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Shopping Listing
Shopping (Overview)Shop hours are typically Italian in that many close for the pranza (13 or 4 PM). But in the high season many not only remain open all day, but also on Sundaythe big day for Italian families to visit.There are more than enough shops selling antiques and finely crafted goods around San Marco. Right on the piazza is the jeweler Nardi as well as the most respected lace shop Jesurum, and the more famous glass manufacturers. Through the west arcade you come to the Larga XXII Marzo with antiques at Cassini, fine silk scarves, and the exquisite Fortuny silks of Venetia Studium. Continuing west, the lanes take you past designer boutiques with names like Missoni and Krizia, and art and antique galleries, until you exit in the campo Morosini with the witty display windows and clothing of Fiorella. On the opposite side of the canal, art galleries cluster around the Guggenheim Museum in Dorsoduro; here, too, are the interesting glass designs of Cenedese (near the Salute Church). Past the Accademia, the contemporary furniture of Scarpa catches your eye. Between Campo San Barnaba and the Frari Church, there are intriguing shops filled with buttons, old door knobs, and brass fittings on Botteghe and Cappeller streets. Also, this is where you should be for Venetian masks. With the revival of Carnevale, artisans once again make the traditional white masks called bauta. You can find harlequin faces and sun gods and moon goddesses all year round; they can be made of leather, gilded wood, and carta pesta, a kind of papier mâché. |