Surface finishes
- Matte black closed fronts
- Weathered stone counter
- Cedar mirror frame
- Pale plaster basin surround
- Overcast grey floor and wall tones
Verve
A grounded Verve vanity module with a closed obsidian plinth, weathered stone basin deck, and cedar-framed mirror rhythm.
Published Reviewed

Overview
The full design intent, materials, and how this system is built — in detail.
Verve Obsidian Towel Plinth is made to order and manufactured in our Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time for bath projects that need a closed vanity wall, a weathered stone basin deck, and a grounded lower plinth without open towel shelving.
The differentiator is the Obsidian Towel Plinth itself. Existing Verve directions already cover architectural spa vanity, basalt ribbon wash niche, bronze mirror plinth, candlelit tolerance wash wall, fluted halo wash wall, limewash double basin alcove, sculpted faucet ledge, stone reveal basin wall, and twin glow basin ledge ideas. This SKU is different because the lowest band of the vanity becomes a solid closed plinth, giving the bath a heavier architectural base while keeping towels and daily products hidden behind finished fronts.
The module is planned for primary baths, villa suites, and hospitality-style residences where the basin wall should feel calm even when the room is used every day. The closed plinth gives the vanity a strong horizontal datum below the drawers, so the weathered counter, cedar mirror frame, and matte front rhythm read as one measured composition.
Fadior specifies the cabinet body around 304 stainless steel construction, then resolves the exterior finish, basin deck depth, plinth height, drawer rhythm, mirror frame, wall fixing, and cleaning clearances through measured drawings. The result is durable bath storage that still looks quiet, grounded, and residential.
The visual direction is deliberately restrained. Matte black closed fronts, weathered stone, cedar framing, pale wall planes, and overcast-toned surfaces create a bath suite that feels tactile without becoming decorative.
The page shows a design direction for one Verve shop SKU rather than a fixed stock vanity. The design rendering shown on this product page is for material mood, cabinet rhythm, and spatial intent. Final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, site proportions, surface texture, and finish depth after measurement and sample approval.
For homeowners, the value is a cleaner primary bath. Towels, bottles, and daily-use items do not need to sit in open cubbies under the basin. The plinth keeps the lower view closed, while the counter and mirror remain visually composed.
For architects, the module gives a clear planning language: a closed basin-storage wall with a low architectural base. That makes it easier to coordinate mirror width, basin placement, lighting, stone return, floor transitions, and nearby shower glass or window lines.
Buyers should treat the meter inputs as a transparent starting point for formula pricing and early comparison. Final dimensions, finish samples, plumbing positions, installation access, delivery route, basin specification, and internal storage balance are confirmed before production.
The plinth is intentionally not an open shelf. It is a finished lower face that can conceal towel storage, cleaning items, or reserve bath supplies behind the project-specific internal layout. This keeps the front of the vanity visually calm after the room is used.
The basin deck can be planned as a single long counter, a centered wash zone, or an offset basin arrangement depending on wall length and plumbing. The important point is that the closed plinth remains a continuous base under the drawer rhythm.
In compact baths, the plinth can make the vanity feel anchored without adding loose furniture. In larger suites, it can align with a shower curb, stone threshold, wall reveal, or full-height mirror frame.
Fadior reviews all of these relationships before production because a bath vanity must handle water, cleaning, daily touch, and long-term alignment.
Finish coordination matters. Matte black surfaces need the right sheen, edge detail, and cleaning expectations. Weathered stone needs credible thickness and a basin cut that feels resolved. Cedar framing should warm the mirror plane without turning the vanity into a rustic object. The Obsidian Towel Plinth balances those choices by making the lower band simple and closed.
The module also helps project teams discuss scope early. Instead of pricing a generic vanity and then adding separate towel shelves, plinth bases, and mirror surrounds later, the SKU groups those decisions into one measurable composition. That helps compare finish direction, meter lengths, and storage function before final shop drawings.
Installation sequencing is reviewed before production because a long vanity often arrives after flooring, wall finish, waterproofing, and plumbing rough-in are already fixed. Fadior checks plinth alignment, cleaning access, moisture tolerance, mirror position, wall-light centers, and drawer-break alignment so the finished bath feels intentional rather than assembled from separate parts.
During review, Fadior separates what the buyer sees from what the installer must resolve. Buyer-facing decisions include finish, counter material, mirror frame, plinth proportion, basin placement, and the level of visual contrast. Technical decisions include wall fixing, plumbing access, ventilation, floor protection, waterproof detailing, tolerance gaps, and maintenance access.
That separation is important for a shop SKU because the page must be understandable before final measurement exists. The module gives a concrete priced direction for comparison, then the project process refines the exact lengths and details. It is a starting product definition, not a substitute for measured production drawings.
The best result is a bath vanity that stays visually closed after daily routines. The basin deck can be used, towels can be stored, cleaning supplies can be hidden, and the room returns to one calm architectural surface. That is the practical reason for the Obsidian Towel Plinth differentiator.
The final review also checks long-term cleaning behavior: toe-line dust, splash zones, towel handling, and the gap between counter and wall are considered before production so the closed plinth remains practical, not only visually composed.
Installation sequencing is part of the product definition because bath walls are rarely neutral by the time cabinetry arrives. Fadior reviews flooring height, waterproofing build-up, rough plumbing, finished wall thickness, and threshold alignment before the vanity is produced. Those checks decide whether the plinth sits proud, floats above a shadow gap, or meets the floor as a flush base. The choice affects cleaning access, moisture tolerance, and the way the cabinet visually lands in the room.
The mirror and lighting relationship also matters. A closed plinth can make the vanity feel calm only when the drawer breaks, basin centers, wall lights, and cedar mirror frame line up cleanly. Fadior studies those sightlines before production so the project does not end with a centered basin fighting an off-center mirror or a drawer reveal interrupted by plumbing. The goal is a bath wall that looks measured from the first glance.
Long-term maintenance is reviewed as carefully as the first photograph. Toe-line dust, splash zones, towel handling, counter cleaning, and the gap between stone and wall all shape the final detailing. A solid plinth is valuable only if it stays practical after months of use, so the team confirms wipeable finishes, service access, and the hidden storage balance before the cabinet body is released for production.
For project teams, this makes the SKU useful during early budgeting. The page defines a clear exterior promise, while the measured process still leaves room for the actual basin, plumbing, drawer, and finish decisions. That balance gives the buyer a concrete shop direction without pretending that a made-to-order bath vanity can be reduced to a single stock size.
This also helps the client compare the Verve module against open-shelf vanity alternatives without losing sight of durability, cleaning, and measured installation requirements.

Visual interpretation
See how the product holds its design language at room scale and in close detail.
The visual direction keeps the vanity closed and grounded, using the low plinth as an architectural base instead of open towel shelving.
Matte black fronts, weathered stone, cedar framing, and overcast-toned surfaces create a restrained bath suite around the Obsidian Towel Plinth.
Key features
These points explain why this flagship product stands out.
Closed obsidian plinth
The lower band stays shut and grounded, avoiding open towel cubbies beneath the basin deck.
Weathered stone basin deck
A measured counter plane anchors the wash zone while keeping the storage wall visually calm.
Cedar-framed mirror rhythm
Warm framing softens the dark vanity front and connects the basin wall to nearby architecture.
Formula-ready meter inputs
Base cabinet and counter lengths give the publisher transparent dimensions for shop pricing.
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 adjusts vanity length, plinth height, counter depth, basin position, mirror width, internal storage balance, plumbing access, and finish details after site measurement.
Finish samples, waterproof detailing, cleaning expectations, delivery access, wall fixing, and floor protection are confirmed before production.
Specifications
The key data is organized for clear review before planning and quotation.
| Series | Verve |
|---|---|
| Category | Bath and Vanity |
| Differentiator | Obsidian Towel Plinth |
| Construction | 304 stainless steel cabinet body with custom exterior finishes |
| Production model | Made to order in Foshan, China |
| Lead time | Approximately 30 days after final drawings and sample approval |
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 the first description paragraph and FAQ for buyer transparency |
| Design rendering disclosure | Product imagery is a design rendering | Shop SKU disclosure | Placed in the product copy and FAQ for buyer transparency |
| Cabinet body material | 304 stainless steel | Fadior brand rule | Used for the cabinet body before project-specific exterior finishes are resolved |
| Price source | Publisher computes USD price from moduleDimensions | Formula pricing | Codex does not write a manual price |
| Module length inputs | base 3.4 m, countertop 3.2 m | Commerce bundle | Used by the publisher for formula pricing |
| Availability model | Preorder with production lead time | Shop SKU commerce | Availability date is set by the publisher from the live publish date |
| Product type | Bath vanity modules > Bespoke suite > Obsidian towel plinth | GMC taxonomy | Used for product-page and merchant-feed classification |
| Primary use | Closed vanity storage with a grounded lower plinth | Buyer intent | Matches the Obsidian Towel Plinth differentiator |
| Visible finish direction | Matte black fronts, weathered stone counter, cedar mirror frame | Design brief | Defines the visual style for this SKU |
| Series distinction | Obsidian Towel Plinth | Slug-differentiator gate | Avoids repeated Verve basin ledge, wash wall, and mirror plinth concepts |
| Public URL pattern | /shop/verve-obsidian-towel-plinth-in-verve | Shop tier | Published as a shop SKU, not a product inquiry page |
| Identifier model | MPN derived from slug, no GTIN | Google Merchant Center | Publisher writes identifier fields during live publish |
FAQ
These questions help buyers compare options and reduce friction before inquiry.
This SKU centers on a solid closed lower plinth beneath the basin storage. Other Verve directions already cover wash niches, mirror plinths, faucet ledges, basin walls, and double-basin alcoves. The Obsidian Towel Plinth is different because the lowest band reads as one grounded architectural base, keeping towel storage and daily bath supplies hidden rather than displayed in open cubbies below.
Yes. It is made to order and manufactured in our Foshan, China factory with an approximately 30-day production lead time after measurements, drawings, finish samples, plumbing positions, and access requirements are approved. Fadior adjusts the meter lengths, counter depth, plinth height, drawer rhythm, basin layout, and mirror relationship to the project rather than shipping a fixed vanity size. Final packing, freight, and installation coordination are confirmed separately for the project location.
The product imagery is a design rendering for material mood, cabinet rhythm, and spatial intent. Final manufactured product may vary in room lighting, site proportions, surface texture, finish depth, plumbing position, and adjacent architecture after measurement and sample approval. The images should be used to understand the intended closed vanity composition, matte black plinth, weathered counter, cedar mirror rhythm, and grounded bath-suite mood, not as a guarantee that every site proportion will match the final project.
It works best in primary bathrooms, villa suites, penthouse baths, and hospitality-style residences where the client wants the basin wall to stay closed and calm. The plinth supports a heavier architectural look while concealing towel storage and daily bath supplies. It is useful when an open lower shelf would make the room look busy, or when the vanity needs to align with a shower curb, stone threshold, mirror frame, or window line.
Related products
These references help the current product stay connected to the wider collection.