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Celebrating 100 years: The colour-drenched cult of French cookware powerhouse Le Creuset
Celebrating 100 years: The colour-drenched cult of French cookware powerhouse Le Creuset

Straits Times

time25-04-2025

  • Lifestyle
  • Straits Times

Celebrating 100 years: The colour-drenched cult of French cookware powerhouse Le Creuset

April Hershberger's rainbow-coloured Le Creuset cookware in her kitchen in Salisbury, Pennsylvania on April 9. The prized pieces in her collection are her matched Dutch ovens (in the front row). PHOTO: KRISTIAN THACKER/NYTIMES NEW YORK – Ms April Hershberger is not the only collector of Le Creuset cookware who owns so many pieces that she cannot count them. But she may be the only one who built an entire house around one: the deep-red, 9-quart (about 8.5 litres) oval Dutch oven she received as a gift for her 2006 wedding. It sparked an obsession. She had her kitchen stove, the centrepiece of her home in a restored barn in south-eastern Pennsylvania, custom-made to match her collection of Le Creuset cherry-red pots, baking dishes, pitchers, plates and more. The 42-year-old also has pieces in mustard yellow and sunflower yellow, Mediterranean blue and Caribbean blue, forest green and lime green, which she frequently arranges and rearranges into stripes, swirls and rainbows, documenting it all on Instagram. 'I could never commit to one colour,' she said. Ms April Hershberger with her first Le Creuset pot at her home in Salisbury, Pennsylvania, on April 9. Like many collectors, she received her first pot as a wedding gift. Unlike most, she built a new kitchen around its deep red hue. PHOTO: KRISTIAN THACKER/NYTIMES Like French luxury fashion houses Hermes and Chanel, Le Creuset (luh cruh-SAY, according to the official video, meaning French for crucible) is a Gallic legacy brand that has flourished in the modern global marketplace by becoming collectible while also remaining functional. And collectors have turned what was once a niche brand into a near-cult, perpetually entranced by new lines, colours and shapes. Some stick to a colour family, such as pastels. Others focus on a single item across the spectrum, such as trivets or pie birds. 'As an Aries, fire and flames speak to me,' said Ms Arlene Robillard, a purist who has one of the world's largest collections of the company's original colour: Volcanique, an orange-red ombre sold in the United States as Flame. A photo provided by Ms Arlene Robillard shows part of her collection of Le Creuset cookware in the company's original colour: Volcanique, an orange-red ombre sold in the United States as Flame. PHOTO: ARLENE ROBILLARD VIA NYTIMES To celebrate its 100th anniversary, Le Creuset recently released its latest colour, Flamme Doree (golden flame). It is close to the original hue, with a gold shimmer added, like expensive make-up or a shot of Goldschlager liqueur. Months ago, a sighting of the new hue at an unspecified Williams Sonoma store sent the Le Creuset Lovers group on Facebook, which has 97,000 members, into a frenzy of speculation. Two Le Creuset pots in the company's latest colour, Flamme Doree (golden flame), are displayed for a photograph in New York on April 2. PHOTO: VINCENT TULLO/NYTIMES Before Le Creuset, most cookware came in shades of grey, black and brown. But in 1925, two Belgian entrepreneurs – one an expert in cast iron, the other in vitreous enamel, made of heat-fired glass – built a foundry in the industrial north-eastern corner of France to deploy their new technology: coating cast iron with colourful enamel. (The enamelled cast-iron pots are all still made in the foundry, but other cookware and tableware are produced in Portugal, Thailand, China and elsewhere.) A vintage advertisement for Le Creuset cookware. When the company was founded in 1925, the technique of bonding coloured enamel to cast iron was new. PHOTO: LE CREUSET VIA NYTIMES Their Le Creuset pots quickly caught on in Europe, thanks to their bright colours, durability and kitchen performance. The cookware began trickling into the US in the 1950s, but sales swelled in this century as new items were introduced. A vintage advertisement for Le Creuset cookware. When the company was founded in 1925, the technique of bonding coloured enamel to cast iron was new. PHOTO: LE CREUSET VIA NYTIMES By expanding the company's palette from basics into pastels, neons and neutrals, and expanding the line from cookware into tableware, utensils and storage, Le Creuset has become a kitchen marketing powerhouse, with 90 stores in North America. In 1988, five years after the first US store opened, the company was bought from the French owners by Mr Paul van Zuydam, a South African entrepreneur who pushed for the new strategy. Since the company is privately held, its revenues are not made public. The company has produced collaborations with artists such as American interior designer Sheila Bridges, using her black Harlem Toile de Jouy pattern, and with brands such as Star Wars, Harry Potter and Hello Kitty. The US is its largest market, and Japan is not far behind. It has also staged strategic drops of limited-run items, including a black heart-shaped Dutch oven that sells out as soon as it reappears, then shows up on resale sites such as Etsy and eBay. A pot from Le Creuset's Harry Potter collection in Ms April Hershberger's kitchen. To keep its image up-to-date, Le Creuset has done collaborations with artists and brands like Hello Kitty, Star Wars and Harry Potter. PHOTO: KRISTIAN THACKER/NYTIMES After baker Jim Lahey's recipe for no-knead bread baked in a Dutch oven went viral in the early 2000s , Le Creuset produced a dedicated bread oven in 2022 that has become its most popular new piece in decades, said Ms Sara Whitaker, a director of US marketing for the company. Pop-up factory sales, like a recent three-day event held in San Jose, California, generate huge lines and feverish social media posts, especially among buyers of VIP tickets that come with the opportunity to buy a US$50 (S$65) 'mystery box' that can be opened only after exiting the sale. Each box contains at least US$350 – but sometimes up to US$1,000 – worth of overstocked and discontinued merchandise, and fans film suspenseful unboxing videos in the parking lots to post on TikTok. Outside the factory sales and outlet stores, the pots can be very expensive. Retail prices go up to US$750 for the biggest, a Dutch oven called the 'goose pot', large enough to roast a 7kg bird. In March, when Netflix debuted a new lifestyle show starring Meghan, Britain's Duchess of Sussex, among the many reasons some viewers called her 'unrelatable' were the white Le Creuset pots she used. Her cookware was singled out as being too expensive and too pristine, a criticism that some black women said was based in racist and dated assumptions. Many of them, such as Ms Sharzae Cameron of Atlanta, made a point of showing off their collections on social media. 'We have had these for years now – this isn't new,' said Ms Cameron, 42, citing wedding registries, outlet stores and holiday gifts as opportunities to build a collection. Ms Sharzae Cameron with her collection of Le Creuset's Flame cookware at her home in Locust Grove, Georgia, on March 31. PHOTO: NYDIA BLAS/NYTIMES Ms Robillard, the Flame collector, has well over 1,000 pieces in the original colour, including rarities like a 1955 Tostador, a kind of George Foreman Grill prototype by Raymond Loewy, the French-American industrial designer who also created the original Coca-Cola can, the Barcalounger and the Shell logo. Ms Robillard, 73, has a contact in the Netherlands who scours flea markets for her and a dedicated room in her home in Apopka, Florida, for the collection, stored on industrial shelving that has to be bolted to the walls to support its weight. Factory sales and new pieces hold no interest. Her current fixation is a vintage sangria pitcher that she once spotted on a resale site in South America. 'The hunt is always fun.' NYTIMES Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Le Creuset at 100: How enamelled cast iron cookware conquered culinary culture
Le Creuset at 100: How enamelled cast iron cookware conquered culinary culture

Tatler Asia

time22-04-2025

  • Business
  • Tatler Asia

Le Creuset at 100: How enamelled cast iron cookware conquered culinary culture

Above The iconic Flame colored Le Creuset Dutch oven with its signature vibrant orange-red enamel and embossed brand name (Photo: Unsplash/Becca Tapert) Their inaugural creation in 1925—a cocotte in a striking orange hue designated Volcanique (now termed Flame)—initiated a century of product development. This distinctive colour, evocative of molten iron during the casting process, became the firm's signature and remains emblematic in contemporary markets. The company has operated under Paul van Zuydam's ownership since 1988, during which period Le Creuset has expanded globally whilst maintaining traditional manufacturing processes. The corporate emblem, introduced in 1970, visually references metal casting and moulding techniques, reflecting the organisation's industrial heritage in a universally recognised form. Don't miss: Bill Bensley: Eco-luxury hotels' design rebel Artisanal methods in a mass-production era Above The Le Creuset Dutch oven with its distinctive glossy enamel finish in teal (Photo: Unsplash/Odiseo Castrejon) While much of the cookware industry has transitioned towards automated production and offshore manufacturing, Le Creuset continues to produce its cast iron items in the same foundry where operations commenced, employing methodologies that have remained fundamentally unchanged for a century. Each item requires meticulous craftsmanship and progresses through numerous production phases. The manufacturing protocol includes individual sand moulds that are destroyed after a single use, ensuring product uniqueness. The enamel coating—essentially vitrified glass bonded to iron at elevated temperatures—creates a surface that offers functional advantages beyond aesthetics: it remains non-reactive, non-porous and demonstrably durable. Read more: Home tour: Malaysian indoor-outdoor home blends concrete design with African influences Above A coordinated set of deep blue Le Creuset cookware creates a deliberate colour-themed culinary aesthetic (Photo: Unsplash/Dane Deaner) This commitment to quality correlates with premium pricing structures. However, the firm's lifetime warranty policy and the documented longevity of Le Creuset products as intergenerational possessions have substantiated this investment proposition for numerous consumers. The cookware distributes heat uniformly and maintains thermal efficiency, making it suitable for a wide range of culinary techniques, from slow cooking to braising, bread production, stewing, and frying. See also: Bordallo Pinheiro's quirky ceramicware and why they remain such enduring cult favourites Chromatic portfolio Above Le Creuset's precisely calibrated colour spectrum has defined the brand for a century (Photo: Le Creuset) If Le Creuset's manufacturing expertise constitutes its technical foundation, colour represents its market differentiation strategy. The firm has developed approximately 200 chromatic variations throughout its history, each formulated through empirical testing to ensure lasting visual integrity. Beyond the iconic Flame, Le Creuset has introduced colours that reflect evolving design sensibilities—from Mediterranean-inspired blues to contemporary pastels. Don't miss: 7 unique furniture colours that contrast with Mocha Mousse in your home Above Le Creuset launched Flamme Dorée collection for their 100th anniversary (Photo: Le Creuset) For its centennial , the company has released a limited production Flamme Dorée (Golden Flame) variant that references the original whilst incorporating contemporary design elements. Le Creuset's product evolution has progressed from a singular cast-iron cocotte to nearly 1,000 distinct product configurations, all available in the firm's extensive colour spectrum. This diversification has transformed cooking implements into design elements that collectors arrange in polychromatic displays and position prominently in domestic environments. Read more: Biophilic luxury: 7 stunning nature-integrated resorts Cultural significance and celebrity fans Above Meghan Markle cooking in a Meringue Le Creuset pot (Photo: Netflix) Le Creuset has achieved a position few kitchenware manufacturers attain: genuine cultural relevance whilst maintaining product authenticity and heritage values. Literary figure Joan Didion's Volcanique orange casserole dishes were documented in Vogue photography. Taylor Swift incorporates Le Creuset prominently in her domestic environment and documentary material, although the company was obliged to disassociate itself from artificial intelligence-generated advertisements falsely employing her likeness in early 2024. The Duchess of Sussex, Meghan Markle, displays her collection in her Netflix production "With Love, Meghan," arranging Dutch ovens in multiple chromatic variants during culinary demonstrations. See also: Inside Meghan Markle's Netflix house, where she filmed new lifestyle series 'With Love, Meghan' Above Le Creuset's innovative Star Wars collaboration merged culinary craftsmanship with pop culture appeal (Photo: Le Creuset) The firm has additionally ventured into strategic collaborations with intellectual property franchises including Star Wars, Harry Potter and Hello Kitty, introducing Le Creuset's manufacturing standards to alternative market segments whilst maintaining premium positioning. These commercial partnerships have facilitated brand relevance across diverse demographic categories. Collectors like April Hershberger restructure their domestic environments around their Le Creuset acquisitions, transforming kitchenware into a phenomenon comparable to luxury apparel brands. This consumer devotion has recategorised Le Creuset from kitchen equipment to status indicators that communicate both serious culinary intentions and aesthetic discernment. Don't miss: 10 most expensive Lego Star Wars sets to bring home on Star Wars Day Contemporary market position Above Le Creuset in Olive, White Chiffon and Pink palette (Photo: Le Creuset) Above Le Creuset in a Meringue, Oyster and Sea Salt palette (Photo: Le Creuset) In 2025, as households navigate economic constraints, investment-grade products with demonstrated longevity have gained market traction. Le Creuset's slow-cooking proposition aligns with contemporary reconsideration of rapid consumption models across product categories. The brand's persistent popularity has generated consumer behaviours typically associated with limited-edition luxury goods, as evidenced by the requirement for law enforcement intervention at the Andover retail event—perhaps the definitive indication of Le Creuset's exceptional market position. Read more: 7 Chic Cutlery Sets with Design Pedigree Above Le Creuset offers a wide range of colours, ranging from vibrant reds, oranges and yellows to soothing blues and elegant neutrals (Photo: Le Creuset) What originated as a cast-iron cooking pot has evolved into a symbol of culinary sophistication and aspirational lifestyle, valued by successive generations and sought by collectors internationally. In Le Creuset's commercial universe, a pot functions not merely as a cooking receptacle—it represents an embodiment of craft, colour and material culture that has successfully navigated a century of shifting consumer preferences and technological developments. NOW READ Private islands and wealth: How 6 tech and business leaders built their secluded domains Georg Jensen unveils Lituus: Danish designer's sculptural vases transform flower care 10 magnificent multi-generational family homes in Malaysia Best of Tatler Asia video highlights Featured videos from around Tatler Asia: Get exclusive behind-the-scenes look at the interviews we do, the events we attend, the shoots we produce, and the incredibly important people who are part of our community

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