Crafty Dining in Potts Point
We are proud to announce our fourth Crafty Dining experience as part of Good Food Month and Sydney Craft Week. Showcasing the rich variety of vintage & contemporary fashion, design and dining options on the elegant streets of Potts Point.
Cafe de la Fontaine
Café de la Fontaine is a French Café, Creperie, Patisserie, French Ice creamery and antique store located right in the heart of Potts Point, chosen for its vibrancy and long history as a destination of chic and elegance.
The café has an entirely authentic Parisian interior decorated with white orchids, hanging antique glass & brass lanterns, bejeweled chandeliers and soft Dior grey wood paneling.
An experience that transports you directly to France with freshly-made eclairs that sell-out on a daily basis alongside authentic crepes, galettes and baguettes. If your lucky on a weekend morning a singer will be crooning French classic in the corner next to the lite-up wire Eiffel tower.
There is also an ice cream stand that is proving very popular with la enfants in the area.
On the menu for Crafty Dining:
Rose, lychee & raspberry Macaroon
Wine match:
La Mascaronne & Chateau Du Montfrin, Provence - both Rose
Check-out our menu and images from Thursday night's very enjoyable Crafty Dining Potts Point event as part of the opening week of Sydney Craft Week and Good Food Month. We’ll let the photos from the fabulous Julie Samerski do the talking.
Café de la Fontaine is a French Café, Creperie, Patisserie, French Ice creamery and antique store located right in the heart of Potts Point, chosen for its vibrancy and long history as a destination of chic and elegance.
Kings Cross Distillery is located at the intersection where the once mischievous glittering half mile of Darlinghurst Road, meet the increasingly glamorous Macleay Street of Potts Point. The stripped-back brick space was formerly a speakeasy and gambling den in the 1960s, before becoming an adult bookstore named Private Book Shop and later Ecstasy Adult Bookstore in the late 1970’s. Upstairs there was the usual, shadowy, pleasures of a by-gone era befitting of the postcode 2011.
Booty Shoes delivers stylish, seasonal collections of women’s shoes sourced from the finest international shoemakers. Their passion for shoes enables them to bring their clientele a variety of beautiful brands, styles, colours and textures each year, cleverly curated so that their customers have the key items they need for each season.
Mon Petit Chou Boutique is an established ladies fashion boutique, who recently made the move further up Macleay Street to a new and bigger location opposite the famous landmark the El Alamein Fountain. Owner/operator Robyn Mann sources most of her brands on regular trips to Europe, specialising in designer clothing.
Purveyors of fresh, made-to-order sandwiches as well as hearty salads, homely sweets and delicious coffee. Small’s Deli have a passion for quality ingredients and try to keep things as local and sustainable as possible. Designer Emily Van Loon and chef Ben Shemesh (ex-Dear Sainte Eloise) were on a summer holiday in Bologna, Italy, when they first came up with the idea of running their own sandwich shop.