Bode Celebrates Its Paris Boutique Opening With a Family Affair—and Fly Fishing

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At the party, guests looked into the sky toward the old fly fishing baskets decorating the shelves and decorated the shelves for hand-carved bamboo fishing rods from the 1930s. “The store’s identity is very deep into Parisian identity, but it was spent in the United States and inspired by the United States,” Emily explained. This shows a respect for the legacy leisure movement of French and American interests. When Bode Aujlas bought a home in northwest Connecticut in 2021, they delved into the research of former owners and developed an interest in fishing – the fishing vest was the first fishing ties of Emily and Emily and Aaron, hanging in one of the front windows of eight stores facing the Department of Culture.

They visited over 100 spaces, but the Royal Royal neighborhood was a two-decade frequented by Emily for twenty years, long ago, in her fictional name played by Lily Collins – a two-Win selfie in the area. An antique postcard store in the neighboring Galerie Vivienne has been a favorite since college, and recently, since her toddler daughter was a regular at the Si Tu Veux Toy Store – not to mention the chic Brasserie Chez Georges.

Emily has close ties to France and Paris. Not only did she show it on the Paris calendar, she also found many of her first antiques and antique textiles at the French flea market. From Nice and Saint Paul de Vence to the Vanve and Clignancourt flea markets in Paris, she and her team will return home from the trip with twelve suitcases filled with fabric. French craftsmen painted the walls of the shop on the artificial Faux Bois, and the stained glass doors belonging to the Belgian cathedral.

Images may contain animal fish life trout and human

Photo: bode

During the crowded store opening, Aaron spent some time visiting his favorite store elements from his kind-hearted guys, including marigold wax cotton, a much-loved fabric used to jackets lined up on windows and ceiling panels. In a window, there is a 1930s doll house purchased from a 96-year-old woman. Outside, two smartly dressed young men stopped in front of the windows of the glowing shop:mais oui, c’est le bo-day! “The store’s reputation has been before this, but it will appeal to all audiences of locals to visitors.

“I like the history of retail, even like a person in society, is the history of you buying souvenirs and souvenir culture,” Emily explained. For Paris boutiques, these souvenirs will include cotton underwear with Eiffel Tower decals and tie. She continued: “Especially in the United States, this idea has affected me for a long time. Even as a kid, I have always tended to do things at certain moments.” Well, the Paris moment of Bord has arrived.

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