Skip to content

Silkstone

Silkstone Kitchen Suite with Limestone Dish Pass Window

A made-to-order Silkstone kitchen module with a limestone dish-pass window, closed service storage, and a carrara island.

Published Reviewed

Collection
Silkstone
Space
Kitchen
Specifications
6

Quote request

Request a quote for this piece

Send your details to the Fadior project team. We reply within one business day with lead time, pricing, and availability for your region.

Your inquiry is sent directly to the project team.

Chat about this on WhatsApp
Fadior Silkstone Kitchen Suite with Limestone Dish Pass Window — 304 stainless steel kitchen system, front view
Hero viewKitchen
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.

Silkstone Kitchen Suite with Limestone Dish Pass Window is made to order and manufactured in our Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time for homeowners who want a formal Silkstone kitchen with a clean dish-pass opening, closed service storage, and a carrara-topped island. 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 Limestone Dish Pass Window gives Silkstone a direction that is distinct from its apron island, bronze pull counter, induction workwall, courtyard pantry island, breakfast monolith, culinary wall, prep peninsula, and tambour tea pantry products. Instead of another island-led or appliance-led arrangement, this SKU makes a framed pass window the organizing gesture between preparation, plating, and dining.

The buyer problem is coordination. In larger homes, kitchens often need to serve both family meals and hosted evenings without exposing every prep detail. A dish-pass window lets the service wall stay useful while the front of the kitchen remains composed, closed, and visually calm from the dining side.

Silkstone works well for this idea because the series already carries a formal cabinet language. The boiserie rhythm can frame the pass window as architecture rather than a casual cutout. That matters for apartments and villas where the kitchen is seen from a dining room, salon, or corridor.

The pass window should remain intentionally clean. It is a serving aperture, not open display storage. Keeping shelves, rails, and small objects away from the opening protects the shop image and lets the stone surround, cabinet proportions, and closed faces do the visual work.

The island supports the gesture without competing with it. A carrara surface gives plating space and a clear foreground plane, while the tall wall behind carries closed storage for serveware, small appliances, linens, and pantry overflow. The page therefore presents a useful service sequence rather than a loose decorative kitchen image.

The module dimensions are 4.2 meters of base cabinet planning, 2.8 meters of wall cabinet planning, 1.6 meters of tall cabinet planning, and 3.6 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.

For a household that entertains, the useful question is where trays, plates, coffee service, and cold dishes wait before they reach guests. This SKU creates a dedicated pass zone while keeping the cabinetry exterior finished and closed. It can support a dining room, breakfast room, or salon-adjacent kitchen without turning the wall into a commercial counter.

The limestone surround should be reviewed early because its thickness changes the character of the opening. A thick frame feels architectural and grounded; a slim frame feels lighter and more contemporary. Fadior should confirm the edge profile, cleaning access, and junction to the cabinet panels before production drawings are approved.

Lighting should support the pass window without making it theatrical. Soft task light inside the opening can help plating, while warmer ambient light can keep the dining side elegant. The driver location, service access, and glare control should be resolved during technical drawing review.

The closed storage plan matters more than the public image can show. Behind the finished fronts, Fadior can allocate zones for platters, small appliances, dry goods, cleaning tools, and seasonal hosting pieces after site measurement. The public SKU keeps those internals out of view because the buyer-facing decision is the exterior service wall.

The visual direction uses parisian cream, warm taupe, soft slate blue, rose gold tone, and boiserie white as a refined residential palette. Those colors support a formal kitchen without making the product feel heavy, and they separate the Silkstone pass window from darker or more industrial service-wall concepts.

Compared with a simple pantry wall, this design gives the room a social threshold. Food and drink can move through the opening, while the cabinet wall still reads as furniture from the dining side. That makes it useful for clients who want a kitchen that can support hosting without exposing the whole work zone.

Compared with a conventional open shelf, the dish-pass window is easier to keep visually disciplined. The frame can be measured, wiped, lit, and specified like a real architectural opening. Loose display shelves may look attractive at first but often become cluttered once daily use begins.

This SKU should be treated as a briefing object, not a fixed cabinet kit. It names the Silkstone series, Kitchen category, Limestone Dish Pass Window differentiator, formula-pricing dimensions, production location, lead time, and visual disclosure in one place so the buyer and Fadior team can discuss the same direction before drawings are finalized.

For designers, the main constraint is proportion. The opening must be high enough for comfortable service, wide enough for trays, and low enough to maintain a strong cabinet wall above. If those dimensions are wrong, the idea can feel like either a serving hatch or an empty niche instead of a tailored kitchen module.

For homeowners, the practical review should include daily routines, not only entertaining. Coffee setup, school mornings, casual snacks, and cleanup paths all affect whether the pass window earns its space. The strongest version supports everyday use first, then makes hosting feel effortless.

The final quotation should follow measured site conditions, finish choices, appliance clearances, lighting requirements, stone detailing, and internal storage design. If those decisions change, the factory drawings and computed price should change with them. The page presents a serious product direction rather than a pretend fixed package.

During measurement review, Fadior should confirm how the pass opening relates to ventilation, outlets, counter appliances, dining-room sightlines, and adjacent door swings. Small junctions decide whether the finished kitchen feels intentional from every viewing angle.

A final buyer review should compare the page concept against the real household service pattern. If the dining room is rarely used, a simpler workwall may be wiser. If the home hosts often, the Limestone Dish Pass Window can become the quiet bridge between preparation and hospitality.

The service opening should also be coordinated with adjacent dining furniture. A pass window that lands too close to chair backs, cabinet handles, or a circulation pinch point will feel awkward no matter how refined the finish is. Before production, Fadior should mark the real serving path from cooking zone to table, then adjust cabinet depth, island clearance, and pass height so the movement feels natural during both weekday meals and hosted evenings.

Because this is a made-to-order shop SKU, the visual page should start a technical conversation rather than close it. The homeowner can approve the broad Silkstone direction online, but the final cabinet split, stone slab choice, hardware concealment, and electrical plan still need measured drawings. That distinction protects both sides: the buyer sees a serious product direction, and the factory receives the details needed to build a coherent kitchen.

The pass window also gives the sales team a practical way to discuss privacy. Some families want the cooking area fully visible, while others prefer a softer boundary between preparation and dining. This module sits between those extremes. It keeps a serving connection open but lets the closed cabinet wall hide everyday storage, appliance clutter, and cleaning supplies from the public side of the room.

Fadior Silkstone Kitchen Suite with Limestone Dish Pass Window — 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 image set presents Silkstone as a formal kitchen service wall with a limestone dish-pass opening, closed boiserie storage, a carrara island, and refined Paris apartment proportions. The hero image uses a white commerce background so the SKU can stand clearly in shopping surfaces, while the gallery shows the same exterior language in a residential kitchen setting.

The visual hierarchy stays disciplined: pass window first, closed storage wall second, island third. The imagery avoids open drawers, labels, construction details, and visible internal mechanisms so the buyer evaluates the finished exterior design.

Key features

Designed as a system, not decoration

These points explain why this flagship product stands out.

  • Limestone Dish-Pass Window

    A framed pass opening creates a clean service point between kitchen preparation, plating, and dining without turning the wall into open display storage.

  • Closed Silkstone Service Wall

    Tall and lower cabinet fronts stay closed so serveware, small appliances, and hosting supplies remain out of sight from the dining side.

  • Carrara Island Foreground

    A carrara-topped island gives the kitchen a calm plating plane while keeping the pass window as the main architectural gesture.

  • Haussmann Boiserie Rhythm

    Parisian cabinet proportions and refined panel lines make the service wall feel like residential architecture rather than a commercial hatch.

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

  • Parisian cream boiserie fronts
  • Warm taupe limestone pass surround
  • Carrara island surface
  • Soft slate blue accent shadow
  • Rose-gold tone lighting trim

Color options

Parisian cream#EAE0CD
Warm taupe#9C8B73
Soft slate blue#A2B4BB
Rose gold tone#C28E66
Boiserie white#F4EEE0
Fadior Silkstone Kitchen Suite with Limestone Dish Pass Window — 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 Silkstone Kitchen Suite with Limestone Dish Pass Window — 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.

Customize the pass-window width, stone thickness, cabinet run lengths, island depth, service lighting, outlet placement, appliance clearances, internal storage split, and sample finishes after site measurement. Keep the pass opening clean and the surrounding storage closed so the Limestone Dish Pass Window differentiator remains clear.

For smaller homes, the same service idea can compress into a shorter wall run. For larger homes, Fadior can extend the closed storage wall and widen the island while preserving the framed pass-window gesture.

Specifications

Technical specifications

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

SeriesSilkstone
CategoryKitchen
DifferentiatorLimestone Dish Pass Window
Module dimensions4.2 m base, 2.8 m wall, 1.6 m tall, 3.6 m countertop
Production locationFoshan, China
Primary useFormal kitchen service wall for dining, entertaining, and closed hosting storage

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 productionManufactured in Foshan, China with approximately 30-day production lead timeShop SKU disclosurePlaced in the first description paragraph for buyer transparency
Design rendering disclosureProduct imagery is a design renderingShop SKU disclosurePlaced in concept facts and FAQ for buyer transparency
Series bindingSilkstoneSanity catalogSeries comes from the live Sanity catalog
Category bindingKitchenShared daily planSecond planned category for the 2026-07-08 shopnew schedule after the 09:00 Bath_and_Vanity publish
DifferentiatorLimestone Dish Pass WindowSlug contractTitle, slug, and product copy use the same differentiator
Slugsilkstone-limestone-dish-pass-window-in-silkstoneShop SKU namingFollows series-differentiator-in-series shape
Module dimensions4.2 m base, 2.8 m wall, 1.6 m tall, 3.6 m countertopFormula pricing inputPublisher computes price from these inputs
Existing-product distinctionNot another apron island, bronze pull counter, induction workwall, courtyard pantry island, breakfast monolith, culinary wall, prep peninsula, or tambour tea pantrySeries existing-products reviewThe differentiator focuses on a framed limestone dish-pass window
Visual directionParis Haussmann Reimagined for KitchenImage style rotationUses compatible style and category overlay for all four image briefs
Buyer use caseFormal apartment or villa kitchen serving dining, salon, and hosted aperitif routinesCommercial intentSupports service-wall planning without open storage

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

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

Is the Limestone Dish Pass Window kitchen made to order?+

Yes. It is made to order and manufactured in Fadior's Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time after measurement, sample approval, and project drawings. The SKU is not a warehouse-ready cabinet set; the pass opening size, cabinet runs, stone edge, lighting, and storage divisions should be confirmed before the factory release package is approved. This keeps expectations clear before deposit, survey, and technical review.

What makes this Silkstone SKU different from other Silkstone kitchens?+

This SKU centers on a framed limestone dish-pass window instead of another island, breakfast monolith, induction workwall, pantry island, culinary wall, prep peninsula, or tea pantry bay. The opening creates a formal service point between preparation and dining while the tall cabinet wall remains closed and composed. That makes the product useful for homes that entertain often but still want a quiet kitchen face from the dining or salon side.

Are the product images final factory photos?+

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, shop drawings, stone detailing, lighting access, and site measurements before production. Use the rendering as a visual brief, then rely on samples and drawings for final approval.

How is the shop SKU price determined?+

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, service-window size, stone detailing, and measured site conditions can change the specification. That keeps the shop listing transparent without pretending a survey-dependent custom kitchen module is a fixed kit.