The Most Beautiful Foyers in Vogue
Photographed by Baker Christopher, Vogue, January 20121/27A crewel-covered wing chair, botanical prints, and the wellie lineup set the country house tone in the turn-of-the-century Southampton, New York, home of Vogue Contributing Editor Catie Marron and her husband, Donald.
Photographed by Gili Oberto, Vogue, January 20142/27A 19th-century Scottish lantern hangs above the antique pedestal table casually strewn with books, flowers, and ceramics in the entrance hall of sugar heiress Emilia Fanjul Pfeifler’s Locust Valley, New York, estate—the perfect greeting to a comfortable family weekend home.
Photographed by François Halard, Vogue, February 20063/27Despite the location of designer Rachel Riley and photographer husband Daniel Jouanneau’s Loire Valley château, the foyer is decidedly English, taking its cues from an Adamesque architectural tradition that Riley appreciates from her childhood in Bath, England.
Photographed by François Halard, Vogue, February 20094/27The entryway to interior designers Alexandra and Michael Misczynski’s Hollywood Hills home is a blend of antique and modern, and a perfect representation of their brand, Atelier AM, featuring a Giacometti chandelier, a 17th-century table, and a simple vase of eucalyptus branches.
Photographed by François Halard, Vogue, March 20145/27The entrance hall in fashion designer Dries Van Noten’s 19th-century Belgian manse was actually designed in the fashion of Louis XV after World War I, when the house was badly destroyed by shelling.
