Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Does anyone else find the lady in there unhelpful and rude? She didn't want to measure my daughters' feet and every time we picked up a shoe she was behind us putting it back perfectly. She was not keen to look for our size and so we tried on a few shoes and I just couldn't bring myself to buy any because she made us feel so unwelcome.


Anyone else experienced the same?

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/54618-jolie-a-pied-rude-and-unhelpful/
Share on other sites

I went once, and never again. We got a very perfunctory measure of my son's feet, then we were simply waved towards the shelves of shoes. Then when we did attempt to try things on, we got the 'hovering but no help' experience too.


I was on the verge of complaining to the owners but then I couldn't be bothered as I wasn't going to go back anyway.


John Lewis early on a Saturday morning is the best in my view. I've tried EM a few times but she never seems to have much stock and I got tired to going back to hear every time "oh new stock is coming, hopefully soon...."

There seems to be a split personality: I've had very nice, friendly and helpful service for myself and my son on some occasions, on other (regardless of with or without child) occasions it was more like I was interrupting something more interesting and shouldn't be cluttering up the shop...
Go to Emmanuelle Marshall in Forest Hill/Sydenham. Dorothy is fab with the children. She will happily measure your children's feet and will distract the unwilling ones very well. Then she will find all the shoes she has in your child's size. She will find the ones that fit correctly and then let you choose, or not, anything you/your child likes. I can not recommend her highly enough. (My daughter was a nightmare with having her feet measured when little and vomited in shops because she would get in such a tiz about it - Dorothy changed all that). The shoes are reasonably priced too.
Another vote for Dorothy (Emmanuelle Marshall). If there is a certain shoe or colour that you don't want to buy, she will not bring it out and save you the ensuing argument over purchasing glittery shoes (if not wanted!). Very reasonably priced and great quality.
Gently Elephant in Brockley are absolutely delightful - the staff are all charming, helpful and will work with you on budget or colour preferences and they have lovely shoes and also books, clothes and gifts. One of my favourite shops in all of London.

I find the people in that shop very unfriendly and particularly useless when it comes to children's shoes and measuring their feet! I asked about soft first walkers and was directed towards proper toddler shoes. Needless to say we didn't try on anything in there.

I too can recommend EM and gently elephant. Both know how to measure little feet and make sensible shoe recommendations.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Oh yes, it could have been about there, I can't remember exactly. At one point there seemed to be a load of pizza places opening on NCR. I vaguely remember the one we used to use was put out of business by another one which opened.
    • That Neal Street veggie cafe was great. Food For Thought ❤️
    • Hi Dogkennelhillbilly, You won't be aware that i proposed infill sites for housing in East Dulwich - the garages on Bassano Street and Henslowe that respectively became 1-4 Dill Terrace family houses and the 78, 80, 80A Henslowe Street family houses. These were council owned garages and it was frustrating how slow the council was to go from my idea to completion (roughly eight years). East Dulwich has some other vacant WW2 bomb sites I'm guessing that the private land owners have been sitting on.Owe for a land tax for vacant land.  WRT to the builders yard by East dulwich station. Southwark Council has an agreed policy the area should remain suburban 2/3 storeys maximum. But the approved scheme is 9 storeys of student accommodation. Very hard to put this genie back in the bottle. The council has recently publicly stated lower ratios of social housing will be required. I will be amazed if the developer doesn't submit another application now they have the 9 storeys approved but with significantly less social housing. The less social housing the higher the land values. The higher the land values the less social housing viability reports state are possible.  If we really want to increase home supply - Southwark have over 6,000 empty homes. Vancouver charges a low % of the value of empty homes and rapidly eased this problem. Parts of Wales have introduced under Article 4 planning permission is required for second homes seeing within 12 months a dramatic decrease in property prices. Southwark Council have Article 4 requirements - why not add this one? It takes National political will to solve this AND regional and local authorities such as the second home council tax premium and these being used promptly. 
    • https://www.letslinkuk.net/ I'm interested to know why the OP didn't find this sort of scheme to work, as I would have thought it was much harder to find someone to do a direct exchange with? Does anybody else have experience of a scheme like this? Happy to be persuaded! 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...