What they forget millions of people actually live in London and lots of areas just minutes from Oxford Street are small villages with people living, supermarket shopping not just perusing designer bags in Selfridges.
Bank Holiday Monday Miss Smith met up with Jones for a day in London looking at two separate villages. Starting off in Westbourne Grove , people immediately think of Portabello Market when they see Notting Hill – so after a hearty breakfast in 202 Westbourne Grove the Nicole Farhi cafe – home ware and clothing shop we wandered round. The area was very quiet and most shops either not opening or choosing Sunday opening hours. The whole area had a feel that the locals had left town for the festive season.
All the shops had left Christmas behind and were full on sale with further reductions – giving the shops an appearance of season over; just miss matched stock and large sale tickets.
As a lifestyle store Ralph Lauren ticks every box it oozes luxury without stuffiness, the sales assistant was warm and welcoming the stock was beautifully merchandised with a discreet 30% off. The attention to detail at every level is faultless and the Christmas feel was very much in evidence.

Smith:
I was very tempted to buy copious amounts of very chic après ski wear which is a testament to Mr Lauren and his design team as I hate snow and would never consider ski-ing a holiday. The shop wants to make you want to move in with the lovely room sets, the merchandise so befitting luxury clothing and accessories. The sales assistant was welcoming but discreet and very friendly just setting the right tone.
Jones:
I love the sub-villages of London during the Christmas break, it’s a great opportunity to see who the real retailer’s are, those who shut up shop for the whole season really don’t get the “shop-keeper” business do they??! Westbourne Grove is a tale of two consumer groups merging….there is the high-spending fashionista chic set, catered for by Bamford and friends and then there is the “north London keeping it real” crowd…pretending they only go to WG for the Pubs after Portobello market…yeh right!
I agree with Miss Smith, Ralph has got it right here, the shop was warm and inviting the Sale was discreet and the offer was good. There were some great basic pieces and it was good to see the new Spring lines kept at the back, available, but not front and centre as if we had forgotten it was snowing last week! All Saints was busy and in full Sale, good for them, a lone retailer at that far end of the street, a great example of High Street mainstream being able to merge with the elite without offense.
Space NK was a massive bright beacon on the corner…shame it was empty…sort of like a disco when they put the lights on at the end of an evening and everyone has gone.
There are a few strange adjacencies here that could be made to work better, perhaps with the predicted further hard times ahead in the first quarter some of these units will become available and clever Landlords could improve the mix.
As a footnote we both liked how the Ann Fontaine shop has taken a wing on the side of the Westbourne Gove church – with the large windows and stonework making a feature of each of the mannequins in the window. A great way of taking an unusual space and using it for a retail space.
Sadly we couldn’t enter as the sales assistant was cleaning and told us through the window she wouldn’t open for another twenty minutes!

We then headed over for lunch to Marylebone High Street – minutes from the mayhem of Oxford Street ,Marylebone High Street was in full swing with locals shopping, eating and just window shopping

After a few glasses of red wine in the cosy confines of the Marylebone pub we hit the High Street – we both loved the Aubin and Wills shop. The “older brother/ sister” to Jack Wills. The shop interior is again very much attention to deal – really pursing their theme and all the small anecdotal display and merchandise props. From each of the shops having customised bags to the props looking like they have come from the locker room of a venerable red brick university.
Smith:
The stock is well priced and well made – I loved the home ware as it really takes the feel of the clothing through to the rest of the house. I was very tempted by a bed linen for my spare room.
Jones:
Marylebone HS was a different picture, much more traffic, driven no doubt by the through-route to Oxford St and Waitrose…the shops here were generally making the most of the unexpected footfall. The White Company, who do a great job, if a little predictable now, were in full Sale swing although the staff seemed a little indifferent…just because stock is reduced does not mean reduced service does it??
I like The Marylebone pub, however having no food on was a big mistake, we watched several groups of punters settle on the cosy cushions and then pack themselves off again when the offer was a only a Prawn Baguette…..shame missed opportunities! Never mind it gave us much more space and a decent chance of getting served at the bar quickly…every cloud etc!
I love the Dyptique stores that are popping up all over the place, compact, friendly and focussed….I purchased several gifts from this brand this year and found the staff to be knowledgeable and helpful. I think the positioning of these stores is very good for us blokes, right in front of our face when we walk from the office to the pub…Brook St for example…nice work!
Worth a mention and visit – Daunts bookshop.
Smith:
A must for anyone who loves books and also travel as its area of specialisation- Daunts is a great shop just packed with books but also the fact the book has this tiny mezzanine floor which you climb and feel you’re in a library with the wood panelling and the books all laid out in country order. So hitting the Peruvian trail to just wanting a luxury weekend in Berlin this shop will have a book covering both places.
This was the second busiest shop on the High Street – the first was Waitrose!
Jones:
I mooched about in Daunts while Miss Smith browsed the fashion, I always feel very mature and cultured just by spending time in this brilliant store. I purchased several travel books and a great Rugby history book for my oldest. The selection of titles is fantastic and the feeling you get from the history of the store is worth every penny….I don’t want a Starbucks or Costa in a book shop, I want great books and the knowledge that serious thought has gone into the offer by people who understand their customer and their business. A coffee shop next door maybe…but dirty cups and crumbs spilling off tables near books….don’t get it?!!
Having some of London’s high-spots almost to yourself is worth the trip up in the holiday period if you are clever…and if some of the retailers made a little more effort it could generate a whole new trading opportunity!




