“Spending time with friends and family, my children and our animals,” is what photographer and stylist Cathy Kasterine says brings meaning to her. It’s an appropriate statement given that she has just spent the day in the Cotswolds [in southwest England] with her longtime-friend the landscape architect Miranda Brooks at her 17th Century farmhouse. This July, Kasterine captured Brooks, her two daughters Grey and Poppy, and their friend Secret Snow, horse riding and hanging out in denims and Mary Janes amid meadows of corn, wild blue geraniums and daisies. With Poppy styling, lunch made largely from Miranda’s garden, Le Monde Béryl’s creative director Lily Atherton Hanbury’s son Hanmer filming, this was truly an intergenerational happening.
Kasterine, who is a contributing fashion editor for British Harpers Bazaar, spent a lot of her childhood in the darkroom with her father who was also a photographer. After leaving school, she moved to New York and began assisting on advertising campaigns and editorials with photographers such as Richard Avedon and Horst P Horst. Her career break came when she styled Kate Moss in chiffon knickers for the British Vogue cover shoot of 1993 shot by Corinne Day - an image from this story hangs in Tate Modern in London. A recent commission saw her photograph Violet Hume for the cover of the Financial Times HTSI magazine who she describes as a “young warrior.” She says: “I wanted to capture that spirit in my photographs.”
Brooks, is also a contributing editor - for American Vogue - and first met Kasterine in New York through the stylist and fashion editor Camilla Nickerson. Her architect father was a founding member of the Soil Association and she recalls as a child discovering gardening through growing peas. “I had peas and was very obsessed with them. I played my recorder to them every night to make them grow,” she laughs. Brooks studied art history at the Courtauld Institute and read landscape architecture at Birmingham University in England before eventually setting up her own practise in New York - she created Anna Wintour’s Long Island garden. She moved permanently to the Cotswolds in 2019.