This Charming ’50s Ranch House Captures a Glimmer of a Forgotten California (2024)

Based in Los Angeles, Eric Hughes and Nathan Turner embody the California dream. Turner was on Million Dollar Decorators and is a lifestyle expert, home cook, author, and decorator with clients from Singapore to Sydney. Hughes has designed homes for Hollywood celebrities including Sarah Jessica Parker, his lifelong friend. But having both grown up in the Golden State, the couple, who are both ELLE DECOR A-List designers, fondly recall a very different California, a place of stark beauty, simplicity, and self-sufficiency. This was the world of their grandparents and great-grandparents—and one they have now reclaimed for themselves in Ojai.

This Charming ’50s Ranch House Captures a Glimmer of a Forgotten California (1)

In the family room of Nathan Turner and Eric Hughes’s weekend home in Ojai, California, the ceiling is clad in repurposed fence pickets. The custom sofa is in a Madeaux by Richard Smith stripe, the co*cktail table is from Big Daddy’s Antiques, and the curtain fabric is by Ralph Lauren Home.

It wasn’t the plan. The couple used to decamp on weekends to Malibu, but when that area became über popular, they decided to look for a sleepier spot. In Ojai, just 80 miles north of L.A., they found an old 1950s rambler—a western ranch house that once served as the centerpiece of a working cattle ranch. It reminded them of the homes of their childhood. Turner grew up in the Bay Area, spending weekends, holidays, and summers on his grandparents’ ranch in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada. In junior high, he would ride his horse Cochise on the fire roads into town, ordering a co*ke and fries at the Burger King drive-through on horseback. Hughes’s grandmother Milly lived in a ranch house in Rancho Santa Fe, in San Diego County.

This Charming ’50s Ranch House Captures a Glimmer of a Forgotten California (2)

The dining room’s antique Belgian library table is surrounded by press-back oak chairs from flea markets. The Spanish chandelier is from Early California Antiques, and the map is from the 1920s.

The original thought was to redo and flip the house in Ojai, but the longer the duo spent hiking local trails and river-beds, riding bikes into town, and being on a first-name basis at the hardware store, the more they realized that their weekend home was a keeper. “We both have that touchstone of what old-school California is, and we both wanted that,” Turner says.

See Inside and Out of This Classic 1950s Ranch House

This Charming ’50s Ranch House Captures a Glimmer of a Forgotten California (3)

The one-story clapboard home is filled with such classic ranch design elements as a low-slung roof and wood beams. A giant mulberry tree shades and cools the entire house, even in August. Turner and Hughes preserved the original one-inch strip oak floors in the dining room and laid reclaimed bricks in the kitchen, paired with Shaker-style cabinets from Ikea. They added several Old West details, from a double Dutch door in the kitchen straight out of Bonanza to the dining room’s press-back wood chairs. Even the outdoor pool, an upcycled shipping container, has a troughlike “ranch vibe,” says Hughes.

“We both have that touchstone of what old-school California is, and we wanted that.” —Nathan Turner

The western aesthetic invites the outdoors in, like the board-and-batten wood siding that flows from outside to inside. Closet doors sport metal barn latches, and the family room ceiling is covered in 50-year-old cedar pickets that Hughes salvaged on an L.A. project. “We put the old ranch back into the ranch house,” Turner says.

This Charming ’50s Ranch House Captures a Glimmer of a Forgotten California (4)

The primary bedroom’s walls are painted in Oak Moss by Sherwin-Williams. The custom sofa is in an Élitis fabric, and the quilt is by Heather Taylor Home for West Elm. The Angel Pazmino chair and footrest are vintage, the rug is from Marc Phillips, and the English dog portrait is from the 19th century.

Meanwhile, the lush setting is its own kind of paradise, from the Eden roses that border the driveway to the back garden—visible from the new primary suite and bath—with its mature fig, persimmon, grapefruit, tangerine, and loquat trees. “Clearly some lovely person planted one of each of those 80 years ago,” Turner says. And in the guest room, the Orange Crush wallpaper—designed by Turner for Wallshøppe, the wallpaper company where he and Hughes are co-creative directors—is an ode to Ojai’s famous citrus groves.

This Charming ’50s Ranch House Captures a Glimmer of a Forgotten California (5)

Turner designed the orange tree–patterned Wallshøppe wallpaper in the guest room. The headboards are in a Colefax and Fowler check, the bedspreads are by Schoolhouse, and the vintage Moroccan rug is from Mansour. The artwork is by Mary Maguire.

But it’s not all by hook or by crook. The couple added plenty of modern touches to their renovation, like a Thermador range (“Nathan has a cookbook, for God’s sake,” Hughes says) along with freezer drawers and a giant refrigerator. The new spacious primary bath has a glass and steel shower enclosure and a cast-iron soaking tub. There is a fully stocked outdoor kitchen and gazebo complete with a dining table and vintage iron candelabra.

This Charming ’50s Ranch House Captures a Glimmer of a Forgotten California (6)

Fresh cactus paddles are nailed to vintage wood siding in the outdoor kitchen. The vintage Spanish chandelier is from Early California Antiques, the vintage ladder-back dining chairs are from Chairish, and the tablecloth is in a stripe from Ralph Lauren Home.

While these creature comforts make the house livable, the overall vibe honors the connection they feel to their California upbringing. There is history here, from their nanas’ vintage jelly jars in the kitchen to the ribbons and cards from Turner’s great-grandfather’s time in the Cattlemen’s Association, now framed on a gallery wall. “It’s our collected stuff that feels personal,” Turner says. “And that makes us happy.”

This Charming ’50s Ranch House Captures a Glimmer of a Forgotten California (7)

This story originally appeared in the April 2024 issue of ELLE DECOR. SUBSCRIBE

This Charming ’50s Ranch House Captures a Glimmer of a Forgotten California (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Jerrold Considine

Last Updated:

Views: 6375

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (78 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Jerrold Considine

Birthday: 1993-11-03

Address: Suite 447 3463 Marybelle Circles, New Marlin, AL 20765

Phone: +5816749283868

Job: Sales Executive

Hobby: Air sports, Sand art, Electronics, LARPing, Baseball, Book restoration, Puzzles

Introduction: My name is Jerrold Considine, I am a combative, cheerful, encouraging, happy, enthusiastic, funny, kind person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.