The markets are popular on the weekends selling variety of fashion, lifestyle and bizarre goods. Stables Market also has growing antique and furniture trade.
A myth held by the rest of London, is that Camden's only attraction is the large weekend market and that otherwise it only attracts single-parent teenagers, students and the homeless. In reality, the rich, the poor, the could be either and would be neither, are all co-existing in an area that stretches from the white mansions of Regent's Park to the big estates on the way to Euston.
Furthermore, the market is the least enticement for locals, now that 100,000 bargain hunters descend upon it each weekend. However for tourists and those that enjoy crowds there are some real fashion bargains to be had, particularly with shoes, leather goods and generally bohemian gear.
It is true that nestled round the back of the High Street is London's largest doss-house which serves up soup, clothes and beds for the homeless daily and yes Camden needs two unemployment offices to manage the copius claims. But it also has Jongleurs Comedy Store - which is as professional, slick and expensive as the West End sister, the famous Jazz Cafe on Parkway, the cozy French Cafe down Delancey Street that has a stream of rich and famous dropped off and picked up at its entrance, and Compendium, renowned as the best alternative bookshop in London.
To see :
Colorful shops on Camden High Street
Amy Winehouse Statue at Camden Market
Street Art & Creative Artwork ( Ferdinand Estate : around the corner from Chalk Farm tube station ,
Harmood Street , Hartland Road , Hawley Street , Castlehaven Road , Hawley Road , Kentish Town Road, Greenland Place , Bayham Street , Miller Street ..)
Regent’s Canal
Primrose Hill is one of the chicest places in London and home to many celebrities, including Hollywood actors,
supermodels, and politicians.