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Famed Paris boutique Colette folds its wings and bids au revoir

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I must admit, I didn’t get much shut-eye last night,” confessed Sarah Andelman, who was on duty first thing Wednesday, helping prepare for Colette‘s final day. Her uniform: an Au Revoir Colette hooded sweatshirt, Noir Kei Ninomiya skirt and printed Moncler puffer jacket.

A gaggle of young hipsters formed an orderly queue at around 10.30 a.m., half an hour before opening time, as staff ferried boxes of stock and window dressers put the final touches on the store’s last ever window display — a quiet and enchanting affair featuring 25 species of butterfly fluttering in a mesh cage. The installation nods to the store’s first ever window display 20 years ago, which featured blue butterflies.

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Colette will cease operations at 7 p.m. tonight, while the e-shop will shutter at 11:59 p.m., although a lot of the online stock has sold out. The retailer on Dec. 19 sent out a final newsletter, titled Au Revoir. It thanked customers and partners, and invited people to share messages on the site from midnight Wednesday. Colette also plans to upload video messages filmed by Hugues Lawson-Body for a documentary he is making about the store. As reported, Saint Laurent is in negotiations to take over the corner site.

In the countdown to the store’s opening Wednesday, Colette’s community manager Sandrine Tonye paced the line, phone aloft, getting the crowd to chant, “Colette c’est chouette” (or “Colette is great”). “I’ve been here 10 years, Colette is my family,” she told WWD, welling up, adding that the team is planning a goodbye party Wednesday night, though she couldn’t disclose details.

First in line was Canadian Baudouin Maurel, 18. “I’m used to queuing for sneaker sales, so I knew there would be a lot of people. It’s the most iconic store in Paris for streetwear,” he said, adding that one of the salesmen had told him they would be bringing out a lot of fresh stock today.

Behind him, Guillaume Wilhelm Leteurtrois, 29, said he was hoping to find something “symbolic” for his girlfriend’s birthday present. He was surprised at how late people started lining up. “I was just sending a message to my friend saying it’s the first time in my life I’m at the front of the queue,” he marveled.

The doors swung open and the crowd rushed to the T-shirt racks as vendors calmly fielded questions. Michael Baratoux, who has been working at the store for the past five years, said the T-shirts with the Colette mascot were the first to go, followed by the sweatshirts marked with slogans like Forever Colette and Paris Colette Club. “I’m sad but also excited as it’s such a special day, and it’s the beginning of a new chapter in my life,” he said.

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“Life continues,” echoed a beaming Andelman, handing out chocolates to customers as they exited the store. Of the special window display, she said: “It’s wings, this idea of flying off.”

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