GRASSE • MONACO • VILLEFRANCHE-SUR-MER
There are so many places to choose from along the French Riviera, and figuring out where to go can be a daunting task. You will likely fly into Nice, as that is the French Riviera’s capital, and while it is definitely not a city you want to neglect exploring, you certainly don’t want to confine yourself to it. Nice is a marvelous base for exploring the Riviera, as most nearby towns will be easily accessible through the train there via a day trip. I began and ended my trip there. I took day trips to Grasse, France and the Principality of Monaco. I also spent a couple of nights in Villefranche-sur-Mer and Antibes. I won’t write about Antibes as the day I spent there was overcast, and my friend and I were both ill, so sadly, I didn’t do much there.

Grasse, France
Grasse is a city that has been on my to-do list for about 4-5 years. My love of perfumery was born soon after meeting my good friend Marcelo, a talented artist with whom I share a creative and aesthetic affinity for good books, cooking, and more importantly, a predilection for exquisite tastes. He introduced me to, among other things, the world of niche perfumery. Taught me about top notes and heart notes and base notes. Spent countless hours discussing what smells we liked (we have very different preferences), spraying and smelling different perfumes, eventually even dabbling with perfume making. He casually mentioned Grasse to me one day, that it was the perfume capital of the world, and you could go take a perfumer’s workshop there and create your own scent. I made a mental note and decided on the spot that I would go there at some point. Fast forward, here I am at the Galimard Perfume Factory (pictured above), which is one of the three main perfume houses in Grasse that offers perfume workshops. I chose their workshop because they offer the largest selection of perfume notes to create from, at the best price, so it wasn’t a hard call. The workshop is held about a mile away from the factory and is 53 euros, takes approximately two hours, and at the end you walk away with your very own 100 ml bottle of perfume. Which, by the way, the composition of is recorded in Galimard’s database so that you can re-order your signature scent.

Galimard Factory
The Galimard Factory offers free tours, and also has a small gift shop where you can buy their perfumes, lotions, soaps, and other small curios. When you walk through you’ll see the different copper stills (pictured above) where essential oils are created and the perfumer’s organ (pictured below), where the Nose (perfume expert) composes perfumes. The organ is the desk where scents are arranged in three tiers by type: top, middle/heart, and base notes. In order to be well-balanced, perfumes have all three of these. The top note, as the name belies, is what you will first smell. That is why it is so important to spray on a perfume before purchasing. Wait to see how the perfume smells when it reacts with your skin (smell after about five minutes for top note) and then live in it for a day to see how you smell as the top note fades into the heart note and finally settles into the base note. The base note will be the smell you’re left with and many people buy perfume for love of the top note, not realize that the dry down may not be quite what they signed up for.

Galimard factory
As mentioned before, the perfume workshop is held at a distinct but nearby location (pictured below).


When you walk into the site of the perfume workshop, the lobby (pictured below) will be full of perfumes, soaps, and scented lotions. The gift shop at the factory seems to have pretty much the same selection. Come early and sample the smells before your workshop begins. I would recommend doing it before and not after as your nose will need a break post-workshop. Halfway through the workshop we were shooed away to take a much needed breath of fresh air outside.


Once it is time for your workshop, you will be ushered into the back room, where you will be seated at your very own perfumer’s organ (pictured below).


You are given time with each, the base, heart and top notes, beginning with the base. You figure out your smells and add them to the vial and mix according to the perfume expert, or Nose, who is facilitating the workshop. Each tier is subdivided into families which are color-coded i.e. fruity, floral, chypre etc. Once your perfume is done, you can have it in a complimentary brown bottle, complete with a custom label (name of your choosing), or pay extra for a different bottle. The brown keeps the light out, which is a good thing, and it gives it an apothecary-like feeling so I stuck with it.

Me and le nez (the Nose)
Don’t expect to use your perfume right away. The smells need to properly mix, and the chemical breakdown really takes at least six weeks but you are told you can use it after two. You technically can, but, according to Marcelo, six weeks is the sweet spot. He has more experience making perfume than I do so I defer to him. I also noticed that my perfume did smell very different at the six week mark than the two week mark. I actually didn’t like my perfume at the two week mark and now love it.

Moving on to Monaco. Another country is a thirty minute train ride away, under 10 euros each way? It would be a shame to miss it, so go, go, and go. It is a really easy day trip, and unless you have money to blow, it isn’t worth staying there as accommodation is quite expensive. Budget is expensive in Monaco. It feels like a gated community inside of France. Everything is manicured, and almost pristine in comparison. Well-cared for is the phrase that comes to mind. It is also very hilly, the city feels like it has “levels”. I ascended to the Prince’s Palace, which was more unassuming than I expected.


The square in front of the palace is, like most squares, a public gathering space. Not sure if it’s mainly tourists or locals are mixed, but the height means it also functions as a lookout spot where you can see the entire city from above. Just beyond the square are small little streets, more like alleys (without the dodgy connotations) that you can wander. There are some souvenir shops along the way there as well. On the way up and down to the palace, you will see Port Hercules, which is Monaco’s only deep-water port. The sheer amount of yachts docked there is a testament to the wealth found there.

Some people say it’s overrated but I think you should go to Casino Monte-Carlo. Yes it is a 17 euro entrance fee but it includes the option of either a 10 euro credit to play, or a drink voucher. I actually got lucky for the first time ever, and made about 40+ euro, so I made my money back and then some. Cameras/pictures aren’t allowed inside the casino’s gaming room, so the picture above is from the lobby but the inside is BREATHTAKING. You can just walk in and sit down for awhile and take it all in, it truly is exquisite and a world away from what you would usually think of when the word casino comes to mind.

The last place on the riviera I will discuss is Villefranche-sur-Mer. Picturesque, even quaint, and oh so French in the best of ways. Villefranche is everything you want in a quiet Riviera village.

One of the best, and affordably priced, French restaurants I went to in France was in Villefranche-sur-Mer: La Grignotière.

The daily menu comes in just under 20 euros at 19.50, and includes three courses. Appetizer, entree, and dessert. That’s a pretty sweet deal, and the quality far exceeds the price point. Snapshot of menu below, also…can someone please teach them how to spell octopus?





We also had an amazing time relaxing on the beach there. Pebbled like Nice’s beach, but the pebbles were small and tan instead of grey.


The riviera isn’t overrated, it has been written about and visited throughout time by artists, celebrities etc. for a reason. Just figure out what you want out of your visit and you’ll probably find a town or city there that suits your specific tastes and needs. I did my research and opted out of cities like St. Tropez and Cannes because although they’re well known, the consensus on Cannes is it offers little more than a film festival and St. Tropez is more expensive, and less beautiful than some of its less-known counterparts. A bit inland to Grasse for perfume, Monaco for a taste of royalty and luxury, and Villefranche for the understated charm of a French Riviera seaside village.

À bientôt!








































































































































