Quirky Things You Find in FRENCH HOMES (South of France House Tour)

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  • Опубликовано: 17 май 2024
  • Join me on this French house tour to see what houses are like in the South of France!
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    In this south of France house tour, we will chat about some of the more quirky things you find in french homes and things to look out for inside a typical french house in case you want to spot some key differences between French and American houses or French homes compared to other areas of the world (obviously being from NZ French vs American homes isn't my expertise - excited to hear what you have to share on that!)
    You'll get a good feel for what are houses like in the south of France, but of course there are 100s of different types of houses in France so when researching what are French homes like, please take this into account! In saying that, we'll cover some facts about French houses, typical French house interior, and objects and things you find in French homes.
    For my USA viewers, I would love to know - what are the big differences between French and American homes? And for everyone else, what are French houses like compared to where you're from?
    Bisous
    Rosie
    #frenchhome #frenchhouse #frenchhousetour
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Комментарии • 269

  • @mylene_v
    @mylene_v Год назад +197

    As a French person, I’ve never seen house without an oven. Some students living in very tiny flat only use microwaves but otherwise I feel like everyone own an oven we need it to coock so many typical French meals 😅

    • @oscillatewildly2191
      @oscillatewildly2191 Год назад +9

      Totally agree!

    • @lyes215
      @lyes215 Год назад +8

      Yep even iny first flat at 20 year old i had an oven.

    • @laureferre5298
      @laureferre5298 Год назад +14

      100% Agree never saw a french house without an oven ni the kitchen it’s a basis…. Or the owner never cock

    • @Imsemble
      @Imsemble Год назад +3

      They have houses without ovens in other Western countries?

    • @Flaura2710
      @Flaura2710 Год назад +2

      Agreed !

  • @rosekelsey
    @rosekelsey Год назад +38

    I'm an architecture historian and during my first trip to France, I couldn't stop obsessing about the functional shutters. We don't have them in America (they are usually decorative if houses do have them). I love the ritual of opening and closing them every day, and the process of adjusting your home to the hours of our planet.

    • @denisearmstrong3019
      @denisearmstrong3019 Год назад +1

      Bhad them in Paris..shame we don't use in fl

    • @cathjj840
      @cathjj840 Год назад +2

      I built an extension to my house in the Paris suburbs and for various reasons had to put electric roll down shutters on the windows, but insisted on having regular ones on the two doors. I, too, love that ritual of opening and closing them, attaching the thingies on the outside wall that keep them from moving with the wind. (The modern ones aren't as fun as the old ones with an 'espagnolette' (fancy metal clasp to close them), however, which you can jigger to keep the shutters just slightly open, keeping out most of the light and view but letting in lots of air).

    • @lennymac5915
      @lennymac5915 Год назад

      @uta gordon I'm not surprised if insurers insists they are closed. It's like a welcome sign for criminals.

    • @heatherfeather1293
      @heatherfeather1293 6 месяцев назад

      European architecture is beautiful compared to the ugly cookie-cutter buildings we have in the US

    • @nitha609
      @nitha609 Месяц назад

      It would drive me crazy to open and close them every day.

  • @jfrancobelge
    @jfrancobelge Год назад +83

    This actually is an old house, even if renovated - quite a nice traditional house in fact, I like it. But modern houses are different, especially the smaller fireplaces (if any). This bathroom is also pretty old style though still common; at home I have both a bath tub and a shower cabin. Tiled floors are kind of a common feature indeed, but in the north, where winters are colder, we also tend to either have more wooden floors, or we have carpets on the tiled floors. As for French homes not having an oven... sorry, I disagree; I've never seen a kitchen without a regular oven in addition to the microwave.

    • @alfinou_13targaryen
      @alfinou_13targaryen Год назад +9

      same for me, I've never seen a kitchen without a regular oven either (and I've lived in Provence all my life)

    • @mgparis
      @mgparis Год назад +6

      @@alfinou_13targaryen Same here (I'm from Paris but I've never heard of anyone not having an oven in their kitchen!)

    • @mysterfr
      @mysterfr Год назад +9

      I came only to comment about the oven :D. This house is an exception, oven are to be found in pretty much every household, it's a must have as soon as you cook ! I did not get the surprise about the power plug, this is a standard through Europe for at least 40 years. She lived in Paris for a while, if her appartment didn't have such plugs, then it was not following the norms :/

    • @kikireinecke5607
      @kikireinecke5607 Год назад +1

      @@mysterfr I don't think she was surprised from the perspective of a Parisian. The point of the piece is what surprises people from outside of France. As an American, I find that electrical outlet bizarre, not just the shape, but also the retractable grounding pole.

    • @vincentoesterle6781
      @vincentoesterle6781 3 месяца назад

      The grounding pole is NOT retractable ! These are typical French outlets. You can also find them in Belgium and recently in Denmark. The rest of Europe mostly uses the German Schuko outlets that have 2 grounding pins, left and right.@@kikireinecke5607

  • @annaburch3200
    @annaburch3200 Год назад +17

    I remember having such a difficult time taking a shower at my host family's home outside of Paris. Where's the shower curtain? So I laid down in the tub and washed that way so I didn't get water everywhere. Lol!! And then we moved families and I stayed in Provence in a beautiful home with those thick walls and shutters with cicadas chirping all the time. That was absolute HEAVEN!! My host grandma had made up my bed all soft and crisp, so I had lovely sleep and then I'd go downstairs to fresh baguette and homemade apricot jam with butter for breakfast. It was so wonderful. Good memories! 😊❤️

    • @Leopold_van_Aubel
      @Leopold_van_Aubel Год назад +6

      Most French people also simply sit down to wash themselves. You're less likely to slip and fall down.

    • @Rachel-rs7jn
      @Rachel-rs7jn Год назад +1

      @@Leopold_van_Aubel For me personally, it's the opposite. I'm way more likely to slip when I'm trying to stand up from a sitting position in a wet tub, vs if I just stay standing the whole time.

    • @mamaahu
      @mamaahu Год назад

      @@Leopold_van_Aubel But you are sitting in dirty water?

    • @Leopold_van_Aubel
      @Leopold_van_Aubel Год назад

      @@mamaahu No since the water goes away into the drain.

    • @michellemobakeng5938
      @michellemobakeng5938 Год назад +1

      Did you sleep French or Swedish way?
      French way is bolster pillow with or without a square pillow, top sheet and bottom sheet, blanket and bed cover unless your host grandma adopted the modern way.
      I can relate to the breakfast you described with coffee and milk or hot chocolate.

  • @salomeeeee
    @salomeeeee Год назад +38

    Seeing you do that little tutorial in the bathtub had me cracking, to me it’s such a normal thing (rinse, cut the water, soap, rinse again). I’ve never understood people leaving the water running from start to finish 😱
    I’m also surprised there isn’t an oven in the kitchen, in my mind it’s quite a common thing to have. Some very well known dishes require one: poulet rôti, légumes farcis, tartes, gratins, gâteaux and many more... Well, I know I need my oven 😂

    • @jamiemueller3572
      @jamiemueller3572 Год назад +3

      Because we love standing under a steamy shower the whole time, feels amazing

    • @rexgirl-11
      @rexgirl-11 Год назад +3

      In Southern California we shower like this as well to preserve the scarce water supply :)

  • @Hide_and_silk
    @Hide_and_silk Год назад +8

    We live in the south of France and we ripped out the trumpet vine (native to SE USA) as it's really invasive. We - and all our neighbours - have ovens. Our house had a bidet in one of the bathrooms and we have kept it as they are really useful and hygienic. Re shutter colours...it depends on the locale. Ours are chêne (medium oak) but our friends' house, a little further south, are in Bordeaux red (by law) as they are in a conservation area. Edit the finish on the exterior of the house is called crepi. We can stand 8 adults easily - full height! - in our fireplace! Our surveyor called it one of the most effective heat extraction devices he had seen haha ! The chimney is now closed off with a wood burner installed!

  • @DarkCid7777
    @DarkCid7777 Год назад +33

    The dictionnaries you showed are actually different from one another. The red ones were medical dictionnaries listing most medicines with their secondary effects etc ..
    There is one encyclopedia with 3 volumes, the other ones are actually french to english dictionnaries, there are only a couple of "real" dictionnaries 😋

  • @kellybutler5273
    @kellybutler5273 Год назад +13

    I am a kiwi living in Aix en Provence for the last 18months. When we moved here I also could not get over the gates! So many are also beautifully elaborate. I don't feel we appreciate a gate as much in NZ. We also have 2 bidets, yet only 1 toilet in our house...

  • @kathleenewing3673
    @kathleenewing3673 Год назад

    That shower brings back memories/grumbling from my trip to the South of France.

  • @eandry77
    @eandry77 Год назад +7

    Hi ! I'm a french guy, the Vidal dictionnaries are for doctors, they are drugs dictionnaries. You're in a doctor's house ! ;)

  • @Lucio38320
    @Lucio38320 Год назад +23

    I’ve never seen a family house without an oven, I think your case is an exception.
    Oh and people pay for water everywhere in France 😄 (maybe there are exceptions for some « outre-mer » regions but i’m not sure)

    • @Julot1
      @Julot1 Год назад +1

      Maybe un owen needs VPN to work !

    • @cathjj840
      @cathjj840 Год назад

      @@Julot1 lol ..uh mdr

  • @theappalachiancottage1526
    @theappalachiancottage1526 4 месяца назад

    I believe it's a trumpet vine, hummingbirds adore them.

  • @KimberlyGreen
    @KimberlyGreen Год назад +9

    Thank you to your in-laws for permitting a look into their private spaces.

    • @isagrace4260
      @isagrace4260 Год назад +5

      Agreed! It’s so very kind of them to share this inside view with us

  • @missmakoti9702
    @missmakoti9702 Год назад +40

    Seems logical to me to put tiles in a house in a warm country instead of carpet, to keep the house cool. Also I find carpet really unhygienic, I never understand why people would want that in their house. I live in a cold country, so no tiles except for the kitchen, bathroom and the hallway but all the other rooms have wooden floors or laminate floors.

    • @noefillon1749
      @noefillon1749 Год назад +2

      Well France isn't a warm country. It is only during summer. During the other seasons, the tiles get too cold and we must wear slippers inside. But we do still have tiles instead of wood for example.

    • @cathjj840
      @cathjj840 Год назад

      Not much wall to wall carpetting, but decorative rugs are usually found in living rooms and bedrooms.

    • @sparkyggreatmusic450
      @sparkyggreatmusic450 Год назад

      I live in Arizona, and the tile floors are a must in this desert 🌵 heat. I only have cozy area rugs on either side of our beds. Be advised our temps can go from 90’ F to 118’ F.

  • @d.e.s4432
    @d.e.s4432 Год назад +8

    I particularly enjoyed the ginormous pillow. The idea of functioning shutters is so foreign to me in the US. They're almost always just decorative here, and as such, weirdly too small for windows.

  • @christianc9894
    @christianc9894 Год назад +21

    C'est typique d'un maison ancienne, un peu "maison de famille" comme on en trouve beaucoup en France, des endroits modernes, bien équipés qui côtoient une ancienne salle de bain, une magnifique cheminée, et un signe du sud de la France, des génoises sur la toiture, beaucoup de livres et pas de télévision partout. Cela veut dire que l'on est pas dans famille "ouvrière", mais chez des gens qui ont du gout et de l'éducation sans signes ostentatoires.

    • @cathjj840
      @cathjj840 Год назад +4

      Mais, ouvriers comme bourgeois, ils ont un four !

    • @hugaldo8883
      @hugaldo8883 Год назад

      Christian ça me désole de vous l'apprendre, mais vous n'êtes manifestement pas au courant : vous êtes un con. Ou alors en fin de vie et dans ce cas je m'excuse du côté cavalier de mon commentaire.

  • @DollyJohanne
    @DollyJohanne Год назад +2

    Thank you for sharing 😊
    I believe Norway is in the middle here. We have some concrete houses, and often tree houses with concrete cellars/first floors. Newer houses and some old has installed it too, has a airflow heat system that also can be put on cold for the summer. It is not the same as air conditioning. I know it is used in Germany too, since I have seen it at Antoinette Emily’s channel, another kiwi expat living in Germany.
    We don’t have garbage disposal in the sinks, but we have shower that is not hand hold, or more you can take it down and use it by hand if you want to, but it is attached. Many homes has dryer’s, especially families, but many use a mix of them and hanging things up. They is expensive to use, but many find them very convenient. All homes has an oven. Only smaller apartments may not have it, but often also they have in a smaller version. Most people thinks that a kitchen without an oven is only something you can live with like when you are studding or a small part of live, then “you need a real kitchen”. Even people that don’t cook much is mostly there. I live in a small apartment, and my most common topic from visitors is my “bad kitchen facilities”, and that “my landlords can’t expect high income because of the kitchen”. I do have two electrical stove tops (burners) just over the small fridge, and a separate oven more like the French you showed, plus I have a microwave I added too. My kitchen is also a part of my entrance and a bit strange, so it’s more than just two stove tops (norm is 4), small fridge and the oven. I love it here, so nice landlords and neighborhood, and live alone, so I don’t care, but it is not a “good kitchen” In Norwegian standards.
    Maybe you have touched on it before, but how is recycling in France? We are not as strict as Switzerland, but do recycle food, paper/cardboard, glas/metal, plastic, and “leftover” garbage that don’t fit in the other categories in my town. There are some differences around the country for what you have to sort out.
    Lightbulb, batteries and small electric can be turned in at any store, and we also have to pay a fee for all soda cans and bottles and you get it back when you deliver it to the store again. This is the way all around Norway.
    Thank you again!
    Love from Johanne, Norway 🇳🇴

  • @valerie-wy7xp
    @valerie-wy7xp Год назад +11

    C'est un typique Mas provençal ancien ,très beau. Dans les maisons plus récentes c'est différent .Personnellement j'ai une télé dans la chambre ,une clim réversible, et un sèche linge (mais surtout pour l'hiver car l'été ou jour de mistral c'est dehors ,sec en 10 minutes 😉👍

  • @polapoliczkiewicz7590
    @polapoliczkiewicz7590 Год назад +3

    Ha ha, I feel like at home :)
    In Poland, in old houses, we have the same elements! Eccept shutters, not so common like in France. They exist as an ornament right now in very very old wooden cottages. Bidet you can see in more elegant houses 😀 I think with nostalgy about the brass handles at the windows in my family home.
    Thank you, Rosie, for the video 🤗

  • @tiffanychappel6294
    @tiffanychappel6294 Год назад

    Looked like a trumpet vine on the house. Hummingbirds love them.

  • @lreppy10
    @lreppy10 Год назад +8

    Such a lovely home! Thank you for the tour! 💖

  • @alfinou_13targaryen
    @alfinou_13targaryen Год назад +10

    hey Rosie!! What a nice Southern family home! Nice vlog, thank you for taking us with you! As you may remember I am French myself and I live in Vaucluse like your in-laws and I literally know nobody who lives without an oven in the South of France! Many Parisian apartments don't have oven because they are so tiny that they don't have enough room to put an oven or a dishwasher but in the rest of the country where houses are bigger it is very typical to have an oven. I must say, it's a culture shock for me as a born and bred Provence girl to see a big house like that without an oven!

    • @mamaahu
      @mamaahu Год назад +2

      Hope you don’t mind a tiny correction (you are French, so you would probably welcome it!) “Bred” is the past tense of the verb “breed”. You know what “bread” is. Like so many confusing words in English it is pronounced the same but spelled differently.
      I’m excited to be moving soon to the Vaucluse and my house with an oven! Thank you for your reassurance .

    • @alfinou_13targaryen
      @alfinou_13targaryen Год назад

      @@mamaahu thanks for the correction! I knew that one but I must have lacked focus when I wrote that sentence!! I feel so silly to have made such a ridiculous mistake :) thanks for showing that to me!!!

  • @lynsview2895
    @lynsview2895 Год назад +1

    The plant growing up the wall is a Trumpet Vine

  • @SLVperso
    @SLVperso Год назад +29

    About the dryer we also consider that it destroys the clothes (don't know if it's true or not)

    • @sarahmacrae8277
      @sarahmacrae8277 Год назад +8

      It might now destroy them but it definitely shortens their life

    • @chateau7
      @chateau7 Год назад +2

      I never put my shirts or pants in a dryer (living in California): they last much longer by not putting them in a dryer.

    • @peggiescraftcafe7117
      @peggiescraftcafe7117 Год назад +1

      I only use my dryer for towels, underwear & socks. Otherwise I hang dry my clothes on hangers or clothesline. I also hang dry my sheets except in the winter when I put them in the dryer.

  • @wudgee
    @wudgee Год назад

    I adore my shutters. They are great for keeping heat in during the winter, and stopping all that condensation on the windows after a cold night. I once had rain coming in during a storm through the French doors so I close the shutters now.I like the gates, it’s a bit like that in the UK.Aah yes those are my tiles.

  • @Hydraks81
    @Hydraks81 Год назад +28

    A oven, for a familly house, is VERY common. Not having one is pretty rare for a home. In fact, many french receipe are coocked in an oven.
    The bidet is only there in old houses that are not renovated (or the owner is very attached to having a bidet :D)
    Execept for that, this house is pretty standard for an house (not a modern one but still)

    • @kling8460
      @kling8460 Год назад

      Why has france removed bidets? They are still popular in spain and Italy and it is much more hygienic.

    • @Hydraks81
      @Hydraks81 Год назад +2

      ​@@kling8460 I don't exactly know why it disapear in more recent houses, but i have some suppositions, the toilet paper has arrived in everyone's home during the 19th century, with time, it leads to less usage of the bidet. The bidet take some space and can be replaced by using a shower.
      However,I totally agree, this is way more hygenic. The japanese toilet seems to be the all in one perfect solution :D

    • @kling8460
      @kling8460 Год назад

      I have a japanese bidet and also a traditional one. It saves so much money and much more hygienic. People wash their hands after the toilet but they don’t wash their ass. I find this so strange moving bits of personal waste around the skin with paper. 😂. In thailand every toilet has a mini shower head and also doesn’t take any space and much cheaper than a japanese bidet :) also spanish homes are often smaller than french homes yet still can fit a bidet and also even small Italian apartments. Bidet fan here 😀

  • @isabelledelacotardiere9230
    @isabelledelacotardiere9230 Год назад +3

    Hi ☺️
    I would say that this house would not be your typical French house. It's more of an old country house and my guess would be that it's not where your in laws liver the whole year. Maybe just a holiday home. An old family one. I can't imagine a French kitchen without an oven (unless your mother in law is allergic to cooking 😉) This house also has typical Provence features that you might not find in other French regions. It also looks like a house of older people. Couples in their thirties wouldn't have this kind of decoration/style (mine has old paintings and furniture because my in laws passed away and we inherited their stuff which we kept for sentimental value....)
    But it's a glimpse at what a French home could be

  • @marie9869
    @marie9869 Год назад +2

    In the north east of France, there's tiles only in the kitchen and the bathroom. The most common in the living and bed rooms is the parquet on the floor. In the oldest appartment there could be carpeting in those rooms but more and more people tend to remove it for hygienic reasons. I don't like carpet especially if I can't easily wash it...
    Thank you for sharing some of french culture.

  • @graciepoo622
    @graciepoo622 Год назад +9

    I appreciate the home tour and know this is not something you're accustomed to doing in your normal vlogs. Some tips for the future to make viewers' experience better: 1) ensure picture is not blurry and 2) shots should be of the house and not mainly on yourself (hard to see the house and details behind you). Perhaps being behind the camera would give a better experience. We can still hear you narrating, even if we can't see you. Hope this feedback helps!

    • @cathjj840
      @cathjj840 Год назад +2

      I think this was not her own house and didn't want to show much more illustrative details

    • @marblehead2500
      @marblehead2500 Год назад

      Agree, and suggest that you maintain a clear and steady shot of what you are showing. In some cases, the camera pans much too quickly or the image is too blurry or dim. I do find this of great interest, and enjoy your commentary. Love the windows! Thank you!

  • @maevane6828
    @maevane6828 Год назад +1

    Hello Rosie 👋
    French person here.
    From my experience it is very rare to not find an oven at someone’s house or apartment.
    You are right on the use of the bidets. I don’t think anyone still use them though and personally I think they’re a waste of space. You actually don’t find them in recent constructions.
    Also, the pillow part killed me 😂
    Have a good day!

  • @tyeteames7192
    @tyeteames7192 Год назад

    Great to see you back again!

  • @mysterfr
    @mysterfr Год назад +3

    Hi Rosie, you might want to consider buying some stabliser (DJI osmo or Ronin S ?) in case you plan to do more videos holding your camera or phone, it's will be nicer to watch for us ;)

  • @nicholasrooksby3327
    @nicholasrooksby3327 Год назад +4

    I love this house in France!

  • @morganel8208
    @morganel8208 Год назад +3

    Je ne vais parler que pour mon cas personnel, mais de grands oreillers comme ça c’est génial parce que tu peux vraiment les embrasser quand tu dors sur le ventre, en te mettant plus haut ta tête et tes cervicales sont bien entourées et tu peux choisir de te surélever la tête en le pliant aussi

    • @christianc9894
      @christianc9894 Год назад

      On fait peut-être une fixette sur la clim mais Rosie c'est sur la taille des oreillers, personne n'est parfait.😁

  • @TheAlicia149
    @TheAlicia149 Год назад +2

    I was so surprised about the absence of oven 🤔 The only house or apartment I saw in my life without it are students' room. And still, I know a lot of student buying mini oven ✨️
    For AC, so true.... Summer are so warm without it 😭 But more and more people get it now.

  • @Julot1
    @Julot1 Год назад +3

    This is not a typical french house. This is a south-east of France, old house, inhabited by old fashion people, educated and more wealthy than the average French people.

  • @dream-67
    @dream-67 Год назад +3

    We have an old long wooden bread bin which is used to hold baguettes! A friend of ours used to live in France but gave it to us when she returned to the UK....we have great fun asking guests what they think it is for!

    • @dream-67
      @dream-67 Год назад

      @uta gordon that's what we have, described perfectly 👍😃

  • @LydiaJustineKeema
    @LydiaJustineKeema Год назад +13

    This was wonderful, Rosie! I love content like this! Please continue to do house tours of where you’re visiting! Any recommendations of French television shows or where you find French TV out of typical streaming services (Amazon, Netflix, etc.) would also be wonderful!

    • @mathiasdurand3354
      @mathiasdurand3354 Год назад

      You can use a VPN on these services to watch from France. They have some french/french exclusive content, including animation and comedy movies.

  • @RoseDawsonworld
    @RoseDawsonworld Год назад +2

    well I must say that a lot of these features can be found across homes in egypt and romania, quite interesting. The bidet is a common feature in fancy egyptian homes

  • @UldAses
    @UldAses Год назад +5

    Quick question: is the house a secondary house? (a vacation house?) that would explain the lack of oven. No real need for one if it's for a few months of summer when you're most of time outside barbecuing. The Vidal dictionary is a medical dictionary who list all medications on the market that year (composition & effects)

    • @cathjj840
      @cathjj840 Год назад

      Many French have those - they really love their meds. Maybe too much. But they get them cheap so don't deprive themselves.

    • @UldAses
      @UldAses Год назад

      @@cathjj840 I don't think we love meds too much. I know I would do without mine if I could. We're the 15th country (worldwide) in term of consumption of meds.

  • @justunsouriir
    @justunsouriir Год назад +4

    The big red Vidal dictionnary you show in the video as a French vocab dictionnary is actually a medicines dictionary hence the various editions you can find in the bibliothèque ;)

  • @Kitsambler
    @Kitsambler Год назад +4

    Walking through France on the Chemins St Jacques, I often passed French houses under construction. Almost uniformly, they are constructed of a unique clay (ie, red) brick, roughly 12 inches (30 cm) square and 2 inches (5 cm) thick, with quite a few 1-inch diameter holes perforating the brick. The brick walls are then coated on the exterior side with a concrete mixture we know as stucco. I believe the insides are plastered but they may use dry wall.
    As for showers: North Americans are accustomed to shower while *facing towards* the spigot (the shower is aimed away from the wall), while in France one showers while *facing away*, so that the shower is aimed back into the corner, containing the spray. I had to receive an education from one of my French hosts one night, who complained about how much mess the Americans made in the shower. Also, the French bathtubs are at least a foot deeper than the American ones, causing many trips and falls from unsuspecting visitors.

    • @isagrace4260
      @isagrace4260 Год назад +1

      I honestly prefer this as I don’t wash my hair every day and like to have control over the water flow. My last two places have had typical « modern » showers with two shower heads - one handheld and one overhead or attached to the wall above me - and I still use the handheld 85% of the time

  • @lisaseidenkranz3211
    @lisaseidenkranz3211 Год назад

    Loved this type of content

  • @FloN.
    @FloN. Год назад +3

    Haha, so many of these things you can find in my grandparents' house! (they do live in the south of France) I remember my grandpa did REFUSE to get rid of his bidet when they remodelled the bathroom bc he still uses it 😂but I think it's a very old school thing, most French people today don't use/need/have a bidet anymore. Also, I hate overhead shower heads (what if I don't want to wet my hair?? How do I access nooks and crannies to rinse them off??) and will defend the French way of showering forever.
    I have personally NEVER seen a home without an oven, for what it's worth. Indeed, have also never encountered a garbage disposal thingy in my French life, have only learned about its existence by watching English-speaking media, and it's extremely rare for people to have a drier in my experience (but again, maybe it's bc I'm from the South so we can air-dry our clothes more easily?). We didn't really have books in my house growing up, but it might be a social class thing.
    Finally, just wanted to point out that your amazement at our "unicorn" plugs is delightful lol

  • @Bobrogers99
    @Bobrogers99 9 месяцев назад

    In the UK, the washing machine is most often in the kitchen. In France, it's very often in the bathroom. In the US, it's neither - the washer is in a laundry room or closet, the basement or the garage. European homes often have under-counter refrigerators and freezers, though the "American style" fridge-freezer is catching on. I suspect that this is because Europeans shop several times a week for food, whereas in the US we do it only weekly or even less often.

  • @DRF1001
    @DRF1001 Год назад +6

    I lived in a house like this one summer in Beaulieu-sur-Mer. Only realize how great it is now of course though I was aware that Paris was bloody great. I was so incredibly lucky to have lived there and *miss it everyday, it actually hurts. Have you seen the show Lupin? Any shows like it please recommend Salut

  • @margielavarias1490
    @margielavarias1490 Год назад

    Thank you so much for making this video! It’s relaxing to watch your video

  • @williamkazak469
    @williamkazak469 Год назад

    Nice video Rosie. Thank you. You are loved.

  • @lyes215
    @lyes215 Год назад +1

    I live in Nice and yeah that's typical south of France home.

  • @almatoledo1608
    @almatoledo1608 Год назад

    Merci pour le Nord VPN idée 💡 !

  • @nicolethijs5428
    @nicolethijs5428 Год назад

    Oh my god, those kitchen tiles are the exact ones
    I had in Belgium!

  • @TMD3453
    @TMD3453 Год назад +1

    You seem more French, Rosie! Not sure why I say that.. ! but anyway, I agree on gates and volets. All feels very French when seen together. I hope you’re having the loveliest of holidays!! 🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷

  • @catherinelahmi1651
    @catherinelahmi1651 Год назад

    Funny transcription for a bidet: B day!

  • @tenga3tango
    @tenga3tango Год назад +1

    You should also introduce to viewers that in many areas in Southern France, and some southern European cities, there are squat toilets instead of pedestal throne seat toilets.
    It surprised me when I discovered them in the riviera region.

  • @kerouac2
    @kerouac2 Год назад

    Ovens are super common in French homes. And bidets are disappearing at just about every bathroom renovation.
    A handheld shower head is generally called a "telephone" in France.

  • @agyos
    @agyos Год назад +1

    Wonderful! Thank you!

  • @shatterquartz
    @shatterquartz Год назад +17

    I've always been puzzled by the frequent use of wood as a building material in Anglo-Saxon countries. It requires careful maintenance otherwise it's not durable, and it's way too flimsy for the sort of climate events that occur regularly, for example, in the US Midwest. Who in their right mind would build a house out of wood in a region nicknamed Tornado Alley? The tale of the three little pigs comes to mind.

    • @sarahmacrae8277
      @sarahmacrae8277 Год назад +8

      There are wooden houses all over Europe that are hundreds of years old, in Many parts of Scandinavia despite the cold it is building material of choice . Wood will last if it is properly seasoned before use, the wooden windows in my house are original and 130 years old, the problem today is that wood needs to season for a couple of years and folks don't want to wait so use the timber green. In the UK more homes are older than 100 years than not. WOOD is healthy doesn't give off nasty chemicals is a renewable and recyclable material and very versatile,

    • @ybreton6593
      @ybreton6593 Год назад +1

      @@sarahmacrae8277 le bois est sain ? sauf , s'il a plusieurs couches de peintures . dans le nord-ouest de la France en Bretagne (ne pas confondre avec la Grande-Bretagne anglaise!!!) la plupart des maison sont en pierres de tailles "granits" et les toits en ardoises . chacune des régions de France ont des modèles de maisons différentes , nous utilisons les matières premières les plus courantes de la région

    • @ThesaurusToblerone
      @ThesaurusToblerone Год назад +4

      Availability of materials. The colonists were eager to chop down all those trees in North America, Australia and New Zealand 🙃

    • @ybreton6593
      @ybreton6593 Год назад

      @@ThesaurusToblerone Vous dite quand l'Amérique du Nord, l ' Australie et la Nouvelle-Zéland , la Nouvelle Calédonie , Wallis-et-Futuna, la Polynésie, la Réunion ,Madagascar , la Guyanes , Guadeloupe , Martinique , Colonisés , les colons étaient impatient d'abattre des arbres , çà c'était au 18ème 19ème Siècles , même avant ? a cette époque nous n'existions pas ? là , il est question du 20ème et 21ème siècles , l'être humains a évolué dans le bon et plus dans le mauvais sens !

    • @woodnymph01
      @woodnymph01 Год назад

      @@sarahmacrae8277 We don’t have wood houses in the UK though, so I wouldn’t use here as an example.
      I agree that it’s more to do with how a material is used that will determine its longevity.

  • @jchow5966
    @jchow5966 Год назад

    This is my favorite episode so far! I 💟 actually seeing this stuff!!! ☮️💟

  • @sebastienmorel2950
    @sebastienmorel2950 Год назад

    The prongs on the power outlets are the connections to earth (for safety). However, many houses and apartments in France still have old outlets without earth prongs.

  • @hardiksuratiya9095
    @hardiksuratiya9095 Год назад

    gate we find Infront of kiwi home mostly wooden fencing but of course not electronic unless its some storage facilities or commercial facilities.

  • @rowenn1729
    @rowenn1729 Год назад +4

    In France every home has a oven

  • @chateau7
    @chateau7 Год назад

    I love looking at doorknobs and shutters and hardware in homes - quirky but fun!

  • @bethdaisey
    @bethdaisey Год назад +1

    That looks like a typical American house. Fireplace, mirrors cicadas (live on the east coast and they are out right now). Only difference: AC!! Can’t live without it!

  • @lahermosajarifa7007
    @lahermosajarifa7007 Год назад

    Fascinating video. Thanks.

  • @akashaseekers
    @akashaseekers Год назад

    Thank you! I love this kind of contact and I lived in NZ as a kid!

  • @tatjanasanjic8888
    @tatjanasanjic8888 11 месяцев назад

    We have the same houses and all in Croatia ,there is many similarities,especially on Adriatic coast in Dalmatia and Istria!

  • @jonathanbrett-warren2031
    @jonathanbrett-warren2031 Год назад +2

    Your make up is stunning!

  • @dfinite4089
    @dfinite4089 Год назад

    Your makeup looks so pretty!!

  • @22304abc
    @22304abc Год назад +1

    I loved this introduction to the south of France. I'm going to be visiting Provence in October and Wonder what I will find. Merci

  • @Hide_and_silk
    @Hide_and_silk Год назад +2

    One of the most significant differences I found in French home is the toilet being separate from the bathroom with not even a sink in there to wash your hands! Also the weird phenomenon of large fancy gates but with no fence...or just a wire 'fence' either side.

    • @isagrace4260
      @isagrace4260 Год назад

      This is not uncommon in the UK. I’ve also seen it in several Victorian or Brownstone homes in cities like San Francisco and Boston in the US

  • @noreengaud
    @noreengaud Год назад

    I agree with some of the comments here about the fact that it’s uncommon not to have an oven in a French home. I’ve not been to anybody’s home where there isn’t one. Even my hubby’s grandmother who’s 96yo owns an old oven which she uses to cook gratin dauphinois & roti poulet whenever we visit her. Many French dishes require hours of cooking using an oven and they love to bake too so it only make sense to have an oven in their homes.
    As for the bidet, I’ve noticed that they only have them in very old houses and hotels. Personally, I think it’s a great idea to have one next to the toilet as it’s practical to clean oneself after using the loo and esp for women during ‘that time of the month’ though I’m not sure if you’re supposed to squat over them as you’ve mentioned 🤔🤭

  • @Tamara-cp8nb
    @Tamara-cp8nb Год назад +2

    Crazy I could do exactly the same for a farm house in Italy same features!!

  • @mars7612
    @mars7612 Год назад +1

    The only reason I could think of for not having an oven is the heat? I don't live in France but I grew up in an area with no AC where it got VERY hot in the summer. So, a rule in our home was to not use the oven in the summer because it just gave off too much heat.

  • @jchow5966
    @jchow5966 Год назад

    I love it. Show more! I live in the USA.

  • @heenarangwani2175
    @heenarangwani2175 Год назад

    Never seen a French home without an oven, I mean, how else would they make all the lovely gratin and tartes? Loved the house though. It's quite charming.

  • @Scarabeecookies
    @Scarabeecookies Год назад

    Hi Rosie !
    The flower growing over the wall outside that you love is called a bignonne. I have one growing over my house. They come in orange and red and are very pretty.
    Also I'm really astonished as I never saw a french house without an oven in my life ! xD Perhaps it's because of a family choice or of the way the house was designed ? Or is it a South thing, since I live in the center of the country, near Lyon ?
    Anyways, I really enjoyed this video and hope you had a great time in the South !
    Edit cause I posted before watching the end :
    HAHAHAHAAAAA THE INFAMOUS BIDET !!!! It is quite rare nowadays, but you'll still find them in older houses, like my grandmother's house in a small village. It is designed to clean yourself properly after going to the toilets. You sit on it, run the water, use soap, clean yourself, and then each member of the household have their own towel hanging near. The Italians still use it a lot and find us very gross for having abandonned that device !😆
    Also, I think everyone pays for water in the country.

  • @yvesdelavignette2676
    @yvesdelavignette2676 Год назад

    To have floor tiles in the kitchen of a country house makes sense.
    The tiles are easy to clean. Just a sweep with a broom for dirt, and once a while water and soap.
    So you can work in your garden in the morning, come back inside for lunch - with or without removing your shoes - you can keep your (dirty) work cloth on, you can let crumbs fall on the floor. Children can play outside and come inside for a snack without removing their shoes. After lunch, just a sweep and voilà. You can go back outside to go on with your work. Will not wear out with frequent passage or with you moving your chair. No fire hazard with any cooking device (old wood or coal stoves).
    So for me:
    Tiles. Pro: easy maintenance, esp in rooms where people (children and pets) go in and out frequently. You can easily sweep and even wash with water and soap if something liquid falls on it. Do not wear out with frequent passage or furniture moving. Colors do not fade with heavy sunlight. Ideal for rooms with frequent passage, food hazards (kitchen, dinning room), pet hazards and liquid hazards (kitchen, bathroom).
    Con: feels cold on bare feet, may crack if heavy object (hammer, iron) fall on it.
    Wooden floor. Pro: easy to sweep, feel warm on bare feet. Con: you cannot wash them, so keep that for rooms were there is no liquid hazard.
    Good for "in between" rooms like the living room or home office. Or with less in/out going (cities)
    Carpet. Pro: warm and cozy.
    Con: difficult to maintain. Need a vacuum cleaner and special shampoos if you have pets or if something bad happen. Better to remove your shoes. Fragile to sunlight. Need to be changed/renewed every now and then. Very bad for people with allergies.
    Better for sleeping room, and rooms were you remove your shoes. Be carefull with people with allergies.

  • @malomoreau8089
    @malomoreau8089 Год назад +1

    well, for the hoven you just found an exception, most people have one. excepte if you are a student or something like that.
    same for the shower actually, you usually have a curtain and a way to hold the shower head.

  • @divineangelic2727
    @divineangelic2727 Год назад

    Hi Rosie reminds me of my Italian grandparents house tub with shower thing oh my ! No air condition it was just so awful as I never slept from the extreme heat etc

  • @krishnanclips
    @krishnanclips Год назад +1

    But for the bidet and the lack of wall-mounted showers, this could easily be an upper middleclass house in India and in most countries in Asia. It's essentially in the US, Canada, Australia and NZ that you can find houses that you consider "normal", with carpets, air-conditioning, hermetically sealed glass windows, washer-dryers and gigantic ovens.

  • @divineangelic2727
    @divineangelic2727 Год назад

    Hi Rosie. Love when you open your utube with map of Paris and sing Le vie UN Rose my favorite song ever

  • @isabelledelacotardiere9230
    @isabelledelacotardiere9230 Год назад +1

    A little add on for the bidet...it is not used anymore by the young generation. Typically, when I bought my house I had them all removed to make space in the bathroom. But my parents still have them. You'll find that they are still extremely common in Italy though..

  • @violetamariposa2404
    @violetamariposa2404 Год назад

    I'm from the U.S. 👋😊 I was surprised that there was no shower curtain.

  • @legion1791
    @legion1791 Год назад

    So much fun to watch that 😂

  • @Rachel-rs7jn
    @Rachel-rs7jn Год назад +1

    OMG the shower....I struggle so hard when I go to stay with my partner's mom. Luckily she does have a curtain rod so we attach a curtain when we're there. I seriously am unable to wash myself that way without soaking the bathroom floor if there's no curtain.
    We just bought an apartment where the tile in the shower/tub only goes up to about waist height (because I guess you're meant to sit to bathe?). That's the first thing we're changing.

  • @iamhandy-man
    @iamhandy-man Год назад +4

    I wish someone would explain why they use those huge pillows; I usually fold mine in half when I am there. As an American the thing that always seems missing to me in French homes is carpeting. To many of us, it's soft, inviting, and makes a space seem more welcome. Hard surfaces seem less inviting. That being said, we do use hard surfaces, such as tile and wood flooring, for kitchens, bathrooms, and front hallways. But bedrooms and family rooms are often carpeted. Many Americans (my family included) like sitting on the carpeted floor to read or watch television.

    • @isagrace4260
      @isagrace4260 Год назад +3

      My favourite is wood floors with rugs - best of both worlds :)

    • @aakankshathorat3953
      @aakankshathorat3953 Год назад +2

      I like to sit on floor only .better than chair or sofa

    • @peggiescraftcafe7117
      @peggiescraftcafe7117 Год назад +2

      Agreed with the hard floors are uninviting and cold. Not homey and cozy at all.

    • @iamhandy-man
      @iamhandy-man Год назад +2

      @@isagrace4260 That is a winning combination and exactly what we have for our home library: dark hardwood floor with an antique Persian rug on top. So nice!

    • @iamhandy-man
      @iamhandy-man Год назад +1

      @@aakankshathorat3953 I love it, too. So comfy!

  • @williamwinner4234
    @williamwinner4234 Год назад +1

    When I was in South Africa, every home had a gate but it was because car thefts were so common. There are a lot of gates in Puerto Rico too, presumably because of car thefts again.

  • @sanxmuch121
    @sanxmuch121 Год назад +1

    The Vidal is the dictionary for meds bought by doctors, it takes a lot of place and informs them about side effects and incompatibilities of treatments... it is not common in every home in France 😘

  • @rozenndecotignie170
    @rozenndecotignie170 Год назад +1

    Is this a cottage (maison secondaire) ? I can’t see a French family living without an oven! 😂

  • @TexasHotel1
    @TexasHotel1 Год назад +1

    Clothes dryer is very common in french houses may be less in south of France because of higher temperatures but in others regions it's common.
    And oven are common too.
    About the pillows yeah I don't understand why. Only decorative probably.
    Otherwise it's a cool video.

  • @sams3015
    @sams3015 Год назад

    Hey, I hope your holiday is going well. For some reason I expected big old fashioned ovens in France, like an AGA maybe. As for electric gates, they’re catching on here in Ireland especially in the country side. We have a lot of break ins (and in 2020 dog nappings) that come and go in patterns and also we’ve more door to door sales people than the past and people are generally more private than 30 years ago. As for not having TV in the rooms, that seemed be in Denmark too (or so I noticed) and a lot of people didn’t have microwaves because many people are into organic food made from scratch

  • @jenniferwightwick5158
    @jenniferwightwick5158 Год назад +6

    Great video, Rosie! I absolutely love the sound of the cicadas. I once heard that the French have those huge pillows to be able to comfortably sit in bed and read (perhaps someone on here can tell me if that's true?). No garbage disposal in British homes either, people will either compost if and what they can, or use the little caddies that are collected with the bins.

  • @natasharoesch4470
    @natasharoesch4470 Год назад

    Ah, the 📚 books. I think this shows the intellectual side of Europeans in general. I have noticed that any photos of French apartments and homes always show a stack of books in the bedroom on the nightstand. Books are everywhere. I have several book shelves myself, books spilling out, different topics. My father was Russian and his books were very important to him and traveled with us through many moves. Not so important to my mother. Different cultures are fascinating-habits, mannerisms. Keep this theme, I really enjoy your channel. I like the way you connected the “why” of French homes and furnishings.📚♥️

  • @thejmax
    @thejmax Год назад +2

    Hey Rosie, are your in-laws Medical Doctors or Pharmacists by any chance?
    Because "Le Vidal" is a medical dictionary, mostly used to check drugs and medical related stuff.
    Regarding oven, it's weird. Never seen a french home without one. Even timy flats in Paris will have am electric oven. In the country side or south of France it could be gas oven.
    And the climbing plant outside the house is not a weed! Could be a clematite.

    • @cathjj840
      @cathjj840 Год назад

      The French love their meds - many ordinary folks have Vidals and refer to them all the time. The plant is a bignone (aka trumpet vine in English or by its latin name ). Not a weed in France, tho apparently some Americans consider it so.

  • @Strocophate
    @Strocophate Год назад +4

    That vine is in fact a weed (at least here in the US). It's Trumpet Vine (Campsis radicans), and while it has lovely orange flowers, it's terribly invasive here. Hopefully that's not in the case in France!

    • @Hide_and_silk
      @Hide_and_silk Год назад +1

      It is invasive here too (SW France)! We ripped ours out ASAP! It was at risk of destroying our roof!

    • @cathjj840
      @cathjj840 Год назад

      It's mostly decorative and you see it a lot in the south. Sure, it climbs and attaches, but maybe the hot dry climat keeps it manageable down there. I had one in the north where it didn't flower enough to be worthwhile, tho' it did on the neighbor's wall.

  • @samnmaxforever
    @samnmaxforever Год назад

    the Vidal book is a kind medicine handbook that generally only doctors have at home.

  • @citrine65
    @citrine65 Год назад +1

    Like the bidet not the shower.

  • @ktinland5132
    @ktinland5132 Год назад +1

    As a French person, it is very rare not to have an oven in a French kitchen. How are you going to do your tomates farcies , quiche Lorraine, etc without it??! ^^
    Most bathrooms have a shower nowadays because they are more practical and consume less water.
    I know a lot of French people wich have a tv in their bedrooms also. The bidet is not that common in modern households.
    And we all have water bills to pay in France. The main fournisseur is veolia…

  • @pr6369
    @pr6369 Год назад

    Weird about the oven: I have always seen an oven in a French house.... I don't know the south so much, maybe they don't tend to have ovens because it's hot? Having a cloth dryer is a bit more usual in 3 kids and more families, and if we have a bit of space. My mom has one ;) And yes, considered as not eco-friendly (also some of my friends think it's not good for clothes, but it's because a lot of people use it too hot, I believe). I am against the "no shower curtain" style ahahah, always have one. The bidet is one of my favouuuurite old fashion bathroom equipment :)

  • @rubyerickson9964
    @rubyerickson9964 Год назад +1

    Biggest culture shock when I studied abroad in Paris was the showers. It took me weeks to figure it out….