Cordelia de Castellane’s flourishing French & English garden
Released on 09/15/2023
[lively music]
I fell in love with the house and I saw the garden
and I saw, you know, the potential that I could do
in the garden, like a dream garden
that I was always dreaming of.
We wanted a weekend house next to Paris.
I grew up actually half of my time in nature
as I was in Switzerland.
So for me it was back to my roots to be back
at the countryside on weekends,
especially with four children.
For me, it's my number one key project is always
to keep the house and the garden very natural.
Like it's been there for always, we didn't touch it.
I ask Milan Hajsinek
who's a very good landscaper in England,
I didn't want to do something too French.
I didn't want to have too much symmetry.
I wanted to have something more English.
I was always attracted by English gardens.
I wanted a lot of flowers and I want flowers from April
to really end of October, as much as I can
because it's so inspiring for my work.
Here actually was the place
where they were keeping all the wood before in the property
and I said to Milan, okay,
I want a table here because I want to be able
to have the four squares of flowers in front of me
and be able to paint them and to have a place
where I could design
and also a place where we could have lunch
and enjoy the view.
Behind me there's a little window
because of course, when you are sitting there,
you have that beautiful view of the garden.
But I thought it's also about the people
that they cannot face a wall when they sit here.
So it's Milan who had the idea I had, okay,
let's put a mirror.
And Milan said, No, better let's open it
on the real gem that you have behind
'cause I must say, the house has a divine view.
On this table,
I have those glasses that I took in Venezia.
I love them.
I have them in lots of different stripes, in lots of colors.
They mix with everything.
Those are the glasses of jar with the lily of the valley
and a lot of the flowers comes from my garden
and arrives on the plate.
And also the colors of the flowers always, you know,
inspire me to do my color palettes
for all the Baby Dior collection as well
because you know, it's a beautiful link
between my work and my life.
[tranquil music]
I was obsessed to have a greenhouse.
I really wanted to have a place where I could put,
of course, all my plants and do all my arrangements
but also a place where I could have some tables
and have dinner.
We even spent a Christmas here
because there's the heating inside with lot of candles.
I used to have a little brand for children clothes
before Baby Dior who was CdeC, it was in London as well.
And the colors of the stores were all in that colors.
And Milan came to me and said, You know,
I remember you had that special colors on your stores
so why don't we make it that color?
And actually, it's one of my favorite colors.
So we went for that.
[lively music]
I love all the flowers.
I'm quite obsessed by all different kind of flowers.
In few weeks, we will have the Japanese anemones.
I collect few different types of them
and I love them because they move with the wind,
you know, it's like the Gaura.
I love those flowers with a lot of space between them.
And when you do the bouquet and your arrangement,
it gives a bit of air in it.
Saying that, of course, I love the roses.
I think they smell divine
and they're so beautiful in the garden.
Dahlias is absolutely my favorite
and I love tulips as well, but they're not there now.
So you have peonies
and my favorite one are the yellow one there.
Even if I don't like yellow,
don't ask me why, I love yellow peonies.
[lively music]
The other side of the garden is much more English
and this side is really much more French.
And I wanted to keep it very simple
because the house and the stone is really beautiful.
We have a beautiful lave just next door
who has the most beautiful David Austin roses,
one of the unique in France who sells.
We have few of them climbing.
It's quite, you know, like that, very calm and French.
And suddenly, they go the other side of the garden
and it's completely wild and more English.
And I like those places very separate
and different in the garden.
[lively music]
I always say that a house with no flowers has no soul.
It's very important for me.
So I have a place in my garden,
which actually is completely about cutting flowers.
And the weekends I like to pick them up
at the beginning of the weekend to make all the arrangement
for each room and for the living room.
Actually, we have a lot of peonies now going out
and foxgloves and all of that.
Yeah, so I love to do all my arrangement.
It's very strange because when we started to move the lines
of the garden and create the garden together,
suddenly also my interior changed.
I changed some place of furniture.
I add a few things, the colors changed.
The house really took life when the garden start
to be there.
And that's quite fun.
[lively music]
Starring: Cordelia de Castellane
Alasdair Cameron's relaxed, informal family garden | Notes from a Garden
The 40-year evolution of Xa Tollemache's Suffolk garden | Notes from a Garden
Arthur Parkinson's charming Cotswold cottage garden | Notes from a Garden
Clare Foster's thriving traditional English garden
Cordelia de Castellane’s flourishing French & English garden
A master class in Christmas wreath making by Butter Wakefield | The Guest List
How to design a warm and colourful family room
Inside Tricia Guild’s English Heritage collection
How pastry chef Ravneet Gill blends family tradition into modern desserts
Inside Carlos Garcia’s charming 17th-century English country house