Can't travel, no problem: You can still pretend you're in Paris tonight
There are countless ways to invite Paris into your home. All you need is a little creativity. And perhaps a glass of champagne.

Empty embankment on the Seine during a Covid-19 lockdown in Paris on April. (Photo: The New York Times/Dmitry Kostyukov)
While your travel plans may be on hold, you can pretend youâre somewhere new for the night. Paris is a collective fantasy, from the booksellers along the Seine to the grey zinc rooftops of its cream stone buildings. For ages, the city has been the place to turn for lessons in lâart de vivre, the art of living, influencing fashion, philosophy, culture, art and gastronomy around the world. Today, pop-up shops and hipster brunch spots are as much a part of Paris as street lamps and Gothic architecture. But the romance of the city is timeless.
When visiting, I like to be a flaneur, a stroller with no destination, winding through the medieval streets of the Marais, pausing to hear a jazz band, dipping into the Musse Carnavalet, shopping in SoPi (South Pigalle), popping into Eric Kayser for croissants, sitting in the sun on a green metal chair in the Luxembourg Gardens. Evening might bring a ballet at the Palais Garnier, or a sidewalk bistro table from which to watch the crowds go by.
These days, my apartment is the bistro, boutique and boulangerie. Yet, it turns out, this too has a certain romance.
These days, my apartment is the bistro, boutique and boulangerie. Yet, it turns out, this too has a certain romance. There are countless ways to invite Paris into your home. All you need is a little creativity. And perhaps a glass of champagne.
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MAKE YOUR KITCHEN SMELL LIKE A BOULANGERIE

Eric Kayser, the artisan baker who opened the first of his shops in Paris, teaches you how to make classic French breads, including âla baguetteâ, on his lively Maison Kayser Academy YouTube channel. Game for a full meal? Julia Childâs television episodes, including some shows with Jacques Pepin, are on PBS online (youâll also find her on YouTube). A New York Times Cooking editorsâ collection, French at Home, tempts with dozens of recipes. And for dessert? Cookbook author and Times columnist Dorie Greenspan said in France âdessert might be cheese, fruit or maybe the sturdy gateau that almost all French cooks know how to bake: Yogurt Cake. I make it often and always think of Paris and my friends when I do.â
TURN YOUR COUCH INTO A BOX SEAT AT THE BALLET

Dim the lights and nestle into your sofa like itâs a box at the Palais Garnier to watch ballet and opera clips on the Opera National de Parisâ YouTube channel. When you need an intermission, do as the audiences do and get a glass of champagne. The Timesâ wine critic, Eric Asimov, offer recommendations online.
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MUSEUM HOP FROM YOUR LAPTOP
Take your time contemplating masterpieces and monuments through virtual tours. Get up close to paintings by Renoir and van Gogh at the Musee dâOrsay. Zoom in on the brush strokes of Monetâs Water Lilies in the Musee de lâOrangerie. Discover masks from places such as Central Africa and Papua-New Guinea at the Musee du Quai Branly â Jacques Chirac. Explore Sacre-Coeur. And relish vertiginous views from the Eiffel Tower.
FILL YOUR HOME WITH FRENCH JAZZ

Begin with guitar legend Django Reinhardt, a founder of the Quintette du Hot Club de France in Paris, and his bluesy Nuages. Sip a coffee as Eartha Kitt tells you Câest Si Bon (be sure to cue up Dean Martinâs breezy rendition of the song too). And kick up your heels (or fuzzy slippers as the case may be) as Nat King Cole woos you with the French version of L-O-V-E.
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KNOT A SCARF LIKE YOU WERE BORN IN PARIS

Parisian chic may be as close as your coat closet. âWhatever you do, do not channel Emily in Paris, with its kooky combinations of hats, boots and hot pink jackets,â advises Vanessa Friedman, the Timesâ chief fashion critic, referring to the Netflix series. âCast your mind back, rather, to Jean Seberg and âAu Bout de Souffleâ in her striped mariniere and capris. To look French, you must not look as if you are trying too hard. On the other hand, you donât want to look sloppy. That scarf just happened to fall artfully around your neck; that trench simply slings naturally around your shoulders. The word you are going for is insouciance.â Learn to knot scarves like you were born in Paris with this indispensable video from Cosmopolitan France. Naturally, Hermes has pointers too.
Whatever you do, do not channel Emily in Paris, with its kooky combinations of hats, boots and hot pink jackets.
REDECORATE, PARISIAN-STYLE
Ready to spruce up your home for autumn? Spark ideas with the Instagram accounts of Elle Decoration France, Marie Claire Maison, and Cote Maison, even boutique hotels like Le Narcisse Blanc Hotel & Spa. Elle Decor has some âFrench Interior Design Rules to Live Byâ in which the Paris-based designer Jean-Louis Deniot explains: âThe whole idea is anti-decor. To make it look like the owner did it himself â to make it look natural. Which is, of course, very French.â
CURL UP WITH A FRENCH AUTHOR

Download classic novels and poems by Victor Hugo, Emile Zola, George Sand and Honore de Balzac for free from places like Apple Books. If you havenât already, discover the works of one of Franceâs most respected writers, Annie Ernaux. Amble around Paris with Edmund White in The Flaneur. Delve into the cityâs dark underbelly with Luc Santeâs The Other Paris. Or escape into another world like the French do, with a comic book or graphic novel such as the long-running Asterix series about Gauls resisting Roman occupation, which has a new publisher in the United States and new Americanized translations.
BE A FLANEUR
Never mind that your sidewalk doesnât lead to the Seine. Being a flaneur is not about being in Paris but rather, being of the place youâre in â using your senses to savour sounds, scents and colours right where you are. So tie on a scarf, and go for a socially distanced stroll.
By Stephanie Rosenbloom © The New York TimesÂ