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Wander Through These 27 Romantic French-Style Home Gardens
French gardens are renowned for their beauty and sophistication, extending beyond the iconic grandeur of Versailles to encompass a more relaxed yet structured aesthetic in countryside homes. Traditionally, French garden design emphasizes a seamless connection between the interior and exterior of a home, positioning the residence as the central element. This approach often features symmetrical gravel paths, meticulously trimmed boxwoods, and historic planters, all intentionally arranged perpendicular to the main dwelling to guide visitors through distinct outdoor 'rooms.' While modern French gardens maintain elements like defined borders, they incorporate less structured flower beds and more vibrant bursts of color, creating picturesque arbors, cypress-lined pathways, and abundant linden trees.
This article showcases 27 diverse French-style home gardens from various locations, illustrating how their designers have infused them with Gallic flair. For instance, artist Thomas Boog's weekend home in France's Loire Valley features potted olive trees and fragrant Iceberg roses, creating an ideal setting for al fresco dining. In Romilly-sur-Aigre, Hubert de Givenchy and Bunny Mellon meticulously designed Le Jonchet's grounds to balance formality with wild moments, a legacy continued by Zoë de Givenchy with her dahlia-filled tables. In Connecticut, designer Bunny Williams's expansive garden demonstrates her global landscape expertise, with boxwood parterres and perennial borders in a sunken garden.
Further examples include preservationist Ben Lenhardt's 18th-century Charleston home, where traditional French parterre garden principles were applied using variegated Asiatic jasmine and Kingsville boxwood. In Greenwich, Connecticut, Kathryn Herman blended French and American styles, creating outdoor rooms with tuteurs and hornbeam hedges alongside romantic meadows defined by linden trees. London's Victoria-era rowhouses, though urban, adopt French symmetry with custom lattice gates framing stone fountains, as seen in Iain MacDonald's design.
The Provence region offers examples like Le Mas des Poiriers, where Susan Bednar Long's interior floral patterns echo the hornbeam hedges and plane trees outside, and a 200-year-old farmhouse reimagined by Dominique and Alexandre Lafourcade with boxwood topiaries and Annabelle hydrangeas. The English countryside features French-inspired elements with hornbeam hedges concealing antique urns in Richard Smith's manor. The Aube Region's Château de Pouy-sur-Vannes, a 12th-century fortress, was restored by Juan Pablo Molyneux, incorporating formal 17th-century gardens with playful fountains.
New England gardens also embrace French influences, with Drew Kenn's parterre-style garden in Connecticut using crab apple trees and dwarf boxwood, and Robb Nestor and Bill Reynolds's farm dividing gardens with geometric boxwood hedges. Houston properties showcase French-inspired design, such as Herbert Pickworth's garden with a 1920s French fountain and clipped boxwood, and a Versailles-inspired garden by Bill Curtis featuring a copper and steel pergola and a Rodin Museum-inspired pool. The French Riviera highlights natural flora, as seen in Piero Castellini Baldissera's sophisticated villa, while Los Angeles estates, like one designed by Anthony Baratta and Perry Guillot, evoke Monet's Giverny with wisteria-clad arbors. These diverse examples collectively underscore the enduring appeal and adaptability of French garden design principles across various geographical and stylistic contexts.
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