A French country kitchen is equal parts rustic and chic, with an emphasis on neutral colors, natural materials such as wood, and a reverence for the simple beauty of everyday objects.
The decorating aesthetic known in the English-speaking world as French country style is an homage to the charms of the French countryside that is copied around the world, as architects, interior designers, and home decorators seek to transport the charm and elegance of the French countryside to their own backyards.
Check out these French country kitchens that demonstrate how to borrow a bit of French style to make your own space into the warm, charming, effortlessly chic gathering space that it is meant to be.
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Use Gilded Finishes
This French farmhouse-inspired kitchen from Mindy Laven Home is decorated with elegant details like lantern-style pendant lights and scattered paintings with gilded frames on the walls that contrast with the wood beams, cabinetry, and flooring.
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Add a Statement Oven Hood
This kitchen from Marie Flanigan Interiors has pale neutral tones, natural wood floors, and a monumental oven hood with classical curves that lends the space a French country-inspired vibe.
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Collect Copper Cookware
This all-white kitchen from Leanne Ford Interiors has a black metal rack mounted to a painted brick wall that houses a collection of copper pots that are as pretty and shiny as they are useful, and will be the last pieces of cookware you will ever have to buy if cared for properly.
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Opt for a Butcher Block
This kitchen from Marie Flanigan Interiors gets some French country street cred thanks to a French-style butcher block placed in the center of the room in lieu of an American-style kitchen island.
What are the variations of French country style?
French country style is a blanket term that can look very different depending on whether it's inspired by the earth tone paletted of a farmhouse in Provence, the dark wood finishes of a rustic cottage in Normandy, or the ornate furnishings and decor of an elegant provincial chateau. Many French country interiors in France also mix in English country furniture and decor.
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Highlight Ceiling Beams
The vaulted ceilings in this spacious California kitchen from Anne Rae Design are highlighted by dark stained wood beams that add definition and a refined take on rustic style that adds character to the large, airy space. Stacked stone finishes enhance the rustic feel.
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Include a Farmhouse Table
An easy way to add a French country sensibility to your kitchen is to skip the kitchen island and install a farmhouse table instead. Leanne Ford Interiors channeled a French farmhouse spirit in this 1920s Los Angeles hunting cabin with a rustic wood table surrounded by simple white chairs.
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Decorate with Vintage Tools
Decorating your kitchen with utilitarian accessories like vintage or antique wood cutting boards and metal cooking utensils and molds is a simple way to add a sense of history and create a layered feel in a modern kitchen, like this space from Anne Rae Design.
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Incorporate Patterned Tile
Incorporating pretty patterned tile in soft shades of blue, bentwood bar stools, and vintage-style pendant lights adds a little bit of French country flair to this kitchen from Charlie Coull Design.
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Choose Natural Materials
This kitchen from Anne Rae Design highlights natural materials like wood and stone, with a rustic oven surround and wooden bar stools that add French country finesse.
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Use Mismatched Cabinets
This kitchen from Leanne Ford Interiors channels French country spirit with its mismatched storage pieces. Stacked vintage cupboards with an aged painted patina hide clutter, while rustic stained wood shelving offers display and storage space.
What do the French call it?
In France, French country style is simply called "style campagne," or "country style." It is commonly branded "style campagne chic" to indicate a more refined modern take on the country styles of the past. The French sometimes refer to "le style French country" when explaining how it is interpreted by the English-speaking world.
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Use Checkboard Flooring
This family-style kitchen from Marie Flanigan Interiors has checkerboard flooring with an aged patina that looks like it wasn't installed yesterday, adding an aged patina to a new kitchen.
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Highlight Original Features
You might not live in a French country farmhouse, but embracing original features in your home is one way to channel some timeless Gallic charm no matter where you live. Jessica Nelson Interior Design exposed the original brick chimney to add character to this kitchen and the dining room on the other side of the wall.
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Keep It Rustic
Chunky wood ceiling beams, a stone-topped wood island, and a row of copper pots hung above the kitchen sink window add rustic charm to this kitchen from Marie Flanigan Interiors.
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Try Bistro Bar Stools
A pair of classic French bistro bar stools sitting side-by-side at the end of a peninsula creates a cozy seating area in this kitchen from Marie Flanigan Interiors.
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Use Industrial Lighting
Simple industrial-style pendants, a framed painting leaning casually against the backsplash, and an oversized vase filled with flowering branches adds some refined rustic charm to this timeless modern kitchen designed by Rashida Banks for Emily Henderson Design.
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Add a Bistro Table
This kitchen corner banquette from Marie Flanigan Interiors introduces some classic French style into a modern American kitchen thanks to a marble and iron bistro table and some industrial French metal Tolix-style chairs.
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Choose a Wooden Island
In this kitchen from Jessica Nelson Interior Design, a French-style wooden two-tiered work table with turned legs adds charm to the space while retaining the function of a modern kitchen island.
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Add French Accents
This white, modern American kitchen from Jessica Nelson Interior Design serves as a neutral background that allows French-style details like cross-back wooden bar stools and a crystal chandelier to take center stage.
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Layer in Natural Elements
In this kitchen from Leanne Ford Interiors, dark wood open shelving and vintage-style metal brackets provide a space to house everyday items, decorative objects, and flowers that bring the beauty of the outdoors inside. Add some lavender and you can pretend that you picked it from the field outside your window in the South of France.
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Mix Old and New
In this kitchen from Jessica Nelson Interior Design, original brick walls, an antique-style chandelier, and vintage-style French country bar stools add character to the all-white kitchen with its modern cabinetry and finishes.
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Use Rustic Baskets
Leanne Ford Interiors added some French country flair to a Pittsburgh home with rustic hardwood floors and a row of woven baskets on the lower shelf of the kitchen island that add texture and storage to the room.
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Try Herringbone Wood Floors
Rustic wood herringbone floors, white-washed brick walls, and a wood-based kitchen island are some of the details that preserve a sense of authenticity in this historic home renovation from Kate Marker Interiors.
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Hang a Curtain Under the Sink
In this country cottage from Leanne Ford Interiors, a curtain casually hung beneath the vintage farmhouse sink hides clutter while adding an old world sense of charm and ease.
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Use Brick Flooring
We Are True Home chose a thin brick floor tile that lends a new kitchen an old world European-style feel.
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Texturize the Walls
While it's impossible to recreate the centuries-old patina of an old French farmhouse, you can help to create a time-worn feel by forgoing crisp white walls and adding texture using layers of chalk paint and wax, like this homey kitchen from Lobster and Swan.
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Install a French Range
Basic Projects turned a dark and cluttered kitchen in Charleston, SC into a clean and classic oasis that mixes old and new. The designers replaced wood tops with marble, added a farm sink, and installed a classic Lacanche range in dark green that brings a classic Made in France feel.
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Mix Styles
This bright white kitchen from Brexton Cole Interiors has French touches like a farmhouse table with a matching bench and a midcentury modern chair on the end and French rattan bar stools that reflect the mix of styles and periods that embody the French country aesthetic.
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Embrace Imperfection
This rustic English country kitchen from Lobster and Swan would look just as at home in the French countryside, with its mix of simple, natural materials, open shelving, mismatched tableware, industrial lighting, bentwood chairs, and lightly rumpled linen curtains that have an effortlessly chic appeal.
What should go in a French country kitchen?
A French country kitchen should feature wood cabinetry, a good oven range for cooking family meals, and timeless, and high-quality finishes such as tile, brick, or stone.
French country kitchens often include a long wooden farmhouse table with plenty of seating for gathering family and friends, as well as vintage lighting, a rack of copper pots, or even a fireplace.
What are the best colors for a French country kitchen?
French country kitchens are often neutral spaces that include light, earthy colors that range from shades of white, beige, gray, and brown, or colors such as yellow, red, and blue depending on whether the inspiration is a Provençal farmhouse, a rustic thatched cottage in Normandy, or a provincial chateau.
What's the difference between French country and farmhouse style?
Much of what we think of as traditional or farmhouse-style interiors that are so ubiquitous today have roots in French country aesthetics.
Both styles put an emphasis on a rustic but refined sensibility that prioritizes natural materials such as wood, stone, brick, and metal, embraces timeless everyday objects, and favors warm and family-friendly interiors built for gathering and entertaining.