Kein Cross

Kein Cross (born in Dallas, Texas) is an American Fashion Designer, Interior Designer & Entrepreneur, who founded the New York-based Lifestyle brands La Maison Moderne, a two-story home furnishings boutique, & La Maison Moderne Interiors, and more recently the proprietor of Club RaYé, a cocktail bar in the heart of Paris.

Early life
Kein Cross was born in Dallas, Texas. Spent his early childhood at his family home in Bentonville, Arkansas. His father was in the military and Cross's mother was an artist who was constantly on the move, which meant he was enrolled in 17 different schools before he graduated from High School. "What better stew pot for a future display artist than a mother whose gift is tricking the eye, although it’s possible Mr. Cross’s gift for display was something he was born with: as a 6-year-old boy, he was already rearranging the furniture". Kein's love of black & white stripes was apparent from an early age. At the age of 5, he begged his grandmother, a “Southern belle” whose trade was dressmaking, to make him a black & white striped suit complete with a matching hat. Cross attributes his love of fashion to his grandmother's skills

Apart from Fashion and black & white stripes, young Cross had an insatiable fascination with all things French. At the age of 3, his parents bought a Citroen sports car with 3 wheels, which was something quite rare in rural Arkansas, and he was struck by the car's "exoticism". This signalled the beginning of his journey to become the "number 1 Francophile". One day after school, Cross returned home with a book titled How To Speak French, which slightly perturbed his parents, but their lack of enthusiasm couldn't quell his interest in the language, the country and its culture.

Working life & career
During Cross's working life, he has held a number of different jobs. His first job after leaving school was working at an abattoir, which he says gave him the motivation needed to find something he was truly interested in. He soon moved to New York City to pursue a career in fashion and design.

New York
Cross moved to the design capital, New York City. After arriving in the New York, Kein found a job designing window displays at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He then worked as a window-display designer for both Barneys New York and Henri Bendel in the mid-1980s.

Eager to return to the world of interiors, Cross opened Cross & Spellen Home, a modern furniture and home-decoratives store, with Spellen. Ultimately, Cross wanted to work for himself, and so in 1992, Cross branched out on his own with La Maison Moderne Interiors, an interior-design business, and La Maison Moderne, his chic two-story home furnishings boutique at 144 West 19th Street, "pioneering the Chelsea location before it became fashionable".

At La Maison Moderne, clients didn't just shop; they enjoyed sparkling champagne or fresh coffee while perusing the wares at either end of his spiral staircase. His two-pronged operation was a consistent success during its eleven-year run, receiving well-deserved attention from thousands of clients as well as media including: The New York Times, Architectural Digest, New York Magazine, Town & Country, Condé Nast Traveler, Elle Décor, British Vogue, In Style, W, Women's Wear Daily, and Esquire. Eventually, the success of these ventures made it possible to open more outlets and turn the brand into a chain.

Living in Paris has been his dream since he was 21. "I was going to live in New York for a year, then move to Paris", he says. "It got delayed 26 or 27 years."

Paris
"My former assistant, had bought a house in Marrakesh with his boyfriend, and he was talking about moving there", Cross says. "Last September, I was in Paris ... I couldn’t get in touch with him ... his brother called me ... said he had died. That kind of threw things into perspective, that you better do things when you’re thinking about it, because who knows if you’re going to be around next year."

He began his search that year and quickly found his house a few blocks away from Notre Dame in the Fourth Arrondissement. The exterior was battered and marred by a bricked-up window; the kitchen had an old water heater that "stuck out like a sore thumb", and the bathroom was "grubby". But the owner was happy to let Mr. Cross do anything he wanted, and the rent was half the market rate.