Engagement Ring in French Southern.
By Aamir mannan.
New Orleans is like no other city in the United States. Founded in 1718 as a French colony, New Orleans passed from French hands to Spanish hands until it was finally purchased by the United States in 1803. Now a city pulsating with music and energy, New Orleans, born of French, Spanish and Caribbean influences, has a refreshingly foreign feel. Most tourists are struck by the spectacular diversity of the city. It is a true hodgepodge of cultures, ethnicities and pastimes. The charming European architecture of the French quarter is off-set by the city's spicy Cajun cuisine, bars with no closing hour and strange not-quite southern accents. Famed for its music and cuisine, "The Big Easy" abounds with a smorgasbord of incomparable restaurants, offerings dishes you can't find anywhere else on the continent, plus plenty lots of jazz and music venues where you can soak in the city's singular ambiance. New Orleans's vivacity peaks at the annual Mardi Gras and Jazz Festivals, which draw thousands to the city to let loose.
New Orleans' best shopping options are scattered across three distinct districts: the French Quarter, The Uptown/Garden District and The Downtown/Central Business District. The French Quarter has a funky eclectic vibe where you'll find jewelry by local designers, imported pieces, and fine crafts work. Tourists also flock to Royal Street for diamond and fine jewelry stores as well as chic fashion boutiques. Magazine Street, one of the pearls of the Uptown/ Garden District is a six-mile stretch of fashionable boutiques and a prime destination for valuable antique jewelry, special handcrafted necklaces and pendants and designer jewelry. Oak Street is the city's old Main Street, with its fair share of jewelry shops. On Poydras Street and Canal Street in the Downtown/Central Business District you'll find the most reputable jewelers who showcase diamond engagement rings, wedding rings and loose diamonds.
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