Best Kitchens Photographed in Vogue
Photographed by François Halard, Vogue, January 20041/32The globe-trotting sensibility of Marni cofounders Consuelo and Gianni Castiglioni is reflected in the Zanzibarian rugs on the floor of their otherwise industrial-chic Formentera kitchen.
Photographed by François Halard, Vogue, January 20062/32During the restoration of her 18th-century Shropshire farmer’s cottage, Chanel creative consultant Amanda Harlech left many of the home’s original plaster walls unpainted. In the kitchen, the robin’s egg blue hutch stands out against the wall’s many layers of history, and her whippets warm themselves in front of the Aga range.
Photographed by François Halard, Vogue, February 20063/32Despite the location of her 15th-century château in France’s Loire Valley, English design reigns supreme in the home of designer Rachel Riley, as evidenced by the kitchen table set for tea, complete with chintz tablecloth.
Photographed by François Halard, Vogue, February 20084/32In famed photographer François Halard’s New York apartment, the visitor at once feels transported to the Mediterranean. Such was the photographer’s goal, sourcing building materials and antiques from abroad, like the kitchen light fixtures, which came from Marseille, and the circa-1910 tiles that came from Avignon lining the back wall.
Photographed by François Halard, Vogue, February 20095/32For interior design duo Alexandra and Michael Misczynski, their 1920s Hollywood Hills villa is carefully crafted to be kid-friendly. This is apparent in the kitchen, where sturdy stone floors and an 18th-century refectory table conveys a comfortable elegance.
