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Solstice

Solstice Bath and Vanity Suite with Thermal Mirror Grooming Ledge

A made-to-order Solstice vanity module with a measured grooming ledge, closed storage, and a warm mirror wall.

Published Reviewed

Collection
Solstice
Space
Bath and Vanity
Specifications
6

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Fadior Solstice Bath and Vanity Suite with Thermal Mirror Grooming Ledge — 304 stainless steel bath and vanity system,
Hero viewBath and Vanity
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.

Solstice Bath and Vanity Suite with Thermal Mirror Grooming Ledge is made to order and manufactured in our Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time. Product imagery shown is a design rendering for spatial intent, material mood, and vanity rhythm; final manufactured product may vary after site measurement, sample approval, and shop drawings.

The Thermal Mirror Grooming Ledge gives Solstice a distinct bath-and-vanity direction. Existing Solstice entries already cover towel bridges, basin aprons, powder consoles, linen plinths, halo niches, and crescent vanity walls. This SKU instead focuses on a controlled ledge beneath the mirror where daily grooming, heat-aware appliance use, counter edge depth, and closed storage can be planned as one elevation.

Today's editorial brief centers on ILVE, an Italian maker of high-end cooking ranges founded in 1964 and known for hand-assembled ranges with vitreous enamel finishes and gas/electric hybrid configurations. This bath SKU does not sell an appliance. It borrows the planning lesson: a warm functional zone needs enough surface tolerance, ventilation awareness, and surrounding cabinetry discipline to feel intentional rather than improvised.

For a Gulf villa, city apartment, or primary suite, the practical value is order. Hair tools, skin-care bottles, towels, lighting controls, mirror clearance, and counter projection can crowd a vanity quickly. The Solstice ledge gives those routines a measured line while the closed lower storage keeps refills and tools out of sight.

The module dimensions are 2.4 meters of base cabinet planning, 1.1 meters of wall cabinet planning, 0.3 meters of tall cabinet planning, and 2.5 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.

Designers should treat the ledge as a warm-use planning decision. Outlet position, mirror lighting, heat exposure, splash reach, towel location, and drawer clearance all need to be resolved together. If the client uses grooming tools every morning, the surrounding surface and handleless front rhythm should be chosen for routine use, not just for a still photograph.

The public image set keeps every cabinet face closed and exterior-facing because this listing sells the finished residential presence, not construction detail. Hardware, wiring, waterproofing, access panels, and maintenance clearances still matter, but those details belong in measured drawings and technical review after the buyer confirms the visible direction.

Sample review should happen near the real mirror and window locations whenever possible. Walnut tone, marble movement, dark mirror framing, and warm side light can each change the perceived weight of the vanity. The Thermal Mirror Grooming Ledge is meant to make those shifts easier to read by keeping the major planes disciplined.

Storage planning starts with routines rather than cabinet size. Count daily grooming tools, chargers, towels, bottles, cleaning supplies, and spare paper before confirming drawer height. Items used every morning belong near the basin or ledge, while occasional supplies can move into wall or tall storage that does not interrupt the calm front elevation.

For a double-user primary bath, the ledge can support two grooming positions if the wall length allows it. For a compact suite, one wider basin with more landing space may feel calmer. In both cases, the counter, mirror, and drawer lines should align so the front elevation looks tailored rather than assembled from unrelated parts.

The ledge should also be checked against cleaning behavior. A beautiful warm-use strip is only useful if the owner can wipe around the basin, reach daily items, and keep the drawer front dry. Fadior should confirm splash exposure, counter overhang, handle reveal, and towel location before the drawings are approved. The goal is a calm vanity that can host real routines without turning every morning into a surface-management problem.

For remote design review, the SKU gives everyone the same decision language: thermal ledge, closed storage, broad mirror plane, and finish-sensitive counter edge. That is more useful than a generic inspiration image because it names the exact parts that must be measured, sampled, priced, and drawn before production. It also lets the client compare warmth, surface durability, and mirror-wall proportion before choosing the final finish package.

The ILVE reference matters because its ranges are not treated as loose equipment in a serious kitchen; they shape surrounding counter depth, heat tolerance, and the visual weight of the cooking wall. The Solstice bath module applies the same discipline to grooming routines. Warm tools, reflected light, water splash, and storage access should all be planned as one cabinet zone instead of left to accessories after installation.

Before production, the same ledge line should be checked against outlet height, basin splash, mirror lighting, drawer clearance, and towel reach so the quiet visual idea remains practical after installation. If the site has strong humidity or limited ventilation, material samples and backing details deserve extra attention. The finished vanity should look composed on the first day and remain easy to use through daily cleaning.

The Thermal Mirror Grooming Ledge should stay restrained. Extra display shelves, contrasting knobs, busy surface movement, or open trays would weaken the controlled host idea. The stronger version uses the walnut-toned face, marble counter, and dark mirror frame as a disciplined background for the routines that happen there every day. Fadior can adjust the proportions, but the product story should remain calm and architectural.

During quotation, Fadior should ask whether the client is prioritizing surface continuity, grooming convenience, storage volume, or a warmer mirror-wall atmosphere. If the answer is surface continuity with a practical warm-use strip, this Solstice SKU is a strong starting point. If the answer is towel capacity, a sculptural basin wall, or a lighter powder-room mood, another Solstice configuration may be more appropriate.

The final specification should change if the client changes wall length, basin count, outlet plan, mirror lighting, ledge depth, drawer planning, surface sample, or site conditions. That is why the listing uses formula-pricing inputs instead of a manual price claim. The SKU gives the sales conversation a precise starting point while keeping the made-to-order process honest.

A good site survey should photograph the wall, floor, plumbing points, electrical points, window light, door swing, and adjacent shower or tub before confirming the package. The team should also note where the owner stores chargers, warm styling tools, spare towels, and daily bottles. Those small routines determine whether the ledge feels helpful or merely decorative.

For a family primary suite, the ledge can help separate two users without visually splitting the wall into two unrelated vanities. For a guest suite, it can become a simpler landing line that keeps the counter clean between visits. In both cases, the surrounding storage should remain closed because the product is meant to show finished residential presence, not display every object used in the room.

The result is a Solstice bath module that turns a kitchen thermal-heart brief into a bathroom planning language without forcing the kitchen topic into the wrong room. It keeps the product useful for a real buyer: made-to-order cabinetry, a clear production disclosure, formula-based dimensions, and a measured route from design rendering to factory drawings.

This makes the SKU especially useful when the buyer wants a warmer vanity wall but still expects precise daily storage, measured counter depth, and a quiet mirror elevation.

Fadior Solstice Bath and Vanity Suite with Thermal Mirror Grooming Ledge — 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 the Solstice module as a walnut-toned vanity with a long grooming ledge, book-matched counter plane, and a dark mirror frame. The hero image uses a clean white commerce background so the SKU can stand clearly in shopping surfaces.

The gallery keeps the same exterior language across room, detail, and lifestyle views. No image relies on open drawers, visible labels, plumbing exposure, or construction detail, which protects the product's finished residential intent.

Key features

Designed as a system, not decoration

These points explain why this flagship product stands out.

  • Thermal Grooming Ledge

    The long ledge gives daily warm-use tools and wash routines a measured landing line without open shelving.

  • Closed Solstice Storage

    Calm drawer fronts keep towels, refills, and grooming tools hidden behind finished exterior planes.

  • Mirror-Wall Planning

    Counter depth, mirror clearance, outlet location, and ledge height can be reviewed together before production.

  • Measured Formula Inputs

    Base, wall, tall, and countertop meters give the quotation a clear formula-pricing starting point.

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 vanity fronts
  • Book-matched marble counter
  • Lacquer-black mirror frame
  • Warm grooming ledge
  • Oak parquet residential context

Color options

Chamois#E9E2D2
Lacquer black#1A1A1A
Walnut burl#7B5C3A
Raw silk khaki#9C8A6B
Parchment#D5CDB8
Fadior Solstice Bath and Vanity Suite with Thermal Mirror Grooming Ledge — close-up of stainless steel finish and hardware
Finish and detail02
Design rendering — final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, and finish texture.
Fadior Solstice Bath and Vanity Suite with Thermal Mirror Grooming Ledge — lifestyle setting with natural light and
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 ledge depth, basin count, mirror lighting, outlet position, drawer planning, towel storage, splash height, sample finish, and wall length after site measurement.

For larger primary suites, Fadior can extend the same ledge into a double grooming wall. For compact bathrooms, it can compress into one basin bay while preserving the warm mirror-wall planning language.

Specifications

Technical specifications

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

SeriesSolstice
CategoryBath_and_Vanity
DifferentiatorThermal Mirror Grooming Ledge
Module dimensions2.4 m base, 1.1 m wall, 0.3 m tall, 2.5 m countertop
Production locationFoshan, China
Primary usePrimary bathroom vanity wall, warm grooming ledge, closed storage, and mirror clearance planning

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 bindingSolsticeSanity catalogSeries comes from the live Sanity catalog
Category bindingBath_and_VanityShared daily planThird active category for the 2026-07-11 shopnew schedule
DifferentiatorThermal Mirror Grooming LedgeSlug contractTitle, slug, and product copy use the same differentiator
Slugsolstice-thermal-mirror-grooming-ledge-in-solsticeShop SKU namingFollows series-differentiator-in-series shape
Module dimensions2.4 m base, 1.1 m wall, 0.3 m tall, 2.5 m countertopFormula pricing inputPublisher computes price from these inputs
Existing-product distinctionNot another towel bridge, basin apron, powder console, linen plinth, halo niche, or crescent vanity wallSeries existing-products reviewThe differentiator focuses on a controlled mirror ledge for grooming heat-zone planning
Brief honorILVE range planning is translated into a bath vanity discussion about warmth, surface tolerance, and counter-adjacent ledge disciplineEditorial briefAdapts the luxury kitchen thermal-heart brief into a Bath_and_Vanity SKU
Image acceptanceHero is square on a clean white background; supporting images cover 4:3 and 16:9Shop SKU visual gateSupports commerce feed and product-page image requirements

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

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

Is the Thermal Mirror Grooming Ledge vanity 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, sample approval, and shop drawings. The listing is not a warehouse-ready vanity kit. Wall length, basin count, outlet position, mirror clearance, ledge depth, and drawer planning should be confirmed before the factory release package is approved. The client should also review surface samples beside the actual mirror light so the vanity does not become too dark, too warm, or visually heavy.

Why does this Solstice SKU focus on a warm grooming ledge?+

The product responds to today's ILVE brief by translating thermal-zone planning from the luxury kitchen into the primary bathroom. The point is not to place a range in the bath; it is to plan a warm functional strip with enough counter tolerance, outlet discipline, mirror clearance, and closed storage around it. That makes the SKU useful for homeowners who want daily grooming tools handled neatly without turning the vanity into a cluttered open shelf.

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, site measurements, plumbing positions, electrical locations, shop drawings, and production details before manufacturing the finished vanity module. The physical sample and drawing package remain the production authority, while the rendering helps align buyer, designer, and factory team around the same visible direction before fabrication begins.

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, basin count, ledge depth, outlet planning, and measured site conditions can change the specification before production. Final cost can also change when the client changes mirror lighting, counter depth, storage layout, or site constraints, so formula inputs are safer than a fixed public price claim.