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Gloria

Gloria Wine Cabinet with Chalk Plaster Bottle Salon

A custom Gloria wine cabinet module with a chalk-plaster bottle salon, blond-ash fronts, a matte off-white ceramic service top, and a durable 304 stainless steel cabinet body.

Published Reviewed

Collection
Gloria
Space
Wine Cabinet
Specifications
6

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Fadior Gloria Wine Cabinet with Chalk Plaster Bottle Salon — 304 stainless steel wine cabinet system, front view
Hero viewWine Cabinet
Design rendering — final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, and finish texture.

Overview

About this piece

The full design intent, materials, and how this system is built — in detail.

Gloria Chalk Plaster Bottle Salon is made to order in our Foshan, China factory, with an approximate 30-day production lead time before shipping coordination. It is a custom wine cabinet module for homes that need composed bottle storage, aperitif service, and a pale architectural cabinet wall that stays useful without turning the dining area into a commercial bar.

The differentiator is the Chalk Plaster Bottle Salon. Existing Gloria products already cover an amber service wall, a cognac gallery tasting bar, and a quiet brass bottle spine. This SKU moves the series toward a softer coastal villa expression: circular bottle recesses, a chalk-painted surround, blond-ash lower fronts, and a matte off-white ceramic service top.

The module is meant for clients who collect enough wine to need order, but who still want the surrounding room to feel calm. Bottles sit in measured recesses above a closed cabinet base, while glasses, a decanter, a small tray, or an aperitif setup can rest on the ceramic top during hosting. When the moment ends, the lower storage remains visually quiet.

For homeowners, the benefit is daily discipline. Wine service often spreads across a dining table, kitchen counter, sideboard, and pantry shelf. This module gives that routine one place: bottle selection above, serving tools below, and a wipeable top between the two. It supports entertaining without making the room depend on display clutter.

For interior designers, the value is a named object that can be coordinated early. The Chalk Plaster Bottle Salon can align with a dining threshold, living room sightline, terrace door, wall niche, lighting cove, floor finish, and ceiling depth. It gives the design team a precise wine cabinet concept rather than a vague request for extra storage.

For procurement teams, the SKU creates a clear commercial starting point. The bundle states the Gloria series binding, Wine_Cabinet category, module dimensions, product type, Google category, differentiator, and disclosure notes before a buyer asks for drawings or samples. That makes comparison easier across wine walls, tasting bars, cellar niches, and built-in credenzas.

The visible finish direction is deliberately light. Blond ash veneer keeps the cabinet fronts residential, chalk-painted plaster softens the bottle recesses, and the matte off-white ceramic top gives service a practical surface. The palette can sit beside pale floors, coastal views, dining furniture, or a quiet kitchen without pulling the whole room into a dark cellar mood.

A 304 stainless steel cabinet body sits behind the visible finish. That concealed structure matters because bottle storage, base doors, service drawers, and counter support must handle repeated cleaning, weight, humidity variation, and frequent touch. The buyer sees a pale custom cabinet face, while the cabinet basis supports alignment and long residential use.

The formula dimensions set a practical scope for discussion. The concept uses 2.8 meters of base cabinet planning, 1.0 meter of wall cabinet planning, 2.2 meters of tall cabinet planning, and 1.6 meters of countertop planning. The publisher computes commerce fields from those measurements, while final shop drawings adjust to the measured site.

The bottle-salon layout is not an instruction to expose mechanisms. It describes a finished exterior rhythm where selected bottles are visible in clean recesses and the lower storage remains closed. The design should be reviewed for proportion, recess depth, service clearance, and finish sample direction, then adapted to the project before production documents are confirmed.

The module is strongest where a wine cabinet needs to support hospitality rather than dominate it. In a coastal villa, it can sit between dining and terrace. In an apartment, it can replace a loose sideboard. In a formal kitchen, it can become the softer transition between cooking storage and dinner service.

Customization can stay practical. Fadior can adjust bottle recess count, recess diameter, cabinet height, base door split, top thickness, side panel depth, lighting groove, socket placement, glassware storage, tray clearance, plinth treatment, finish tone, ceramic sample, freight scope, and installation sequence after actual measurements and client habits are reviewed.

The image set is planned for buyer inspection rather than fantasy. The white hero isolates the cabinet for commerce review. The midscene shows circulation and dining relationship. The detail image studies the plaster recesses, ceramic top edge, panel alignment, and surface quality. The lifestyle image shows an unoccupied aperitif moment before dinner.

Maintenance is part of the decision. Pale finishes can work in daily service only when the cabinet has a clear reset routine. The ceramic top can be wiped after glasses and trays, the closed base keeps accessories out of sight, and the bottle recesses make selection visible without requiring open shelving across the whole wall.

The SKU also helps the sales conversation stay specific. Instead of asking whether the client wants a larger wine area, the team can ask how many bottles should stay visible, whether the service top supports aperitifs or dinner wine, how glasses are stored, and whether the cabinet should face the dining table, terrace, or kitchen.

Architects can coordinate the module with structural walls, door swings, terrace glazing, floor transitions, lighting drivers, wall reinforcement, moisture planning, ventilation route, and furniture placement. Those choices are easier when the product is named, dimensioned, and tied to a specific service behavior instead of treated as loose millwork.

The module is not designed for buyers who want a walk-in cellar, retail-style bottle wall, or a heavily ornamented tasting room. It is better for clients who want a pale built-in wine cabinet that supports hosting, keeps the lower zone closed, and carries enough bottle visibility to make service intuitive.

Because the cabinet is made for custom projects, final review should focus on fit. The client should confirm bottle capacity, glassware storage, dining clearance, top height, finish samples, cabinet body requirements, delivery access, and installation timing before approval. Those decisions turn the shop SKU into a project-specific order.

The result is a wine cabinet module with a clear reason to exist inside the Gloria series. It expands the family from warmer cellar and tasting-bar directions toward a lighter bottle-salon wall, while keeping the same expectations for durable structure, precise alignment, custom planning, and premium residential finish.

Buyers can use the SKU as a coordination checkpoint for the wider home. The wine cabinet may affect dining table position, terrace circulation, wall lighting, glassware quantity, service tray width, and the way guests see the room from adjacent spaces. Reviewing those choices around one named module reduces late changes after drawings move into production review.

It also gives sales teams a more useful comparison point. A client can decide whether the project needs a cabinet with visible recesses, a deeper tasting bar, a closed cellar service wall, or a bottle spine. That keeps the conversation tied to real room behavior instead of general luxury language.

Gloria Chalk Plaster Bottle Salon should feel quiet before it feels impressive. Its value is the way it organizes a social ritual, keeps the room pale and composed, and gives a custom project a durable wine-service element that can be measured, priced, sampled, manufactured, shipped, and installed with fewer ambiguous decisions.

Before ordering, the buyer should decide whether this module is primarily for everyday evening service, weekend hosting, or display-led collecting. That choice affects recess count, lower drawer planning, glassware placement, service top width, nearby seating, and lighting warmth. Capturing those decisions early helps Fadior turn the shop module into a clean project package instead of a loose cabinet request.

Fadior Gloria Wine Cabinet with Chalk Plaster Bottle Salon — interior room context showing cabinet integration
Interior perspective01
Design rendering — final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, and finish texture.

Visual interpretation

How this product reads at room scale

See how the product holds its design language at room scale and in close detail.

The visual direction presents a pale blond-ash wine cabinet with chalk-painted plaster recesses, a matte off-white ceramic top, cool soft daylight, and a calm dining-adjacent service rhythm for buyer inspection.

The white hero supports commerce review, while the room images show the same closed wine cabinet supporting aperitif service without exposing mechanisms, construction details, or daily clutter.

Key features

Designed as a system, not decoration

These points explain why this flagship product stands out.

  • Chalk plaster bottle salon

    Measured bottle recesses give the wine cabinet visible order while keeping the surrounding room pale and composed.

  • Matte ceramic service top

    A practical top supports glasses, trays, decanting, and aperitif preparation before the cabinet is reset.

  • 304 stainless cabinet body

    The concealed cabinet basis supports alignment, cleaning, humidity resistance, and repeated service use.

  • Closed blond-ash storage

    Lower fronts keep glassware, accessories, and serving tools organized without open-shelf clutter.

Materials and finish

Material choices that support the design language.

Finish, color, and detailing are selected to keep the product convincing in both specification and daily use.

Surface finishes

  • Blond-ash cabinet fronts
  • Chalk-painted plaster bottle recesses
  • Matte off-white ceramic service top
  • Whitewashed wide-plank floor tone
  • 304 stainless steel cabinet body

Color options

Chalk White#F4EFE6
Flax Linen#D5CABA
Blond Ash#B89D7A
Slate Misty Blue#5C6772
Lambswool#EAE5D9
Fadior Gloria Wine Cabinet with Chalk Plaster Bottle Salon — close-up of stainless steel finish and hardware detail
Finish and detail02
Design rendering — final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, and finish texture.
Fadior Gloria Wine Cabinet with Chalk Plaster Bottle Salon — lifestyle setting with natural light and residential styling
Adaptation study03
Design rendering — final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, and finish texture.

Customization

Adapting this product for your home

This is where the product moves from inspiration into a live project discussion.

Designers may adjust bottle recess count, recess diameter, cabinet height, base door split, service top thickness, side panel depth, lighting groove, socket placement, glassware storage, tray clearance, plinth treatment, finish tone, ceramic sample, freight scope, and installation sequence after site measurements are reviewed.

The Chalk Plaster Bottle Salon can stay compact for an apartment dining wall, expand for a coastal villa entertaining zone, or align with a formal kitchen where wine service needs one controlled cabinet surface beside the dining threshold.

Specifications

Technical specifications

The key data is organized for clear review before planning and quotation.

Base cabinet planning2.8 meters
Wall cabinet planning1.0 meter
Tall cabinet planning2.2 meters
Countertop planning1.6 meters
Primary cabinet material304 stainless steel
Visible finish directionBlond-ash fronts, chalk-painted plaster bottle recesses, matte off-white ceramic top, chalk white walls, flax linen softness, and slate misty blue accents

Quick facts

Verifiable facts, at a glance.

Material standards, hardware ratings, and construction methods you can cite or verify before you specify.

Quick reference facts about this Fadior product.
ClaimValueStandardContext
Series bindingGloriaSanity-backed Wine_Cabinet product series.
DifferentiatorChalk Plaster Bottle SalonDistinct from Gloria amber service wall, cognac gallery tasting bar, and quiet bottle spine products.
Base cabinet planning2.8 metersFormula input for publisher-computed commerce price.
Wall cabinet planning1.0 meterSupports bottle-salon recess planning above the service base.
Tall cabinet planning2.2 metersDefines vertical cabinet scope for wine storage and service alignment.
Countertop planning1.6 metersService plane for glasses, trays, and aperitif preparation.
Primary cabinet basis304 stainless steelConcealed structure behind the visible wine cabinet finish.
Visible finish directionBlond-ash fronts, chalk-painted plaster recesses, matte off-white ceramic top, and pale coastal lightCopenhagen-influenced residential wine cabinet expression.
Best-fit settingCoastal villa dining wall, apartment sideboard zone, or formal kitchen thresholdDesigned for aperitif service and quiet bottle display.
Transparency noteProduct imagery shown is a design rendering; final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, and finish texture.Required buyer-facing image disclosure.
Commerce availabilityPreorder after validationPublisher writes availability and availability date at live publish.
Search intentCustom luxury wine cabinet with pale bottle recesses and closed storageTargets buyers comparing built-in wine walls, aperitif cabinets, and custom dining storage.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

These questions help buyers compare options and reduce friction before inquiry.

What makes Chalk Plaster Bottle Salon different from other Gloria wine cabinets?+

This SKU focuses on a pale bottle-salon wall with chalk-painted recesses and a matte ceramic service top, while existing Gloria directions already cover an amber cellar service wall, a cognac gallery tasting bar, and a quiet bottle spine. The buyer is choosing a lighter dining-adjacent wine cabinet that keeps lower storage closed, makes selected bottles visible, and gives aperitif service a defined surface.

Can the bottle recesses and storage layout be customized?+

Yes. The published dimensions create a commercial starting point, but Fadior can adjust recess count, recess diameter, cabinet height, door split, glassware storage, tray clearance, service top thickness, lighting groove, socket placement, side panel depth, finish samples, plinth detail, freight scope, and installation sequence after actual measurements are reviewed. The goal is to match bottle capacity and hosting habits without losing the calm built-in look.

Why does this wine cabinet use a 304 stainless steel cabinet body?+

Wine cabinet storage needs a reliable concealed basis because bottles, glasses, service trays, and lower cabinet doors create repeated weight, cleaning, and handling demands. A 304 stainless steel cabinet body supports alignment, humidity resistance, and daily service behind the blond-ash fronts, chalk-painted plaster recesses, and ceramic top. The visible room stays soft and residential, while the cabinet structure is planned for long use.

How should buyers read the product images before ordering?+

Product imagery is a design rendering for evaluating proportion, finish direction, bottle-salon rhythm, and dining-adjacent atmosphere before final measurements. The manufactured product may vary in wood tone, plaster texture, ceramic sample, room light, bottle capacity, surrounding architecture, and site details. Buyers should use the images to confirm the Chalk Plaster Bottle Salon concept, then review drawings, samples, dimensions, freight scope, and installation planning with Fadior.

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