never breaks its handle.

Toad-like, I check in. 

When I’m shown to room 307 (overlooking the courtyard, which is the center of social activity), a bag of Lancome products sits on the bed.  It’s a pretty sweet moment.  I flop on the bed and squeal a little-- Julia Roberts alone in the fancy hotel after Richard Gere leaves.  As many of you probably know, there is a pervasive scent in the Costes of seeds of coriander, musk, juniper, and lavender-- on sale, of course, in various candle and perfume incarnations downstairs, and also down the street at Colette.  Surprise! 

Next there is what we Americans would call a “Meet ‘n greet” in a little gem of a cushioned room in the far back of the hotel. I chat with Michel Campan who is VP of Interactive Marketing at Lancome and as it turns out, a fellow Bellevilloise—he lives a block away from me.

I meet Julie of Bloc-Mode, and when we’re filling out some legal waiver we notice that our birthdays are a few days apart, same year. “Two Taurus’s into fashion,” I say.  “C’est normal qu’on est des materialistes alors,” Julie says laughing. I like the idea that my obsession wtih nice fabric might be in the stars rather than some snobbish side of my nature.   

We go to Cafe de L’Homme for Lunch, just next to the Musee de L'Homme, where Stella McCartney has her ready-to-wear shows. 

Edouard de la Taille from Lancome has an iPhone.  We are amused.

Img_4789

Edouard and Garance

I really enjoy talking to Garance.  Her blog has taken off in a huge way and I think it’s very good.  Garance I met at the Hyeres fashion festival last April and see each other outside the shows where she shoots for her blog, but we had a lot of fun getting to know each other better over these two days.

There are sightseeing activities planned for the afternoon, but I have to return to my room to work on a story I’m copyediting for a freelance job.  A bowl of red cherries arrives unexpectedly at around 4pm.  I email various friends to tell them that I’m at the Costes, and about the surprise cherries, and to invite them over for a drink (which never ends up happening because there’s just no time). My friend Grandin, excited for me (which is what you want in a friend), emails right back: “Hollah for someone else’s dollah!”

And then it’s a cocktail downstairs in the hotel, and off to Maison Blanche.  Now, all I really knew about the Maison Blanche was that it was fashionable, and that the French girl I used to intern with at a magazine in Paris would go there every Friday night with her “Meester Beeg.”  There is something kind of Sex and the City about it.  All sleek and glossy open white space, it feels un-Parisian in a way.  Until you see the view.

Continue reading "Lancome, Day One" »