25 French Themed Movies To Watch This year

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This year

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year

In the mood for a little French culture and romance? Me too! Here are 25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year. As a writer and chef with The French Magnolia Cooks, I draw inspiration from the environment and culture. Gardening, fashion, color, landscape, music, terroir…and movies. In other words, the plate is more than food. That is to say, the plate is an expression of our voice at a particular time and in a particular place. To clarify, it’s valuable to pay attention to everything around us. 

Movies are more important to our culture because they respect and reflect the past while inspiring our futures. A great movie evokes emotions, whether good or bad. Most importantly, they make us think.

Personally, I love movies because they take me on a journey away from my daily routine and challenges. Even more, a great movie makes me feel relaxed, grateful and inspired.

As I have said before, The French are all about pleasure. These 25 French themed movies embody wit, history, style, love, and fashion. Hopefully, they will bring you joy.

Warning: these movies may cause you to book a flight to France.

Certainly, there are worse things in life.

 

Air France, The French Magnolia

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year

Number 25 of 25 

#25. An American in Paris

Jerry Mulligan (Gene Kelly) is an American ex-GI who stays in post-war Paris to become a painter, and falls for the gamine charms of Lise Bouvier (Leslie Caron). However, his paintings come to the attention of Milo Roberts, a rich American heiress, who is interested in more than just art.

Release date: November 11, 1951

Director: Vincente Minnelli

Music composed by: George Gershwin, Ira Gershwin, Saul Chaplin, Conrad Salinger, Johnny Green

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year

Number 24 of 25 

#24. Funny Face

Dispatched on an assignment, New York City-based fashion photographer Dick Avery (Fred Astaire) is struck by the beauty of Jo Stockton (Audrey Hepburn), a shy bookstore employee he’s photographed by accident, who he believes has the potential to become a successful model. He gets Jo to go with him to France, where he snaps more pictures of her against iconic Parisian backdrops. In the process, they fall for one another, only to find hurdles in their way. 

Release date: February 13, 1957

Director: Stanley Donen

Costume design: Edith Head, Hubert de Givenchy

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year
25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year

Number 23 of 25 

#23. Gigi

Gaston (Louis Jourdan) is a restless Parisian playboy who moves from one mistress to another, while also spending time with Gigi (Leslie Caron), a precocious younger friend learning the ways of high society. The platonic relationship between Gaston and Gigi changes, however, when she matures, but the possibility of something lasting seems unlikely since he won’t commit to one woman. Gigi refuses to be anyone’s mistress, however, and Gaston must choose between her and his carefree lifestyle.

Release date: May 15, 1958 

Director: Vincente Minnelli

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year

Number 22 of 25 

#22. Le Mepris

Experience Brigitte Bardot in this odd but beautiful vintage film. A philistine in the art film business, Jeremy Prokosch (Jack Palance) is a producer unhappy with the work of his director. Prokosch has hired Fritz Lang (as himself) to direct an adaptation of “The Odyssey,” but when it seems that the legendary filmmaker is making a picture destined to bomb at the box office, he brings in a screenwriter (Michel Piccoli) to energize the script. The professional intersects with the personal when a rift develops between the writer and his wife (Brigitte Bardot).

Release date: December 18, 1964

Director: Jean-Luc Godard

Music composed by: Georges Delerue, Piero Piccioni

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year

Number 21 of 25

#21. Les Demoiselle de Rochefort

Delphine (Catherine Deneuve) and Solange (Françoise Dorléac) are twin sisters who each want to find romance and leave their small seaside town of Rochefort, France. Soon they befriend a couple of visiting carnival workers who frequent their lonely mother’s (Danielle Darrieux) café and hire the girls to sing in the carnival. Wanting a career as a songwriter, Solange falls for an American musician, Andy (Gene Kelly), while Delphine dumps her beau and searches Rochefort for her ideal man.

Release date: April 11, 1968

Director: Jacques Demy

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year, The French Magnolia

Number 20 of 25

#20. Before Sunset

This movie will make you want to book a flight to Paris! A sequel to “Before Sunrise,” this film starts nine years later as Jesse (Ethan Hawke) travels across Europe giving readings from a book he wrote about the night he spent in Vienna with Celine (Julie Delpy). After his reading in Paris, Celine finds him, and they spend part of the day together before Jesse has to again leave for a flight. They are both in relationships now, and Jesse has a son, but as their strong feelings for each other start to return, both confess a longing for more.

Release date: July 2, 2004 

Director: Richard Linklater

Featured song: Just in Time

Film series: ‘Before’ Trilogy

Screenplay: Ethan Hawke, Julie Delpy, Richard Linklater

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year, The French Magnolia

Number 19 of 25 

#19. The Artist

In the 1920s, actor George Valentin (Jean Dujardin) is a bona fide matinee idol with many adoring fans. While working on his latest film, George finds himself falling in love with an ingenue named Peppy Miller (Bérénice Bejo) and, what’s more, it seems Peppy feels the same way. But George is reluctant to cheat on his wife with the beautiful young actress. The growing popularity of sound in movies further separates the potential lovers, as George’s career begins to fade while Peppy’s star rises.

Release date: November 23, 2011

Director: Michel Hazanavicius

Screenplay: Michel Hazanavicius

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year, The French Magnolia

Number 18 of 25

#18. Coco Before Chanel

Young Coco Chanel (Audrey Tautou) works as a seamstress by day and a cabaret entertainer by night, then she meets a wealthy heir (Benoît Poelvoorde) and becomes his lover and fashion consultant. Tired of the flowery hats, tight corsets and yards of lace that define women’s fashion, Coco uses her lover’s clothing as a starting point to distill an elegant and sophisticated line of women’s clothing that propels her to the top of Parisian haute couture.

Release date: September 25, 2009

Director: Anne Fontaine

Based on: Chanel and Her World; by Edmonde Charles-Roux

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year, The French Magnolia

Number 17 of 25

#17. Les Miserables

Heavy but painfully beautiful. After 19 years as a prisoner, Jean Valjean (Hugh Jackman) is freed by Javert (Russell Crowe), the officer in charge of the prison workforce. Valjean promptly breaks parole but later uses money from stolen silver to reinvent himself as a mayor and factory owner. Javert vows to bring Valjean back to prison. Eight years later, Valjean becomes the guardian of a child named Cosette after her mother’s (Anne Hathaway) death, but Javert’s relentless pursuit means that peace will be a long time coming.

Release date: December 25, 2012

Director: Tom Hooper

Story and Novel: Victor Hugo

Music composed: Claude-Michel Schönberg

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year, The French Magnolia

Number 16 of 25

#16. The Rules of The Game

In this melancholy French social satire, André (Roland Toutain) is having an affair with Christine (Nora Gregor), whose husband, Robert (Marcel Dalio), himself is hiding a mistress. Meanwhile Christine’s married maid, Lisette (Paulette Dubost), is romantically entangled with the local poacher. At a hunting party, trusted friend Octave (Jean Renoir) also confesses his feelings for Christine, as the passions of the servants and aristocrats dangerously collide.

Release date: April 8, 1950

Screenplay: Jean Renoir, Carl Koch

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year, The French Magnolia

Number 15 of 25

#15. Messenger, The Story of Joan of Arc

Mystic, maiden, martyr – whatever you choose to call her, it is difficult to dispute that Joan of Arc led a remarkably accomplished life for a peasant girl who never went to school … and never saw her 20th birthday. It all began in 1429, when a teenage girl from a remote village in France stood before the world and announced she would defeat the world’s greatest army and liberate her country.

Release date: October 18, 1999 

Director: Luc Besson

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year

Number 14 of 25

#14. Julie & Julia

Frustrated with a soul-killing job, New Yorker Julie Powell (Amy Adams) embarks on a daring project: she vows to prepare all 524 recipes in Julia Childs’ landmark cookbook, “Mastering the Art of French Cooking.” Intertwined with Julie’s story is the true tale of how Julia Child (Meryl Streep) herself conquered French cuisine with passion, fearlessness, and plenty of butter.
Release date: August 7, 2009
Screenplay: Nora Ephron
Story by: Julia Child, Julie Powell, Alex Pud’homme

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year

Number 13 of 25

#13. Sabrina

Although the original Sabrina with Audrey Hepburn is superb. This flawless remake with Julia Ormond as Sabrina Fairchild is a HIT! Sabrina Fairchild is a chauffeur’s daughter who grew up with the wealthy Larrabee family. She always had unreciprocated feelings for David (Greg Kinnear), the family’s younger son and playboy. But after returning from Paris, Sabrina has become a glamorous woman who gets David’s attention. His older, work-minded brother Linus (Harrison Ford) thinks their courtship is bad for the family business.

Release date: December 15, 1995 

Director: Sydney Pollack

Featured song: Moonlight

Music composed by: John Williams

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year

Number 12 of 25

#12. The Valet

Pierre Lavasseur (Daniel Auteuil), a wealthy tycoon, faces disaster when a paparazzo snaps a picture of him with his longtime mistress (Alice Taglioni). Since Pierre’s wife (Kristin Scott Thomas) owns a majority share of their corporation, Pierre must avoid a divorce at all costs. At his lawyer’s suggestion, Pierre hires Francois Pignon (Gad Elmaleh), a parking attendant who is also in the photograph, to pose as his lover’s “real” boyfriend and thus hide the affair from his wife.

Release date: April 20, 2007

Director: Francis Veber

Screenplay: Francis Veber

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year

Number 11 of 25

#11. La Parisienne

In this romantic comedy, Brigitte Laurier (Brigitte Bardot), the beautiful daughter of the French premier, falls for the womanizing Michel Legrand (Henri Vidal), one of her father’s aides, and attempts to get him to settle down with her. When Michel can’t curb his flirtations with other women, Brigette makes a play to seduce the married Prince Charles (Charles Boyer), resulting in an entertaining battle of the wills between the gorgeous girl of privilege and her beau.

Release date: July 30, 1958

Director: Michel Boisrond

Story by: Henry Becque

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year

Number 10 of 25

#10. Something’s Gotta Give

When aging womanizer Harry Sanborn (Jack Nicholson) and his young girlfriend, Marin (Amanda Peet), arrive at her family’s beach house in the Hamptons, they find that her mother, dramatist Erica Barry (Diane Keaton), also plans to stay for the weekend. Erica is scandalized by the relationship and Harry’s sexist ways. But when Harry has a heart attack, and a doctor (Keanu Reeves) prescribes bed rest at the Barry home, he finds himself falling for Erica — who, for once, may be out of his league.

Release date: December 12, 2003

Director: Nancy Meyers

Screenplay: Nancy Meyers

25 French Themed Movies To Watch This Year

Number 9 of 25

#9. French Kiss

When Kate (Meg Ryan) learns that her fiance, Charlie (Timothy Hutton), has become smitten with a young Parisian woman, she boards a plane for France. She is seated next to Luc (Kevin Kline), a small-time crook who uses her to smuggle a stolen necklace, leading Luc to the hotel where she’s staying to confront Charlie. As Kate and Luc get to know each other, their sarcastic rapport grows warmer, and Kate must decide where her heart truly lies as Charlie tries to win her back.

Release date: May 5, 1995

Director: Lawrence Kasdan

Screenplay: Adam Brooks

Music Composed: James Newton Howard

Number 8 of 25

#8. Amelie

“Amélie” is a fanciful comedy about a young woman who discretely orchestrates the lives of the people around her, creating a world exclusively of her own making. Shot in over 80 Parisian locations, acclaimed director Jean-Pierre Jeunet (“Delicatessen”; “The City of Lost Children”) invokes his incomparable visionary style to capture the exquisite charm and mystery of modern-day Paris through the eyes of a beautiful ingenue.

Release date: November 2, 2001

Director: Jean-Pierre Jeunet

Music composed by: Yann Tiersen

Number 7 of 25

#7. La Vie En Ros

Born into poverty and raised in a brothel, Édith Piaf (Marion Cotillard) manages to achieve worldwide fame. Though her extraordinary voice and charisma open many doors that lead to friendships and romances, she experiences great personal loss, drug addiction and an early death.

Release date: April 16, 2007

Director: Olivier Dahan

Number 6 of 25

#6. Belle de Jour

Beautiful young housewife Séverine Serizy (Catherine Deneuve) cannot reconcile her masochistic fantasies with her everyday life alongside dutiful husband Pierre (Jean Sorel). When her lovestruck friend Henri (Michel Piccoli) mentions a secretive high-class brothel run by Madame Anais (Genevieve Page), Séverine begins to work there during the day under the name Belle de Jour. But when one of her clients (Pierre Clémenti) grows possessive, she must try to go back to her normal life.

Release date: April 10, 1968 

Director: Luis Buñuel

Number 5 of 25

#5. Midnight in Paris

Gil Pender (Owen Wilson) is a screenwriter and aspiring novelist. Vacationing in Paris with his fiancee (Rachel McAdams), he has taken to touring the city alone. On one such late-night excursion, Gil encounters a group of strange — yet familiar — revelers, who sweep him along, apparently back in time, for a night with some of the Jazz Age’s icons of art and literature. The more time Gil spends with these cultural heroes of the past, the more dissatisfied he becomes with the present.

Release date: May 20, 2011

Director: Woody Allen

Featured song: I Remember When

Screenplay: Woody Allen

Number 4 of 25

#4. Le Divorce

A great story told superbly. An all-star cast includes: Glenn Close, Stockard Channing, Sam Waterston  Leslie Caron, Thierry Lhermitte. Story: Isabel Walker (Kate Hudson) flies to Paris to visit her pregnant stepsister Roxeanne (Naomi Watts). However, her arrival coincides with her brother-in-law, Charles, walking out to live with his Russian mistress. Isabel, forced to stay in Paris, falls in love with the city and begins an ultimately unsatisfying adulterous affair with an older man.  An unexpected awesome movie ending. 

Release date: August 8, 2003

Director: James Ivory

Screenplay: James Ivory, Ruth Prawer Jhabvala

Number 3 of 25

#3. Priceless

An irresistible and flawless movie! Hilarious, warm and set on the Cote d’Azur. Irène (Audrey Tautou) loves nice things and loves to have wealthy men pay for them. One night, she mistakes Jean (Gad Elmaleh), a poor bartender, for a potential client and spends the night with him. The next morning, Irène realizes her mistake and leaves, but poor Jean is smitten with her. Later, when a rich dowager mistakes Jean for a veteran gigolo, Irène agrees to tutor him in the art of fleecing wealthy lovers. 

Release date: March 28, 2008

Director: Pierre Salvadori

Screenplay: Pierre Salvadori, Benoît Graffin, Franck Bauchard

Number 2 of 25

#2. The Dinner Game

If you haven’t seen this classic French comedy, find it today.  Clever and fall-out-your-chair hilarious. Wealthy Frenchmen hold a weekly contest to see who can invite the biggest idiot to their dinner parties. One of my all-time favorite movies.

All-Star Cast: Thierry Lhermitte, Jacques Villeret, Francis Huster, Daniel Provost, Alexandra Vandernoot, Catherine Frot.

Release date: July 9, 1999

Director: Francis Veber

Screenplay: Francis Veber

Number 1 of 25

#1. Love In The Afternoon

I saved the BEST for last. For me, a perfect movie. Quintessential Paris, shot on location at the Paris Ritz (not the American Ritz-Carlton).

French private investigator Claude Chavasse (Maurice Chevalier) discovers his client’s wife has been having an affair with an American playboy, Frank Flannagan (Gary Cooper). When the client decides to kill Frank, Claude’s sheltered daughter, Ariane (Audrey Hepburn), throws off the plan and saves his life. The two are instantly attracted to one another, but Ariane doesn’t reveal her name. Frank then hires Claude to locate Ariane, unaware he has sent him on a mission to find his own daughter.

Release date: May 29, 1957 

Director: Billy Wilder

Music composed by: Charles Trenet, Franz Waxman, Maurice de Féraudy, Matty Malneck, Henri Betti

Costume design: Hubert de Givenchy, Jay A. Morley Jr.

25 French Themed Movies To Watch this Year, The French Magnolia
Chef Missy, The French Magnolia Cooks

I Appreciate Your Thoughts!

Please leave a comment because I want to hear from you!

Also, please share on your favorite social media.

Thank You & Cheers!

Chef Missy

25 French Themed Movies To Watch this Year

12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home

12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home

12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home 

Reminiscing about how you felt the last time you were in France? Want that feeling all the time? Here are 12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home. As a chef with The French Magnolia Cooks, color on the plate is especially important and so is the environment in which I live.

Apparently, 1 in 12 men and 1 in 200 women in the world are color blind. After joining the military, my husband (Thomas) discovered he that he was severely color-blind. For that reason, he would not fulfill his dream of being a fighter pilot. Nevertheless, his lack of palette fed his palate. To clarify, 26 years in the food and wine business, Thomas has been graced with an old-world discerning food and wine palate of the greatest nature.

However, my husband, like so many, are grateful to paint experts. Thank you to Benjamin Moore for their instinctual ability to feed our colorful souls.

The French are all about pleasure. Almost always, stimulating the senses and evoking emotions of life, love and joyful passion. Joie de Vivre. That is to say, the joy of life!

So, it is only natural that we would seek to re-create the colors of France in our personal home. 

12 Paint Colors To Bring Home France

Is your color palette subtle or substantial?

Wall color is the easiest way to change the feeling of a room. For that reason, use wall color to speak your mind. Also, use the best paint. For me, it’s Benjamin Moore. Ask the questions, how does this color make me feel? How do I want to feel in this space? 

12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home

In contrast to feeling questions, ask practical questions. Are my furniture pieces and fabrics warm in tone or cold? In addition, work in contrast. If you own a lot of warm woods and cheerful fabrics, think about calming the room with a cool wall color. Similarly, if you own a lot of monochromatic, cool-toned fabrics, consider a warm pale color to invite intimacy.

12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home

Number 1 of 12 

#1. Chantilly Lace OC-65, Benjamin Moore

First, everyone needs a great white. Chantilly Lace is a great set it and forget white. Second, white is perfect for using splashes of color and easy touch-ups. Have a brightly painted lacquered bench, chair or table? White could be your go-to color.

12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home

See below, Chantilly Lace gives this bathroom a structural and clean, Parisian look. 

12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home

Number 2 of 12 

#2. Mountain Peak White 2148-70, Benjamin Moore.

Another true white. For instance, it’s base isn’t gray and it doesn’t have a dirty look. However, it has the faintest off-white feel without being a full-on cream. Again, perfect for both an elegant Parisian space or Provence farm house.  As seen below, a once dark attic is now is a light-filled office.

Mountain Peak White, 12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home
12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home

12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home

Number 3 of 12 

#3. Metropolitan AF-690, Benjamin Moore

Classic French gray is both town and country. Notice how Metropolitan is neither blue nor warm. Classic French gray is typically a cool color. Thereby, counter-balancing the warm tones of brown floors and furniture. Cold grays capture the subtly of Parisian formality or Provence calm.

French Gray, Metropolitan, The French Magnolia Cooks
12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home

Number 4 of 12 

#4. Silver Fox 2108-50, Benjamin Moore.

As mentioned in 7 Budget Friendly French Garden Ideas, French style is a study in geometry. I love Silver Fox because it’s a perfect balance of brown and gray. For example, it’s clearly loyal to cool French gray, but introduces an essence of brown wood. As seen below, the brown shines through.

Silver Fox, French Grays, The French Magnolia
12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home

Number 5 of 12 

#5. Head Over Heals, AF-250, Benjamin Moore

Subtle tranquility. Under-tones of pale brown make Head Over Heals whisper nude beauty. Accents perfectly in the guest bathroom below. 

Head Over Heals, Paris Colors, The French Magnolia
12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home

Number 6 of 12 

#6. Pink Moire 050, Benjamin Moore.

Live Paris in your home all day with a sophisticated, intimate and creative soft pink. Likewise, hints of pale rose make Pink Moire a perfect paring with cool French grays and brown woods. Pink Moire captures both the masculine and the feminine in this Paris-type living space.

12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home, The French Magnolia

Number 7 of 12 

#7. Pink Bliss 2093-70, Benjamin Moore

On the other hand, Pink Bliss is casual and fun. In the same vein, it carries the torch from city piedàterre to farm house.  Accented on a bedroom wall speaks romantic intimacy.

12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home, The French Magnolia

Number 8 of 12

#8. Patriot Blue 2064-20, Benjamin Moore.

Many would argue over the criteria for a French blue. Suffice it to say, there are many “French” blues. I say, if you are going to be blue, BE true blue!. Here are three perfect blues for the home. Most importantly, they all say, ‘vivre la France‘.  After that, you really can’t get more French than a blue and white in a kitchen. Below, enjoy a Patriot Blue accent wall in a white kitchen. 

Patriot Blue, The French Magnolia Cooks
12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home, The French Magnolia

Number 9 of 12

#9. Symphony Blue 2060-10, Benjamin Moore.

For large residential walls, I recommend a deep true, navy blue. Symphony Blue is French nautical perfection. Formal and clean; yet, homey.

Thinking of royalty and the coast of of Normandy? Symphony Blue would be a lovely choice.

12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home, The French Magnolia

Number 10 of 12

#10. Ole Blue Eyes 2064-30, Benjamin Moore.

Bright, cheerful and a lot of Provence! The versatile Ole Blue Eyes plays well with others. Like, country mustard. A true country French classic. In other words, Marseille, France on a wall.

Ole Blue Eyes, Marseille, France, The French Magnolia
12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home, The French Magnolia

Number 11 of 12 

#11. Equestrian Gray 1553, Benjamin Moore.

Earthy, homey and well-rounded. Every francophile needs a good mushroom color. Above all, let’s pay homage to Burgundy in a library, mud room or even, an exterior farm house color. An the other hand, nice for an entrance. 

Equestrian Gray, The French Magnolia
12 Paint Colors To Bring France Home, The French Magnolia

Number 12 of 12 

#12. Lavender Secret 1415, Benjamin Moore.

Finally, no French color palette would be complete without dreams of Avignon, Provence. The soul-lifting essence of Lavender Secrets is inspiring. To sum up, combine green floral fabrics and indoor plants. Even more, this French Provence color is sure to ease the mind in a home office or guest house. 

Lavender Secrets, The French Magnolia
Lavender Secrets, The French Magnolia
Chef Missy, The French Magnolia Cooks

I Appreciate Your Thoughts!

Please leave a comment because I appreciate your thoughts and kind words!

Also, please share on your favorite social media.

Thank You & Cheers!

Chef Missy

 

 

7 Budget Friendly French Garden Ideas

7 Budget Friendly French Garden Ideas

Image by PaperENdipity

7 Budget Friendly French Garden Ideas 

I think all of us Francophiles could use more French style in our gardening. Here are 7 Budget Friendly French Garden Ideas. As a chef with The French Magnolia, the garden is paramount – for seed, produce, pollination and rest.

Most of us don’t have the land or budget to install and maintain a ten foot tall boxwood hedge or maze. Even with a tiny bit of space and creativity, everyone can have a little French in their garden. 

First, you should know that the French are into form and structure. Symmetry and order are truly the heart of French landscape design.

So, whatever you create, attempt balance. Pairs of planters can easily achieve the effect of balance. Second, authentic doesn’t have to be fancy. Below, is an example of something quite sophisticated, but simple and unpretentious works every time.

7 Budget Friendly French Garden Ideas

What Are You Going For?

It’s important to always know your why. For that reason, know what time of day you will use the space. What activities will be performed in the space? Secondary questions might be, when do you get sunlight? And, what will survive in your climate?
7 Budget Friendly French Garden Ideas
Paris gardens on small terraces and balconies are used as mini-retreats from the confined space of a city living. Certainly, there are multiple budget-friendly ideas here in this article,7 Budget Friendly French Garden Ideas.
7 Budget Friendly French Garden Ideas, The French Magnolia
Below, are three creative balcony French garden ideas. Notice how simple is lovely.
7 Budget Friendly French Garden Ideas, The French Magnolia
7 Budget Friendly French Garden Ideas, The French Magnolia
In contrast, country French gardens (at chateaux and palaces) were used for reflection and exercise. After that, to show-off or establish ones wealth, position and power. Sometimes, they were designed to intimidate. As a result, Chateaux gardens were designed to be viewed from a distance. Additionally, political conversations, strategies, gossip and secret trysts carried were part of traditional French garden life. It was important not to be seen and heard by household staff. 

7 Budget Friendly French Garden Ideas

#1. Use and feature what you already have. Meaning, a stucco or brick wall. Creepers are perfect for the budget friendly French garden style because you only need a few. Strategically place 2 or 3 along the bottom. They will take root in the smallest about of soil. Set it and forget it. 
See below, a photo of the creeping fig in full force — one of my personal favorites. The creeping fig gives a structural and formal, Parisian look. 
Another budget friendly creeping favorite, the creeping Confederate Jasmine. The Confederate Jasmine blooms and grows well up a wall or over an arched trellis. For that reason, it is ideal for a loose, country French look. 

Run the Confederate Jasmine up the side of a garage and create an instant look and feel of Provence.

7 Budget Friendly French Garden Ideas

Number 2 of 7 

#2. Incorporate smooth micro pea gravel.  Gravel paths and gravel-covered garden spaces are hallmarks of French garden design. 
Scattering bags of micro pebbles is an easy do-it-yourself project. For example, over large weedy, dark areas where grass has a difficult time growing.  Or, use to cover old-cracked cement. 
7 Budget Friendly French Garden Ideas, The French Magnolia Cooks

Number 3 of 7 

#3. French style is a study in geometry. Use long narrow planters with inexpensive, tall-growing, green shrubbery. The modern design of a long, narrow planter makes for great French style. Use boxwoods, if your budget permits, but there are plenty more affordable options. See the Hedge Holly, a hardy, inexpensive and useful foundation plant. Triming the sides flat will resemble a French hedge. Establishing them in planters might be helpful if you are renting. Mature sizes range from 2-10 feet.
Similarly, the laurel bush is a sturdy, quick-growing, green year-round bush. I love the laurel bush in long, narrow planters for a French garden style. 
7 Budget Friendly French Garden Ideas, The French Magnolia Cooks
Create privacy or accent an intimate sitting area by creating a green shrubbery or creeper wall.  Install an inexpensive DIY 2 by 4 fence. Plant a laurel or holly hedge in front and train it up the fence. 
In the same vein, you can use a long, narrow planter for colorful annuals. This French style allows you to move between the seasons more easily. 
7 Budget Friendly French Garden Idea

Number 4 of 7 

#4. Create balance and structure with two topiary-inspired planters. Punctuate the entrance to your garden space or outdoor dining space. On the other hand, topiaries are a French classic at the front or back door. 
7 Budget Friendly French Garden Idea
Topiaries can be a pricey so talk to your local nursery about an affordable alternative that will survive in your climate. I love a trained laurel, but I also love the use of this small evergreen varietal. Furthermore, evergreens are sturdy and of course, green all year long. Tip: You would be surprised what gardening treasures can be found at a garage or estate sale. Hit up a couple of garage sales for unusual planting vessels.

Number 5 of 7

#5. Absolutely include a place to relax and eat, but it doesn’t have to be fancy. Sitting areas and dining spots add a touch of romance and evoke the feeling of the French countryside. A round, metal table found at a garage sale with mix and match chairs is very French appropriate.

Certainly, you can spray-paint an outdoor table. However, if you want to embrace French garden style, use a cotton table cloth. Tip: a big table by the back door might be convenient, but I recommend putting a bistro set way back in the garden. Now, that’s French garden style!  

Number 6 of 7

#6. Water features are important for French garden style. Most importantly, find and use a water feature that’s appropriate for your space. It does not have to be big or ornate. I love the quiet elegance of a small bird bath. That is to say, keep it simple.

Number 7 of 7

#7. Anchor all four corners of your garden with big round planters filled with unexpected options. A bigger budget might allow for a gardenia bush or a lemon tree (if you are far enough south). Budget friendly planters might include the unexpected with tons of color. For example, wild flowers, vegetables, fresh herbs and colorful annuals — all inexpensive choices. 
Vegetable and herb gardens are a staple of French garden design. Even more, think about using metal for a vessel. Heavy-duty plastic planters in a terra cotta color are popular now. They are much lighter in weight and make life so much easier. It’s a great look for the money. Remember to purchase the little feet that lift the planters off the ground. Tip: be sure to drill holes in the bottom of your planters. To clarify, plants don’t like wet feet.
Wild flowers are budget friendly, romantic and cheerful. For instance, lavender’s practicality and indestructible nature hails Provence. Lavender is genuinely deer resistant and comes in beautiful hues. Likewise, Queen Anne’s Lace, is a useful and productive filler that can take you from June until your first frost. Finally, Black-Eyed Susan’s are easy and remind me of The French wine country. They are fabulous for the fall, taking you from September until your first frost.

BONUS TIP, the PERFECT French Garden Accessory

Finally, no French garden would be complete without le chat. Therefore, a cat is the ultimate French garden accessary. In short, one must have a cat to complete the French garden picture. Besides, cats keep mice away. Oh French kitty, we love you. 

7 Budget Friendly French Garden Ideas, The French Magnolia Cooks
Chef Missy, The French Magnolia Cooks

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