Some Sunday Morning

Stroll From London Hotels Through The East End
London is such a multicultural city that you’ll find London Hotels in the East differ from those in the West . While Central London is crammed full of tourist attractions and theatres, Londoners who’ve seen it all before tend to head to the East End :
Morning
On a Sunday morning start with taking a visit to Spitalfields Market. Sunday is the busiest day for traders and the covered market is crammed full of stalls offering the latest in food and fashion. While the funky headwear from Chapeau Claudette has featured in Vogue Magazine, the hand-painted coats sold on a stall here have featured on none other than Carrie Bradshaw herself in season six of Sex and the City.
Lunch
You’ll find numerous food stalls inside Spitalfields Market serving everything from Thai to Taiwanese; a lunch box shouldn’t cost you more than £5 and there’s ample seating outside the market.
Afternoon
Like the majority of London Hotels most of London’s tourist attractions are in the West, but the East End still has many attractions worth exploring. Turn back the clocks at 18 Folgate Street and visit Dennis Severs’ House, originally created as art installation, the house is more of an 18th century time capsule. The house is a living time-capsule with everything kept exactly as it would have been in the 18th century from the half eaten plates of food to the rooms lit by candlelight.
Dinner
Don’t return back to your London Hotels without visiting Brick Lane . The street is known as Banglatown because of the number of Bangladeshi restaurants and shops in the area. You’ll be spoiled for choice when searching for a curry house, but ignore all the curry touts on the doors and head to Sweet and Spicy. The entrance to this canteen style restaurant may look slightly unassuming, but the place is so authentic that you’ll find the locals won’t eat anywhere else, add to that the fact that the prices are extremely cheap and you’ve found yourself a real bargain.
Clint Walker Some Sunday Morning