The things i want to study at close eye are the decorative glass shopfronts made around 1900-1940 and nowadays by Lucien Helle
I have studied his website, his locations and tried to make an apointment with him.
Lucien apparently did not speak English so our conversation went on in French.
I introduced my self as a Dutch guy who is very interested in the old craft and asked him if it would be possible to meet eachother and talk glass in his shop in Paris.
Result: "He freaked out and clearly stated that no one is allowed in his shop and especially not other glass fanantics!
The phone was abruptly ended from the paris side....

But as you know me, I can not rest untill I have answers.
I pursued my quest for knowledge and researched for weeks now all there is to know or find about the Parisian glass shopfronts.
In a French book I recently purchased there were a lot of clues: Most of the shopfronts posted on the Lucien Helle website were actualy not made by him but by other studios like Benoit et Fils who worked about 80 years ago.
In the studio everybody had their own speciality: gilding, painting on canvas, woodworking etc.
During my research I noted down every shopname, every streetname and shop number and looked on the google maps streetview to find out if the glass shopfronts are still there.
Some buildings are torn down on other locations the glass is hidden from view by wooden panels (often covered by several different layers of paint and old posters or graffiti).
At this point most likely I know more about the shop facade than the current shop owners.
All the remaining adresses are in my google map for you to look at and visit if you are about to make a trip to Paris.
I will visit allmost all the locations in the end of Oktober and will photograph them.
If you have any questions on certain details you want to know more about, now it is time to ask me, so I can take a closer look at that when I will be there.
Erik