Surface finishes
- raw cypress exterior fronts
- sealed parchment-tone ledge
- charred shou-sugi-ban slat expression
- brushed travertine bench surface
- washi-style privacy screen
Soleil
A Soleil balcony SKU that combines a sheltered tea perch, privacy screen, closed raw-cypress storage, and a sealed parchment-tone serving ledge.
Published Reviewed

Overview
The full design intent, materials, and how this system is built — in detail.
Parchment Tea Screen Perch is made to order and manufactured in our Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time for balcony projects that need tea service, privacy screening, and closed storage in one compact exterior module. The Soleil series binding comes from the live catalog, while this differentiator focuses on a sheltered tea perch with a screen rather than another rain bar, coffee plinth, breakfast ledge, service rail, or utility wall.
The module is planned around a calm balcony ritual: closed raw-cypress fronts below, a sealed parchment-tone serving ledge at hand height, a vertical privacy screen behind the ledge, and a charred overhead slat that makes the small station feel sheltered. It is not an open display shelf or a loose balcony table. It gives the terrace one composed place for tea, water, a tray, or a quiet morning pause while keeping daily storage out of sight.
For designers, this SKU turns a common balcony request into a reviewable scope: Soleil, Balcony, Parchment Tea Screen Perch, 2.8 meters of base planning, no wall cabinet planning, 1.4 meters of tall cabinet planning, and 2.2 meters of countertop or ledge planning. The publisher computes the USD price from those meter values, so the copy does not invent a price, discount, package total, or promotion.
The homeowner who wants a sheltered balcony tea station, closed storage, and a privacy screen in one composed module should review both privacy and everyday reach. The screen should soften sightlines without blocking the view, the ledge should hold a tray without becoming clutter storage, and the base cabinets should keep cushions, cleaning cloths, cups, or seasonal objects hidden after use. A strong balcony module looks quiet when nothing is happening.
Product imagery shown is a design rendering for material mood, cabinet rhythm, screen proportion, and spatial intent; final manufactured product may vary in lighting, site proportions, surface texture, color calibration, railing alignment, screen translucency, and installation conditions after measurement and sample approval. Buyers should treat the page as a commercial starting point, then lock final details through drawings, samples, and site coordination.
Fadior specifies the cabinet body around 304 stainless steel construction, then resolves exterior finish, screen frame depth, ledge projection, side returns, drainage planning, delivery segmentation, and site tolerances through project drawings. That separation lets the visible mood stay warm and quiet while the planning remains practical for manufacturing, international shipping, and installation on a real balcony.
The finish decision should be tested against local balcony light. Raw-cypress tone can look honeyed at dusk and cooler in morning shade, while a sealed parchment-tone ledge can appear warmer beside clay-colored walls. The privacy screen should feel translucent and calm rather than decorative or busy. Samples should be reviewed beside the actual floor, railing finish, wall color, and any nearby door frame before production approval.
The balcony setting also needs practical checks. Drainage slope, wind exposure, sunlight, cleaning access, screen attachment, waterproofing at the wall, cabinet leveling, and clearance to sliding doors should be confirmed before manufacturing. If the owner wants a kettle drawer, cup storage, cushion compartment, or hidden power point, those decisions should be named in drawings and checked against maintenance reach.
This SKU is useful where a balcony is too narrow for loose furniture but still deserves a purposeful daily station. In an apartment, it can turn a rail-side wall into a compact tea perch. In a villa suite, it can become a quiet privacy screen beside a bedroom terrace. In a hospitality residence, it can create a small service point that looks composed between uses. In each case, the closed exterior keeps the balcony from feeling improvised.
Compared with Soleil products already published in this series, Parchment Tea Screen Perch has a narrower job. It is not a breeze louver utility console, mist glass coffee plinth, planter service rail, privacy eave console, quiet shade breakfast ledge, rain screen morning bar, rattan shade breakfast niche, sunrail terrace bench, sunset prep credenza, or weatherline utility wall. The purchase decision is about a screen-backed tea ledge with closed storage and a restrained exterior finish.
Before production, Fadior reviews wall strength, balcony dimensions, railing relationship, screen height, ledge depth, storage needs, drainage, outdoor exposure, delivery route, elevator access, installation sequence, and how the module is seen from the interior room. If the module must be split for transport, visible seams should align with cabinet rhythm rather than interrupting the tea perch or privacy screen.
The result is a shop-ready balcony object for buyers who want privacy, ritual, and storage without adding visual noise. Soleil provides the catalog series, Parchment Tea Screen Perch names the distinct design move, and the closed exterior keeps the terrace calm after use. The page gives homeowners a clear starting point and gives project teams the language needed to request a measured quotation, sample review, and production-ready package.
A procurement team can use this page to separate the emotional reason for the product from the practical buying data. The emotional reason is the sheltered tea perch: a quiet ledge, a soft screen, warm closed fronts, and a balcony moment that feels intentional. The practical data is the named series, category, differentiator, dimensions, production posture, and disclosure language. Keeping those layers together helps a designer preserve the idea while giving the factory measurable scope.
For international buyers, the value of this module is that the balcony no longer depends on separate loose furniture. The screen, ledge, closed storage, and side return are discussed as one measured package, which helps the designer decide what is fixed, what can be customized, and what must wait for site measurement. That makes the quotation cleaner and reduces vague requests such as a small balcony cabinet or outdoor tea corner.
The privacy screen should be treated as an architectural layer rather than a decorative panel. Its height, translucency, frame thickness, and relationship to the railing affect both comfort and code review. A screen that is too tall can block light and view, while one that is too low may not solve the privacy problem. The final drawing should show the screen from inside the room and from the balcony approach.
The ledge is intentionally modest. It should support a tray, cups, a carafe, or a small service object, but it should not compete with a dining table or outdoor kitchen counter. Keeping the ledge controlled helps the module stay narrow enough for real balconies. It also protects the visual idea: a calm tea perch with storage behind it, not a new clutter surface that needs constant styling.
Material review matters because balconies change throughout the day. Morning shade, afternoon heat, reflected glass, nearby planting, and wall color can all shift how cypress, parchment tone, and stone read in photographs versus on site. Fadior normally resolves that gap through finish samples, drawing review, and site-specific adjustment before production, especially when the project is in a humid, coastal, or high-sun market.
Installation planning should also account for service access after the module is in use. The cabinet should be cleanable, the ledge should be wipeable, and any hidden compartment should remain reachable without dismantling the screen. If the balcony has strict waterproofing rules, the base detail and fixing points should be coordinated before manufacturing rather than solved during installation.

Visual interpretation
See how the product holds its design language at room scale and in close detail.
The visual direction uses a quiet balcony screen, warm raw-cypress fronts, a dark slatted shelter line, and a pale serving ledge so the product reads as a calm exterior module rather than loose balcony furniture.
The white-background hero isolates the SKU for commerce use, while the gallery views show balcony context, material close-up, and a lived-in tea moment without people or readable marks.
Key features
These points explain why this flagship product stands out.
Screen-backed tea perch
A sheltered ledge gives balcony tea service, water, or tray staging one composed surface without adding loose furniture.
Closed balcony storage
Raw-cypress closed fronts keep cushions, cups, cleaning cloths, and seasonal objects out of sight after use.
Project-ready dimensions
Meter inputs are present for deterministic pricing while final ledge depth, screen height, and storage divisions remain adjustable after measurement.
Privacy without clutter
The screen softens sightlines while the cabinet rhythm stays calm, exterior-facing, and useful for narrow terrace conditions.
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 can tune ledge projection, screen height, base storage divisions, side returns, drainage, and finish samples after measurement and drawing review.
For exposed balconies, the final specification should account for sunlight, wind, cleaning access, waterproofing, railing clearance, and the delivery path before production approval.
Specifications
The key data is organized for clear review before planning and quotation.
| Series | Soleil |
|---|---|
| Category | Balcony |
| Differentiator | Parchment Tea Screen Perch |
| Module dimensions | 2.8 m base, 0.0 m wall, 1.4 m tall, 2.2 m countertop |
| Production posture | Made to order in Foshan, China with approximately 30-day production lead time |
| Imagery posture | Design rendering for material mood and spatial intent |
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 first description paragraph and FAQ |
| Design rendering disclosure | Product imagery is a design rendering | Shop SKU disclosure | Placed in customer-facing copy |
| Series binding | Soleil | Sanity catalog | Series comes from the live Sanity catalog |
| Category binding | Balcony | Sanity catalog | Category comes from the live Sanity catalog |
| Differentiator | Parchment Tea Screen Perch | Slug contract | Title, slug, and copy use the same differentiator |
| Slug | soleil-parchment-tea-screen-perch-in-soleil | Shop SKU naming | Follows series-differentiator-in-series shape |
| Construction basis | 304 stainless steel cabinet body | Fadior product standard | Exterior finish is project-specific |
| Module dimensions | 2.8 m base, 0.0 m wall, 1.4 m tall, 2.2 m countertop | Formula pricing input | Publisher computes price from these inputs |
| Functional scope | Sheltered balcony tea ledge with privacy screen and closed storage | Buyer intent | Different from breakfast ledges, rain bars, coffee plinths, service rails, and utility walls |
| Visual direction | Tokyo Wabi Kitchen for Balcony | Image style rotation | Compatible style and category overlay for all image briefs |
FAQ
These questions help buyers compare options and reduce friction before inquiry.
Yes. Parchment Tea Screen Perch is made to order and manufactured in our Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time after measurements, drawings, finish samples, and scope are approved. The final ledge depth, screen height, base storage divisions, and installation details are confirmed before production so the balcony module fits the actual wall, railing, and delivery route.
This product centers on a screen-backed tea ledge with closed storage. It is different from Soleil rain bars, coffee plinths, breakfast ledges, service rails, terrace benches, and utility walls because the privacy screen and tea perch are the defining buyer use. The main decision is whether the balcony needs a quiet daily station for tea service and sightline control, not another general storage console.
Product imagery shown is a design rendering for material mood, cabinet rhythm, screen proportion, and spatial intent. Final manufactured product may vary after site measurement, finish sample approval, railing coordination, sunlight review, and installation conditions. The images help buyers understand the planned look and scale, while the production drawings and approved samples control the final manufactured result. This prevents the page from overstating site-specific details.
Yes. The ledge depth, screen height, base storage layout, side returns, drainage details, and finish selection can be adjusted through project drawings, provided the balcony structure, railing clearance, sun exposure, and installation route support the final scope. Fadior reviews these constraints before production so the finished module remains useful, cleanable, and visually calm after installation. That review also protects the screen alignment and ledge usability.
Related products
These references help the current product stay connected to the wider collection.