
Romy Meehan prepares a cocktail at Bar Lunette. Photo by Hannah Roderick.
Bar Lunette is quickly making a splash in Coolidge Corner.
The new cocktail bar, in a space that had been an optician’s office, has an undeniably retro vibe. The floor is a black-and-white checkered pattern, and vintage paintings hang on the yellow walls. Patrons can doodle or write quotes on one wall covered in brown paper.
“It’s so cute here,” said Jenny Seminack, a 21-year-old Boston University student who was there for the first time on a recent Friday, drinking a strawberry spritz with gin. “I can’t wait to come back.”

Bartenders Mikaela Estes, right, and Romy Meehan at Bar Lunette. Photo by Hannah Roderick.
While there is no shortage of bars in Coolidge Corner, owner Nick Mallia said he wanted to create a unique experience.
“There are lots of options on the table but not a cocktail bar,” said Mallia, who has worked for the neighboring Paris Creperie for over 20 years. “A cocktail bar to go to before a movie. A cocktail bar to go to after the movie. A cocktail bar to go to after the sit-down fancy restaurant.”
Bar Lunette’s menu features French spirits, “Frenchified” classic cocktails and clever pop culture references. Drinks include “Lunette’s French Martini,” which contains vodka, pineapple, mint and blackberry liqueur, and the “Guillo-tini,” a cosmopolitan with a rose and basil foam. The spicy and smoky margarita “Paris Is Burning” references Jennie Livingston’s 1990 documentary. Most cocktails cost $13 to $16.

A bartender serves up “Lost in Translation,” a Midori sour, at Bar Lunette. Photo by Hannah Roderick.
“The drinks are really good and unique for a reasonable price,” said Nicolle Alvarez, 24, a research lab technician at Massachusetts Eye and Ear.
Malia said he hopes by mid-summer to offer a food menu that includes baguette sandwiches, French onion soup, cheeses and more.
Open since mid-May, Bar Lunette already has regulars.
Lauren Smith, 21, a manager at CorePower Yoga who lives in Brookline, said Bar Lunette is a good addition to the community.
“The vibe is great,” Smith said. “We need more fun little bars.”

A “Guillo-tini, left, and “Stardust” at Bar Lunette. Photo by Hannah Roderick.


