Surface finishes
- Warm-grey satin sheltered cabinet faces
- Pale stone perch surface
- Warm oak slat ceiling rhythm
Cannes
A made-to-order Cannes balcony module with a closed foldaway breakfast bar for sheltered morning service.
Published Reviewed

Overview
The full design intent, materials, and how this system is built — in detail.
Cannes Balcony Suite with Breeze Foldaway Breakfast Bar is made to order and manufactured in our Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time for homeowners who want a sheltered balcony module for morning coffee, light breakfast service, and closed storage. Product imagery shown is a design rendering for material mood, cabinet rhythm, and spatial intent; final manufactured product may vary after measurement, sample approval, and project drawings.
The Breeze Foldaway Breakfast Bar gives Cannes a direction that is separate from its existing drying cabinet, privacy ledge, planter berth, service screen, herb rail, laundry screen, bench console, storm-shutter storage, tea landing, and sink landing. Instead of adding another utility wall or planter moment, this SKU centers on a slim breakfast plane that closes back into the cabinet face after use.
The buyer problem is specific. Many balconies need a place for coffee, fruit, a laptop, or a short breakfast plate, but a permanent table can block circulation and make the outdoor edge feel crowded. Open shelves often photograph well for one day and then collect dust, weather marks, and visible clutter. This module keeps the balcony readable from the living area while still giving the owner a usable morning surface.
The exterior language is intentionally quiet: warm-grey satin sheltered storage, a pale stone perch surface, and a warm oak slat ceiling rhythm. Those choices let the product feel residential instead of commercial. The foldaway bar should read as a planned part of the cabinet composition, not as a loose shelf added after the balcony was already designed.
The brief topic on Perrin & Rowe tapware is treated as a specification lesson rather than a plumbing claim. If the adjacent indoor island uses a Perrin & Rowe finish, this balcony bar can carry the same finish discipline through nearby cabinet faces, stone edge thickness, and service-height decisions without pretending to include tapware or water-flow hardware. The point is coordination: a small balcony plane should still align with the larger kitchen specification.
The module dimensions are 2.2 meters of base cabinet planning, 0.4 meters of wall cabinet planning, 2.1 meters of tall cabinet planning, and 1.3 meters of countertop planning. The publisher computes the USD price from those meter values, so this copy does not state a price, discount, package total, or promotion. Any change to meter values should change the computed shop price.
For designers, the main decision is whether the foldaway bar should behave as a quick coffee perch, a covered breakfast ledge, or a staging surface beside balcony storage. That choice affects clear walking width, chair depth, cabinet height, stone edge thickness, and the way the product looks when closed. A successful version gives the balcony a useful ritual without making the exterior feel busy.
The Cannes series already carries a sheltered, resort-like balcony character. This SKU leans into that character by pairing closed storage with a breakfast-height surface that can disappear when the day moves on. It is not a dining table replacement. It is a compact service point for early light, a cup, a plate, a small tray, or a moment between kitchen and terrace.
Storage planning should begin with real balcony habits. Some owners need space for cushions and covers; others need small service items, cleaning cloths, outdoor cups, or a protected place for breakfast trays. Those decisions should be mapped before the cabinet interiors are drawn, because a beautiful foldaway face will disappoint if the inside does not match the way the household actually uses the balcony.
Clearance matters more than decoration. The bar should open without blocking the door swing, balcony rail, chair position, or the path from the kitchen. The closed face should sit flush enough that the balcony still feels calm when the bar is not in use. Fadior should confirm opening radius, support hardware, user height, and the daily movement pattern before factory release.
Finish review also matters. Warm grey, linen, walnut, oak, and pale stone can shift under morning daylight, shaded balcony ceilings, reflected flooring, and nearby wall color. Physical samples should be checked near the actual opening rather than judged only from a screen. That review helps the foldaway surface feel connected to the indoor kitchen and the exterior architecture.
The public image set is meant to explain the planning idea: a white-background hero for commerce clarity, a room-context balcony scene for scale, a detail image for surface rhythm, and a wider lifestyle view for daily use. The imagery should not be treated as a final factory photograph. The final manufactured product depends on measurements, samples, hardware selection, and project drawings.
Compared with a planter berth or tea landing, the Breeze Foldaway Breakfast Bar is more about temporary use. Compared with a sink landing, it avoids claiming a wet zone or tapware package. Compared with a privacy ledge, it is less about screening and more about the small surface that makes a balcony useful at the beginning of the day.
Commercially, this SKU gives the sales team a practical first question: where does the homeowner want a short morning service surface without sacrificing balcony clearance? That question is easier to answer than a broad request for more storage. It turns the conversation toward width, height, finish, support, exposure, and the owner’s actual breakfast routine.
The strongest version should remain closed, quiet, and measured. Extra display niches, visible brackets, open rails, or decorative clutter would weaken the reason this SKU exists. The product should look calm from inside the home and reward close use with a precise foldaway plane, durable surface, and sensible storage behind the closed fronts.
For international projects, the page gives enough specificity to start a serious quote discussion before drawings are prepared: series, category, differentiator, formula-pricing dimensions, production disclosure, visual disclosure, and the buyer problem. The next step is confirming measurements, exposure, internal storage, support detail, and finish samples so Fadior can translate the public concept into a precise factory package.
A practical balcony breakfast bar also needs clear rules for what it is not. It should not become a heavy outdoor kitchen, a permanent desk, or an exposed serving shelf. Those directions would push the Cannes product into categories already handled elsewhere. This SKU stays narrower: closed storage, a foldaway surface, enough perch depth for short use, and a calm face when the balcony is viewed from inside.
The specification meeting should therefore start with three measurements: the open walking width, the preferred standing or seated height, and the distance from the indoor kitchen or island. Those numbers decide whether the breakfast plane should be higher, lower, wider, or more compact. They also decide where support hardware can sit without becoming visible or awkward.
If the home already has a strong kitchen finish story, the balcony module should echo it carefully rather than copy it literally. A Perrin & Rowe tapware finish inside the kitchen may guide nearby tone, edge restraint, or hardware warmth, but the balcony SKU remains a cabinetry and surface package. That distinction protects buyer expectations and keeps the page commercially honest.
Maintenance should be discussed before production. A foldaway plane near exterior air needs durable surface selection, clean edges, and a storage interior that will not become a catch-all. The best version is easy to close, easy to wipe, and visually quiet enough that the balcony still feels like architecture after breakfast is cleared away.

Visual interpretation
See how the product holds its design language at room scale and in close detail.
White-background hero for commerce listing, room-context midscene, exterior finish detail, and 16:9 balcony lifestyle scene.
Key features
These points explain why this flagship product stands out.
Closed Foldaway Breakfast Bar
A slim closed bar plane supports short morning service without leaving a permanent table in the balcony circulation path.
Sheltered Balcony Storage
Warm-grey satin exterior faces keep balcony tools and service items concealed behind a calm architectural wall.
Pale Stone Perch Surface
The pale stone ledge gives the foldaway bar a durable serving edge for coffee, breakfast, or light prep.
Measured Formula Inputs
Base, wall, tall, and countertop meters give the sales conversation a clear formula-pricing starting point.
Materials and finish
Finish, color, and detailing are selected to keep the product convincing in both specification and daily use.
Surface finishes
Color options


Customization
This is where the product moves from inspiration into a live project discussion.
Fadior should tune the foldaway bar around actual balcony clearance and the owner’s morning routine, then lock the surface, storage, and finish details in project drawings.
Specifications
The key data is organized for clear review before planning and quotation.
| Series | Cannes |
|---|---|
| Category | Balcony |
| Differentiator | Breeze Foldaway Breakfast Bar |
| Module dimensions | 2.2 m base, 0.4 m wall, 2.1 m tall, 1.3 m countertop |
| Production location | Foshan, China |
| Primary use | Sheltered balcony morning service, closed storage, and compact breakfast perch planning |
Quick facts
Material standards, hardware ratings, and construction methods you can cite or verify before you specify.
| Claim | Value | Standard | Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Made-to-order production | Manufactured in Foshan, China with approximately 30-day production lead time | Shop SKU disclosure | Placed in the first description paragraph for buyer transparency |
| Design rendering disclosure | Product imagery is a design rendering | Shop SKU disclosure | Placed in customer-facing copy for buyer transparency |
| Series binding | Cannes | Sanity catalog | Series comes from the live Sanity catalog |
| Category binding | Balcony | Shared daily plan | First planned category for the 2026-07-10 shopnew schedule |
| Differentiator | Breeze Foldaway Breakfast Bar | Slug contract | Title, slug, and product copy use the same differentiator |
| Slug | cannes-breeze-foldaway-breakfast-bar-in-cannes | Shop SKU naming | Follows series-differentiator-in-series shape |
| Module dimensions | 2.2 m base, 0.4 m wall, 2.1 m tall, 1.3 m countertop | Formula pricing input | Publisher computes price from these inputs |
| Existing-product distinction | Not another drying cabinet, privacy ledge, planter berth, service screen, herb rail, laundry screen, bench console, shutter bay, tea landing, or sink landing | Series existing-products review | The differentiator focuses on a closed foldaway breakfast bar |
| Buyer use case | Sheltered balcony morning service with closed storage and a compact perch surface | Commercial intent | Supports made-to-order balcony planning |
| Image acceptance | Hero white background plus 4:3, detail, and 16:9 lifestyle roles | Shop image set | Built from gpt-image-2 high-quality generated images |
FAQ
These questions help buyers compare options and reduce friction before inquiry.
It is made to order and manufactured in Fadior’s Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time after measurement, finish confirmation, and project drawings. The public page defines a product direction, not a warehouse-ready balcony kit. Final dimensions, cabinet interiors, bar height, surface durability, and installation conditions should be confirmed before factory release. Fadior also verifies exposure, clearance, and support details so the foldaway plane works safely in the measured balcony rather than only looking plausible in a picture.
This SKU focuses on a closed foldaway breakfast bar for short morning service, while existing Cannes products already cover drying, privacy, planting, laundry screening, herb rail, bench, storm-shutter, tea, and sink-led planning. The differentiator is the compact perch surface that disappears back into a calm storage wall, keeping balcony circulation clearer when it is not being used. That narrower use case keeps the product separate from privacy, planting, sink, tea, and drying-led Cannes modules already published in the same series.
No. Product imagery shown is a design rendering for material mood, cabinet rhythm, and spatial intent; final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, finish texture, and measured proportions. Fadior should still confirm physical samples, balcony dimensions, surface exposure, cabinet interiors, and foldaway bar hardware decisions before production because the public image is a planning reference rather than final proof.
The publisher calculates the USD price from the module-dimension meters supplied in the bundle: base cabinet, wall cabinet, tall cabinet, and countertop lengths. The page avoids manual package pricing because final drawings, finish choices, interior storage, surface specification, and measured site conditions can change the required meter values. A final quote should follow the confirmed technical drawings. This keeps the public listing honest while still giving the buyer a concrete planning basis for the first quotation conversation.
Related products
These references help the current product stay connected to the wider collection.