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The largest store in town is the one-stop shop (clothes, gifts, wines, groceries and more) for those with less time to spare.
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You will find four levels of international designer and brand name clothes and accessories for men, women and children, all under one roof. Free parking, too.
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Provence isn’t short of food markets, but this one is special. It’s held in the evening and stall-holders must sell homegrown or raised produce only. Monday to Saturday from 6pm, April to September and Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday from 4:30pm the rest of the year.
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Not one shop but the tiny street where some of Marseille’s leading fashion creators congregate, among them Manon Martin, Zenane and Casablanca.
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For that absolutely fabulous Cannes look, head straight for the Rue d’Antibes and its string of designer boutiques, all breathtakingly expensive and dazzlingly ostentatious.
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This is a farming and fruit-growing family also known for their own delicious nougat. There’s honey to be had here, as well.
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If you want something Provençal to take home, in the way of fabrics, tableware, linen or clothes, here is a good place to start.
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Great, cave-like emporium boasting food from every corner of the globe, from spices of the Indies to Marmite spread.
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Vallauris’s moribund pottery industry was revived when Picasso took an interest in the craft and more than 100 local potters sell their work on its streets in summer.
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Villeneuve Loubet supports a thriving arts scene and is full of artists’ and sculptors’ studios where you can invest in an original work of art by a living artist.
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