Home This California Home Melds French and Italian Modern Design with a Dash of West Coast Ease By Martha Stewart Editors Martha Stewart Editors Facebook Instagram Twitter Website An article attributed to "Martha Stewart Editors" indicates when several writers and editors have contributed to an article over the years. These collaborations allow us to provide you with the most accurate, up-to-date, and comprehensive information available.The Martha Stewart team aims to teach and inspire readers daily with tested-until-perfected recipes, creative DIY projects, and elevated home and entertaining ideas. They are experts in their fields who research, create, and test the best ways to help readers design the life they want. The joy is in the doing. Editorial Guidelines Published on January 21, 2022 Share Tweet Pin Email Trending Videos Photo: Laure Joliet Tai Rittichai, a talented jewelry designer originally from Thailand, built her business with impeccable taste, patience—and lots of international flights and strategic partnerships. The same holds true of her stunning SoCal home. 01 of 11 Laure Joliet If Tai Rittichai had to pick a favorite room in her elegant 1920s Tudor home in San Marino, California, it would be the kitchen. The warm and inviting space is a busy hub for three generations of her family. Friends flock to the island when she entertains; her two young sons do their homework there; and her mother, Somsiri, a talented cook, can usually be found there preparing delicious dishes originating from her native Thailand. Style-wise, it also spans nations: There are Belgian farmhouse chairs and Swedish Hans-Agne Jakobsson sconces, and the walls are coated in Farrow & Ball paint from England. It encapsulates the distinct aesthetic that Rittichai and the interior-designer couple Cy and Genevieve Carter created together over several years, starting in 2017. And it tells the story of her life, from an extremely modest childhood in Bangkok to her soaring success as a globe-crossing business owner. "I met Cy and Genevieve through my friend Zubair Ahmadi, who runs Amadi Carpets, in West Hollywood," says Rittichai through a translator. "I had been buying rugs from him for a few years, and he knew Carter Design from their days at Commune Design [a renowned L.A. firm]. I also learned that Cy had been associated with Galerie Half, a shop where I have bought many items. When he first came over, I could tell he understood what I had already done and had the vision to help me finish it." Cy, a talented Texan known for his refreshing lack of pretension, remembers things slightly differently. "Tai and I spoke on the phone, then decided an in-person meeting would be helpful," he says. "So I went to her house in San Marino, and I couldn't believe it." Rittichai was in the midst of a chaotic renovation, with oak flooring from Exquisite Surfaces stacked in the garage and pedigreed midcentury European furniture piled in the attic. She had acquired the latter over several decades of scouring Parisian flea markets and putting her finds in storage until she had enough to fill a shipping container to send home. The scene was overwhelming, but Cy saw through it: "I thought, Oh, I know where she wants to go. She has really good instincts." Cy also found Rittichai's personal story inspiring. When she was very young, she was sent to live with her grandparents so her mother could work as a cook outside of Bangkok, preparing food and packing it up to sell at markets. Rittichai and her sister only saw her during school holidays. As teens, the siblings made and sold hair accessories, bags, and T-shirts at local flea markets to earn money, and somehow Rittichai managed to save enough to come to the United States, where she worked a variety of jobs (janitor, dishwasher, table busser) to put herself through college and business school. After graduating, she began designing jewelry and sold her chic, well-priced pieces at the Santa Monica flea market, then through showrooms on both coasts, before opening her first store in Manhattan's Nolita neighborhood. Today, she runs an international company with multiple factories and wholesale clients, including Anthropologie and Neiman Marcus. Her U.S. workforce is made up entirely of women. As a self-made CEO, she was reluctant to seek help with her house, so the Carters started slowly. Their first project was hanging a gallery wall in the living room that mixed 19th-century paintings with drawings by her boys, and installing a tailored Atlantic-blue BDDW sofa. Then, with help from her friend at Amadi, they found a 1920s rug from Khotan with perfect dimensions for the long, narrow room. "Once we finished that, I think Tai began to trust us," Cy says. In short order, walls were coming down to open up the home's choppy layout and expand rooms. Serene paint colors and sculptural plants were chosen to complement the furnishings, making it even more welcoming. "My style is a mix of French and Italian modern, mixed with Californian ease," says Rittichai. "It's more about the objects themselves than knowing their provenance or designer. I can fall in love just as easily with something that costs ten dollars as some-thing that costs ten thousand." Cy Carter says the finished rooms remind him of photos he's seen of Picasso's work space, where "nothing was set or perfect," and chairs moved from room to room as needed. "Tai is very artistic, and she had this way she wanted to live," he says. "Now her house reflects that creativity." Here, Rittichai sits on an Axel Hjorth bench beneath a Joslyn Lawrence photograph printed on vintage Japanese newspaper. She bought it from the artist, whose work is now available at Nickey Kehoe, a home-design store in Los Angeles. Art Direction and Styling by Melañio Gomez 02 of 11 So Happy Together Laure Joliet A harmonious mix of old and new gives jewelry designer Tai Rittichai's living room a layered, collected, and comfortable look. The sofa was custom-made by BDDW; the vintage table is by Poul Kjaerholm; and the chairs are a reproduction of a Hans Wegner design (in front of the window) and originals by Ligne Roset (in leather, left) and Bruno Mathsson (right). The walls throughout the house are painted Farrow & Ball Wevet. The Best Living Room Decorating Ideas for Every Homeowner 03 of 11 Hearth and Soul Laure Joliet The custom kitchen island—made of cerused oak with a soapstone top—is where you'll often find Rittichai's mother, Somsiri, preparing dishes with produce like passion fruit, citrus, and herbs she grows in the back garden. Both hanging light fixtures are from Nickey Kehoe, and the vintage wall sconces are by Hans-Agne Jakobsson. They have this "fantastic green patina," says Rittichai, and were designed for outdoor use. 04 of 11 Built-Ins Laure Joliet Thoughtful built-ins like this coffee nook hide appliances and offer extra storage. 05 of 11 Belgian Farmhouse Laure Joliet Cy found the Belgian farmhouse dining chairs on 1stDibs "for a steal," and the vintage table at Galerie Half. The Best Dining Room Decorating Ideas 06 of 11 Modern Bedroom Laure Joliet A simple bed frame by Kalon, a design studio in Los Angeles, is the centerpiece of Rittichai's bedroom. The custom headboard is upholstered in olive velvet, and two pillows from L.A. textile designer Pat McGann, both covered in antique textiles, add texture and femininity. 07 of 11 Personal Collection Laure Joliet Built-in closet drawers with leather pulls are lined with trays to hold Rittichai's personal jewelry collection. 08 of 11 Marble Luxury Laure Joliet Swaths of Calcutta marble, encaustic-cement floor tiles and brass fixtures from Waterworks, and a pink upholstered bench from Nickey Kehoe turned the primary bathroom into a luxurious retreat. 09 of 11 Laure Joliet Rittichai's sons share a room outfitted with RH bunk beds painted in Farrow & Ball Lulworth Blue (a custom shade) and a vintage desk and storage unit from a Paris flea market. The striped vintage rug is from the Los Angeles store Amadi, and the blanket on the top bunk is by Pendleton. How to Choose a Youthful Paint Color for Your Child's Room 10 of 11 Curio Cabinet Laure Joliet A glass-enclosed curio cabinet holds many of Rittichai's treasures, including favorites from her collection of rabbit paintings and sculptures (tai means "bunny" in Thai), which she's hidden like Easter eggs throughout the house. 11 of 11 Outdoor Entertaining Laure Joliet Metal Windsor chairs from Nickey Kehoe and an antique table with a stone top sit under passion-fruit vines on a patio, making outdoor entertaining a breeze. Was this page helpful? Thanks for your feedback! Tell us why! Other Submit