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Miroir

Miroir Wall Panel Suite with Cove Acoustic Ribbon

A tailored Miroir wall panel with a recessed acoustic ribbon for quieter salon circulation.

Published Reviewed

Collection
Miroir
Space
Wall Panel
Specifications
6

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Fadior Miroir Wall Panel Suite with Cove Acoustic Ribbon — 304 stainless steel wall panel system, front view
Hero viewWall Panel
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.

Miroir Wall Panel Suite with Cove Acoustic Ribbon is made to order and manufactured in our Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time for owners planning a quieter salon, dining wall, or villa corridor. Product imagery shown is a design rendering for material mood, panel rhythm, and spatial intent; final manufactured product may vary after site measurement, acoustic review, finish sample approval, lighting review, and project drawings.

The Cove Acoustic Ribbon gives Miroir a direction that is separate from existing Miroir products. Published Miroir work already covers backlit mineral glow, bronze shadow rhythm, floorline plinth alignment, flush fitting service reveal, fluted linen gallery plane, ipe courtyard wainscot, layered mirror datum, rationalist feature wall, reeded pearl glide plane, soft slate salon wall, and spectral partition datum. This SKU narrows the proposal to a continuous recessed ribbon that softens sound while keeping the wall visually tailored.

Today’s editor brief focuses on American quartz surfaces and Gulf clients who weigh hardness, stain resistance, color confidence, warranty language, and matte Calacatta-look preferences against marble and sintered stone. This wall-panel page uses that decision frame without turning into a countertop comparison. A panel surface also needs sample discipline: the buyer should judge color stability, cleanability, edge comfort, and how the finish behaves under warm side light before factory release.

The module dimensions are 0.6 meters of base cabinet planning, 4.2 meters of wall cabinet planning, 0.0 meters of tall cabinet planning, and 0.4 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 the meter inputs should change the computed shop price.

Designers should start with the room’s sound problem rather than the decorative wall. Does the client need softer dining conversation, a calmer TV wall, quieter corridor movement, or a more composed background for an art niche? Those answers decide the ribbon height, panel width, reveal spacing, skirting line, lighting wash, outlet position, and whether the acoustic band runs as one datum or breaks around openings.

The image set keeps the product exterior-facing. Panels stay closed, the ribbon reads as a finished surface, and no internal acoustic construction is shown or promised. That protects the premium effect and keeps the inquiry focused on wall width, room volume, ceiling height, light direction, cleaning routine, sample approval, and the measured relationship between panel rhythm and architecture.

The strongest version is restrained. Walnut-boiserie planes, polished reveal lines, lacquer-black skirting, a cove acoustic ribbon, parchment wall tones, and a warm side-light study can give a villa salon or apartment dining room more order without making the wall feel like a showroom display. The panel should reward close inspection through alignment, surface depth, and controlled shadow.

Before factory release, Fadior should confirm wall width, ceiling height, substrate condition, outlet positions, lighting channels, panel access needs, acoustic target, doorway clearances, furniture distance, floor level, delivery access, and maintenance expectations. A buyer can send room photos, plans, wall dimensions, ceiling details, sound concerns, lighting temperature, and sample preferences before the first design call.

A Gulf buyer looking at this kind of wall panel usually has two overlapping concerns. The first is visual order: the wall must look quiet from the dining table, entry route, or living area. The second is practical comfort: the surface should soften the room enough that conversation, TV sound, footsteps, and service movement feel less sharp. The Cove Acoustic Ribbon is written around those two needs rather than around decoration alone.

Surface choice should be handled with the same discipline that the editor brief applies to quartz specification. Cambria’s American quartz story is useful here because it shows how luxury clients compare more than appearance: they ask where the surface is made, how consistent the color is, what daily use does to the finish, and whether the specification has a clear warranty or performance logic. Miroir’s wall panels should be reviewed with the same buyer mindset.

The cove ribbon is not a claim that one panel solves every acoustic condition. Room size, ceiling height, floor material, window area, curtain weight, furniture layout, and nearby doors all change how sound behaves. The product gives the designer a clean architectural place to integrate acoustic softness while preserving a tailored wall surface. Final performance should be reviewed with the project team after measurements are available.

Panel rhythm matters because a wall this large can dominate a room. If the vertical reveals are too busy, the panel reads as a decorative screen. If the ribbon is too low, it conflicts with chairs, sideboards, or outlets. If it is too high, it becomes a feature stripe with little relationship to daily use. A good proposal aligns the ribbon with sightlines, furniture backs, switch plates, artwork zones, and the room’s main circulation path.

Miroir is strongest when it acts as architecture. The walnut-boiserie field gives warmth, the polished reveal lines establish precision, the black skirting anchors the wall, and the acoustic ribbon gives a tactile pause. None of those elements should fight for attention. The goal is a salon wall that feels measured, quieter, and more complete before any loose furniture or decoration is added.

Maintenance planning should happen before finish approval. A wall panel near dining, corridor, or media use can collect fingerprints, dust along horizontal ledges, scuff marks near chairs, and light changes from lamps or windows. Sample review should include side light, evening light, cleaning method, expected touch points, and whether the cove texture can be maintained without turning into a dust shelf.

Electrical coordination is another early decision. Outlets, switches, wall sconces, picture lights, speaker points, network ports, and hidden service panels must be placed before production. The cove ribbon should not accidentally cut through a switch line or force a visible access patch. The cleanest outcome comes when the panel layout, wiring plan, and lighting channel are resolved together.

The page also helps sales teams ask a better first question. Instead of asking only whether the buyer wants wood panels, the team can ask what the room needs to feel quieter, which wall drives the main sightline, where people sit, what sounds are uncomfortable, and how the client wants lighting to fall across the surface. Those answers produce a more useful design brief than finish preference alone.

Compared with existing Miroir products, this SKU is intentionally narrow. It is not the backlit mineral plane, the bronze shadow rhythm, the floorline plinth, the flush service reveal, the fluted linen plane, the mirror datum, or the spectral partition datum. Cove Acoustic Ribbon is about a continuous tactile band that organizes sound, sightline, and panel rhythm in one calm move.

International buyers should treat the public page as a starting packet. Send wall photos, floor plans, ceiling height, room use, furniture dimensions, known sound issues, lighting preferences, outlet locations, and desired finish mood. Fadior can then judge whether the wall should be built as a single panel field, a divided sequence around doors, or a partial feature wall that leaves existing architecture visible.

The finished result should not feel like an acoustic product added to a room after the fact. It should feel like a Miroir wall that always belonged to the architecture: tailored, quiet, warm, and precise. That is why the page emphasizes measurements, samples, light, sound, and release checks before production rather than promising a universal wall solution from one rendering.

Fadior Miroir Wall Panel Suite with Cove Acoustic Ribbon — 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 Cove Acoustic Ribbon gives Miroir a direction that is separate from existing Miroir products. Published Miroir work already covers backlit mineral glow, bronze shadow rhythm, floorline plinth alignment, flush fitting service reveal, fluted linen gallery plane, ipe courtyard wainscot, layered mirror datum, rationalist feature wall, reeded pearl glide plane, soft slate salon wall, and spectral partition datum. This SKU narrows the proposal to a continuous recessed ribbon that softens sound while keeping the wall visually tailored.

The image set keeps the product exterior-facing. Panels stay closed, the ribbon reads as a finished surface, and no internal acoustic construction is shown or promised. That protects the premium effect and keeps the inquiry focused on wall width, room volume, ceiling height, light direction, cleaning routine, sample approval, and the measured relationship between panel rhythm and architecture.

The strongest version is restrained. Walnut-boiserie planes, polished reveal lines, lacquer-black skirting, a cove acoustic ribbon, parchment wall tones, and a warm side-light study can give a villa salon or apartment dining room more order without making the wall feel like a showroom display. The panel should reward close inspection through alignment, surface depth, and controlled shadow.

Key features

Designed as a system, not decoration

These points explain why this flagship product stands out.

  • Cove Acoustic Ribbon

    A recessed horizontal band softens the wall visually and guides acoustic planning.

  • Boiserie Panel Rhythm

    Walnut panel fields and polished reveal lines keep the wall tailored and calm.

  • Black Skirting Datum

    A low lacquer-black base line anchors the module against parquet, stone, or tile floors.

  • Measured Release Path

    Factory release waits for site dimensions, sound concerns, lighting channels, and access panels.

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

  • Walnut-boiserie wall panels
  • Polished reveal lines
  • Lacquer-black skirting
  • Parchment-toned cove acoustic ribbon

Color options

Chamois#E9E2D2
Lacquer black#1A1A1A
Walnut burl#7B5C3A
Raw silk khaki#9C8A6B
Parchment#D5CDB8
Fadior Miroir Wall Panel Suite with Cove Acoustic Ribbon — 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 Miroir Wall Panel Suite with Cove Acoustic Ribbon — 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.

Confirm wall width, ceiling height, acoustic target, panel access needs, outlet positions, lighting channels, skirting height, reveal spacing, doorway clearances, floor level, sample approval, and delivery access before production.

The cove acoustic ribbon can run as one continuous datum or break around doors, art niches, and service panels after site measurement.

Specifications

Technical specifications

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

SeriesMiroir
CategoryWall_Panel
DifferentiatorCove Acoustic Ribbon
Module dimensions0.6 m base, 4.2 m wall, 0.0 m tall, 0.4 m countertop
Production locationFoshan, China
Brief referenceCambria surfaces are manufactured exclusively in Le Sueur, Minnesota, using a proprietary blend of 94% crushed quartz and colour-fast polyester resins.

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
Made-to-order productionMade to order in Foshan, China with approximately 30-day production lead time.DisclosurePlaced in the first description paragraph and FAQ.
Design rendering disclosureProduct imagery shown is a design rendering for material mood and spatial intent.DisclosurePlaced in the first description paragraph and FAQ.
Series bindingMiroirSanity catalogSelected by build_batch_jobs from the live catalog.
Category bindingWall_PanelDaily planCurrent unlaunched category from the 2026-07-14 shared daily plan.
DifferentiatorCove Acoustic RibbonSlug contractDistinct from Miroir backlit, bronze, floorline, service reveal, fluted, wainscot, mirror datum, rationalist, reeded, slate, and spectral products.
Slugmiroir-cove-acoustic-ribbon-in-miroirShop slug ruleseries-differentiator-in-series shape.
Module dimensions0.6 m base, 4.2 m wall, 0.0 m tall, 0.4 m countertopFormula pricing inputPublisher computes price from these values.
Editorial brief honorAmerican quartz surfaces / Gulf specification / color confidence2026-07-14 product briefUsed as a surface-sample decision frame, not as a countertop comparison.
Cambria referenceCambria surfaces are manufactured in Le Sueur, Minnesota using 94% crushed quartz and colour-fast polyester resins.Editor brief key factIncluded to honor the daily buying-decision brief.
Primary planning useAcoustic softness, corridor alignment, and quiet living-room order.Buyer decisionDefines the wall-panel inquiry angle.
Image postureExterior-facing panels only; no open structures or internal acoustic construction.Shop image policyMatches generated image briefs.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

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

Is the Cove Acoustic Ribbon ready-made or made to order?+

It is made to order and manufactured in Fadior’s Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time after measurement, acoustic review, finish confirmation, lighting coordination, and project drawings. The public page defines a Miroir wall-panel direction, not a warehouse-ready wall kit. Final width, ribbon height, access panels, outlet locations, lighting, substrate conditions, and delivery route should be confirmed before factory release.

Are the product images final factory photos?+

No. Product imagery shown is a design rendering for material mood, panel rhythm, and spatial intent; final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, finish texture, and measured proportions. Fadior should still confirm physical samples, wall condition, ceiling height, floor level, lighting channels, acoustic expectations, maintenance needs, and project drawings before production because the public image is a planning reference rather than final proof.

Where does this wall panel work best?+

The strongest use is a dining room, salon, corridor, media wall, or villa reception area where the buyer wants a quieter surface without exposed technical treatment. The cove ribbon can soften the wall visually while designers tune room volume, furniture distance, lighting wash, opening positions, and panel access. It should be specified after site dimensions and sound concerns are clear.

What should be checked before factory release?+

Confirm substrate condition, wall width, ceiling height, floor level, furniture distance, outlet positions, lighting channel route, panel access needs, delivery access, acoustic goal, sample approval, and cleaning expectations. Those checks decide whether the cove ribbon should run continuously, pause around openings, or shift height to align with artwork, dining furniture, corridor views, and daily maintenance. This check also protects long-term alignment.