Outerwear France Beginning of September
#1
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Outerwear France Beginning of September
Planning a extended trip to France and will be in Paris for the first 2 weeks of September.
What type of jacket is needed. I'll have a lightweight rain jacket for sightseeing but may need a nice coat for evenings. Can anyone recommend something nice, not too heavy. I'm thinking of a lightweight Trench Coat.
What type of jacket is needed. I'll have a lightweight rain jacket for sightseeing but may need a nice coat for evenings. Can anyone recommend something nice, not too heavy. I'm thinking of a lightweight Trench Coat.
#5
Join Date: Oct 2003
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Doubt you will need a coat unless the weather is very unseasonable or you are used to living in the tropics. I would think a light raincoat is the absolute most you wold need - and very probably not that.
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I've been there several times at that time, I just have a lightweight coat I may wear at night. It's hip-length, just a quilted thing (hard to explain, a short thinner raincoat may be fine) that gives a little warmth but it's not much. It can be cool at night or first thing in the morning, but layering should work for that (sweater, long-sleeve T, etc.).
If you have one of those packable ultra-lightweight down jackets, you could take that. I have a beige one without a hood that can go with anything, including nice pants and skirts.
If you have one of those packable ultra-lightweight down jackets, you could take that. I have a beige one without a hood that can go with anything, including nice pants and skirts.
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#9
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I think any sort of down anything or line anything is definitely overkill. My experience in Paris is that in early Sept you may get 60's at night - so a thin sweater or wrap. Granted you can get a couple of days of unusual weather - but you're still taking about summer.
When there in mid November I took a leather jacket (unlined but not a blazer and that was plenty at night and too warm for during the day - for that I used a lightweight rain jacket - the kind that folds up into a little pouch.
Caveat: I am not from a very warm climate. I know people used to heat fee the cold more - we had a niece visit from FL and she wanted us to turn the heat on when the temp hit 70 - and everyone else was sitting around in tee shirts. We had to explain in NYC you don't get heat until much later in the year - and they only heat the indoors to 55 at night - and 68 during the day - not 75 the whole time.
When there in mid November I took a leather jacket (unlined but not a blazer and that was plenty at night and too warm for during the day - for that I used a lightweight rain jacket - the kind that folds up into a little pouch.
Caveat: I am not from a very warm climate. I know people used to heat fee the cold more - we had a niece visit from FL and she wanted us to turn the heat on when the temp hit 70 - and everyone else was sitting around in tee shirts. We had to explain in NYC you don't get heat until much later in the year - and they only heat the indoors to 55 at night - and 68 during the day - not 75 the whole time.
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I've needed more than a cardigan and rain jacket in summer in Paris, so that doesn't mean much. It isn't the same in September as July due to shorter hours. It just often does have a tinge of autumn in the air, regardless of temps. Depends when you want something more than a rain jacket (which to me is extremely thin and has no lining and provides no warmth). If you have a rain jacket that is warmer, then it probably would work. It just depends how light you want to pack or how prepared for any weather (and how much you typically want to wear in such weather).
Averages are that in September, it can often be down to the low 50s at night and in the early morning. That is cool to me. IN fact, I was just in Mexico City where the temps were similar to Paris in September, and lots of people were wearing more than a rain jacket in the evenings.
September in Paris is not the same as July.
Averages are that in September, it can often be down to the low 50s at night and in the early morning. That is cool to me. IN fact, I was just in Mexico City where the temps were similar to Paris in September, and lots of people were wearing more than a rain jacket in the evenings.
September in Paris is not the same as July.
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Well it does depend on how much you feel the cold. I don;t wear anything more than a thin jacket (over a cardigan if necessary) until the temps go into the 40s. But if you're too cold at 75 - then you need to be prepared.
#17
Okay, this is meaningless in terms of what tourists think about the temperature, but in city-operated subsidized apartments, the heat does not go on until after October 30th unless there has been an exceptional cold snap.
But it should at least give you an idea that September (and even October) are not considered to be cold months.
But it should at least give you an idea that September (and even October) are not considered to be cold months.
#18
kerouac, you are right of course. The fact is that none of us, tourist or local, can know what the weather is going to be like on a particular day in a particular place. We can rule certain things out - snow in Paris in July, for example - but otherwise virtually anything is possible.
Which is why layers are the way to go on almost any trip at home or abroad.
Which is why layers are the way to go on almost any trip at home or abroad.