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  2. Joseph Dufour et Cie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Dufour_et_Cie

    It was the largest panoramic wallpaper of its time, and marked the burgeoning of a French industry in panoramic wallpapers. Dufour realized almost immediate success from the sale of these papers and enjoyed a lively trade with America. Like most of eighteenth century wallpapers, the panorama was designed to be hung above a dado.

  3. Zuber & Cie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zuber_&_Cie

    Zuber & Cie (officially Manufacture Papiers Peints Zuber et Cie) is a French company that is primarily known for painted wallpaper and fabrics.Zuber claims to be the last factory in the world to produce woodblock-printed wallpapers and furnishing fabrics with a history dating back to 1797.

  4. Hotel Arbez - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hotel_Arbez

    Hoping to take advantage of the new cross-border traffic, he opened a grocery store in the Swiss portion of the building and a bar in the French section. [5] By 1921, Ponthus's heirs had fallen on hard times, and the building was sold to Jules-Jean Arbez, who remodeled it and reopened it as a hotel.

  5. The Grand Teddy tea-rooms paintings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Grand_Teddy_tea-rooms...

    Nearly five feet high and over eleven-and-a-half feet wide, [5] Le Grand Teddy was accompanied by two smaller ovals, identified in the painter's notes as The Cafe and The Oysters. Standing four feet high [ 6 ] in portrait orientation, neither appeared in the Vuillard catalogue raisonné when the paintings were acquired as a pair by art dealer ...

  6. Les Deux Magots - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Les_Deux_Magots

    Les Deux Magots (French pronunciation: [le dø maɡo]) is a famous café and restaurant situated at 6, Place Saint-Germain-des-Prés in Paris' 6th arrondissement, France. [1] It once had a reputation as the rendezvous of the literary and intellectual elite of the city. It is now a popular tourist destination.

  7. Parisian café - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parisian_café

    Following the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars, billiard rooms were added to some famous 18th-century cafés in Paris and other cities. [10] According to Louis-Sébastien Mercier, there were some six or seven hundred cafés in Paris before the Revolution; they were "the ordinary refuge of the idler and the shelter of the indigent". He ...