Skip to content

Voyage Bath

Voyage Bath Vanity with Lime Plaster Basin Console

A custom Voyage Bath vanity module with a lime-plaster basin console, ipê-hardwood closed fronts, an aged terracotta surround, and a durable 304 stainless steel cabinet body.

Published Reviewed

Collection
Voyage Bath
Space
Bath and Vanity
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 Voyage Bath Vanity with Lime Plaster Basin Console — 304 stainless steel bath and vanity system, front view
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.

Voyage Bath Lime Plaster Basin Console is made to order in our Foshan, China factory, with an approximate 30-day production lead time before shipping coordination. It is a custom bath vanity module for homes that need a calmer wash zone, durable closed storage, and a warm villa finish direction that feels residential rather than clinical.

The differentiator is the Lime Plaster Basin Console. Existing Voyage Bath products already cover a Calacatta basin gallery, a fluted mirror ribbon, a Milan spa vanity wall, a pearl reed wash alcove, and a soft slate wash niche. This SKU gives the series a warmer clay-and-terracotta option with a grounded console rhythm and a more sunlit villa mood.

The module is planned around a generous basin ledge, closed ipê-hardwood lower fronts, a lime-washed wall plane, and an aged terracotta surround. The visible language is soft and architectural, while the concealed 304 stainless steel cabinet body gives the vanity a durable basis for humidity, cleaning, repeated touch, and long residential use.

For homeowners, the value is daily order. Bath counters easily become crowded with bottles, towels, trays, razors, jewelry, and grooming tools. This module gives the wash routine a clear place: closed storage below, a broad ledge around the basin, a quiet mirror wall above, and enough visual warmth that the room still feels calm at the start and end of the day.

For designers, the SKU creates a precise decision point. Instead of asking for a general vanity, the design team can coordinate a lime plaster basin console with wall depth, basin height, mirror width, light position, floor finish, side niche, towel rail, adjacent shower, and courtyard view. That clarity helps the bathroom plan move from mood board to measured drawing.

For procurement teams, the module gives a clean commercial starting point. The bundle states the Voyage Bath series binding, Bath_and_Vanity category, differentiator, module dimensions, product type, Google category, visible finish direction, and disclosure notes before a buyer asks for a final shop drawing. That makes comparison easier across different vanity modules and finish routes.

The visible finish direction is intentionally warm. Lime-washed clay keeps the wall softly matte, aged terracotta adds a tactile basin surround, and ipê-hardwood fronts give the lower cabinet a quiet grain. The palette works with pale stone floors, shaded courtyards, plaster walls, linen textiles, and deep green planting without requiring a dark spa mood.

The concealed cabinet body matters because bath furniture lives with moisture, cleaning products, repeated opening, and daily contact. A 304 stainless steel structure behind the fronts helps support alignment and resilience while allowing the visible room to stay warm and tactile. Buyers see a calm custom vanity, not an exposed technical object.

The formula dimensions set a practical scope for discussion. The concept uses 2.6 meters of base cabinet planning, 1.1 meters of wall cabinet planning, 0.7 meter of tall cabinet planning, and 2.4 meters of countertop planning. The publisher computes commerce fields from those measurements, while final drawings adapt the module to the measured room.

The console is strongest where a bath suite needs warmth without losing order. In a coastal villa, it can sit beside a courtyard opening. In an apartment, it can replace a cold floating vanity with a fuller cabinet wall. In a primary suite, it can give two daily users a broader ledge and clearer storage split without turning the bathroom into a showroom.

The image set is planned for buyer inspection. The white hero isolates the cabinet for commerce review. The midscene shows how the vanity relates to wall depth, mirror plane, courtyard light, and movement. The detail image studies the terracotta edge, wall texture, wood-grain fronts, and panel spacing. The lifestyle image shows an unoccupied wash moment with the product still dominant.

Customization can stay practical. Fadior can adjust basin position, ledge thickness, mirror width, drawer split, base height, side panel depth, plinth detail, wall panel size, towel niche, lighting groove, socket placement, finish sample, packing sequence, freight scope, and installation timing after site measurements and client habits are reviewed.

The module also helps sales conversations become more specific. Instead of asking whether the client wants a warmer bathroom, the team can ask whether the basin ledge supports daily grooming, whether storage should be drawer-led or door-led, whether the mirror should span the full wall, and whether the finish should coordinate with a courtyard, bedroom, or dressing area.

Architects can coordinate the vanity with drainage route, wall reinforcement, mirror backing, lighting drivers, floor fall, door swing, shower screen, towel storage, ventilation, and access width. Those details are easier to align when the product is named, dimensioned, and tied to a clear service behavior instead of treated as loose millwork.

The Lime Plaster Basin Console is not meant for buyers who want a cold white hotel vanity or a highly polished urban bathroom. It is better for clients who want a durable custom cabinet with warm clay character, a grounded basin ledge, and enough storage discipline to keep the room composed after everyday use.

Before ordering, the buyer should decide whether the vanity is primarily for a primary bath, guest bath, pool-side suite, or villa bedroom connection. That decision changes basin count, mirror width, lower storage, towel placement, ledge depth, lighting warmth, and the level of open display allowed in the room.

The SKU gives the Voyage Bath family a finish direction that sits between spa utility and architectural softness. It does not repeat the Calacatta, fluted mirror, Milan, pearl reed, or soft slate paths already published. It adds a clay-and-terracotta console for clients who want warmth, durability, and a relaxed courtyard-adjacent wash zone.

Maintenance should be discussed early. Warm matte surfaces can work beautifully in bathrooms when the reset routine is clear. The basin ledge should be reviewed for splash behavior, cleaning access, sample choice, and daily object placement. The lower cabinet split should match what the client stores rather than follow a generic drawer diagram.

The module can also shape the wider room. Its wall plane may set the height for sconces, the width of the mirror, the tone of floor tile, and the sightline from the bedroom or courtyard. Coordinating those choices around one named vanity module reduces late changes once production drawings, shipping scope, and installation timing are being reviewed.

The result is a bath vanity module with a clear role inside the Voyage Bath series. It organizes daily wash rituals, keeps storage closed, brings clay warmth into the room, and gives Fadior a durable cabinet basis that can be measured, sampled, manufactured, shipped, and installed with fewer ambiguous decisions.

Buyers can use the SKU as a practical comparison point. If the project needs a brighter stone gallery, another Voyage Bath direction may be better. If it needs a soft mirrored wall, a fluted ribbon may fit. If the client wants a warm basin console with clay texture, terracotta depth, and closed wood fronts, this module gives that request a specific shape.

The best review starts with proportion. Confirm the basin ledge, cabinet length, drawer rhythm, mirror width, wall panel height, floor junction, towel position, and how the vanity is seen from the doorway. Once those choices feel right, finish samples and final measurements can turn the shop SKU into a project-specific order.

Voyage Bath Lime Plaster Basin Console should feel relaxed before it feels decorative. Its value is the way it gives a custom bath suite daily order, durable structure, and a warm architectural face that still photographs clearly, prices from dimensions, and gives the buyer enough information to start a serious project conversation.

Fadior Voyage Bath Vanity with Lime Plaster Basin Console — 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 visual direction presents a warm ipê-hardwood vanity with a lime-washed clay wall, aged terracotta basin surround, sunlit courtyard atmosphere, and closed storage for buyer inspection.

The white hero supports commerce review, while the room images show the same closed bath vanity in a villa setting without exposing mechanisms, construction details, or daily clutter.

Key features

Designed as a system, not decoration

These points explain why this flagship product stands out.

  • Lime plaster basin console

    A warm wall-and-ledger composition gives the bath vanity a grounded architectural presence.

  • Closed ipê-hardwood fronts

    Lower storage stays visually calm while supporting towels, grooming tools, and daily reset routines.

  • 304 stainless cabinet body

    The concealed cabinet basis supports alignment, humidity resistance, cleaning, and repeated daily use.

  • Aged terracotta surround

    The basin ledge and wall surround bring tactile warmth to villa, apartment, and primary-suite bathrooms.

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

  • Ipê-hardwood cabinet fronts
  • Lime-washed clay wall plane
  • Aged terracotta basin surround
  • Pale clay plaster tone
  • 304 stainless steel cabinet body

Color options

Pale Clay#E8DDC8
Adobe Sand#B5926A
Patagonia Jade#5C7B6A
Deep Olive#3A4A36
Lime-Washed Wall#F1EAD8
Fadior Voyage Bath Vanity with Lime Plaster Basin Console — 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 Voyage Bath Vanity with Lime Plaster Basin Console — 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.

Designers may adjust basin count, ledge thickness, cabinet length, drawer split, base height, side panel depth, mirror width, wall panel size, lighting groove, socket placement, towel niche, finish sample, freight scope, and installation sequence after the room is measured.

The Lime Plaster Basin Console can stay compact for a guest bath, expand for a primary suite, or align with a courtyard-facing villa bathroom where the wash zone should feel warm, closed, and easy to reset.

Specifications

Technical specifications

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

Base cabinet planning2.6 meters
Wall cabinet planning1.1 meters
Tall cabinet planning0.7 meter
Countertop planning2.4 meters
Primary cabinet material304 stainless steel
Visible finish directionIpê-hardwood fronts, lime-washed clay wall, aged terracotta basin surround, pale clay tones, adobe sand, and deep olive accents

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
Series bindingVoyage BathSanity-backed Bath_and_Vanity product series.
DifferentiatorLime Plaster Basin ConsoleDistinct from Calacatta, fluted mirror, Milan spa, pearl reed, and soft slate Voyage Bath directions.
Base cabinet planning2.6 metersFormula input for publisher-computed commerce price.
Wall cabinet planning1.1 metersSupports the wall panel, mirror plane, and basin-console proportion.
Tall cabinet planning0.7 meterAllows side-depth and bath storage coordination.
Countertop planning2.4 metersDefines the basin ledge and daily wash surface.
Primary cabinet basis304 stainless steelConcealed structure behind the visible vanity finish.
Visible finish directionIpê-hardwood fronts, lime-washed clay wall, aged terracotta basin surround, and pale clay atmospherePatagonia villa-influenced residential bath expression.
Best-fit settingPrimary bath, guest bath, pool-side suite, or courtyard-facing villa bathroomDesigned for warm wash routines and closed daily storage.
Transparency noteProduct imagery shown is a design rendering; final manufactured product may vary in lighting, environment, and finish texture.Required buyer-facing image disclosure.
Commerce availabilityPreorder after validationPublisher writes availability and availability date at live publish.
Search intentCustom luxury bath vanity with warm plaster, terracotta surround, and closed storageTargets buyers comparing bespoke bathroom vanities and villa-style wash zones.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

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

What makes Lime Plaster Basin Console different from other Voyage Bath vanities?+

This SKU focuses on a warm clay-and-terracotta console rather than a brighter stone gallery, fluted mirror ribbon, Milan spa wall, pearl reed alcove, or soft slate niche. Buyers are choosing a custom bath vanity with closed ipê-hardwood fronts, a lime-washed wall plane, and a broad basin ledge that suits villa-style bathrooms, primary suites, pool-side bathrooms, and courtyard-facing wash zones.

Can the vanity size and storage split be customized?+

Yes. The published dimensions create a commercial starting point, but Fadior can adjust basin count, ledge thickness, drawer split, cabinet height, mirror width, side panel depth, wall panel size, lighting groove, socket placement, towel storage, finish samples, freight scope, and installation sequence after actual measurements are reviewed. The goal is to match daily use without losing the calm console rhythm.

Why does this bath vanity use a 304 stainless steel cabinet body?+

Bath cabinetry deals with moisture, cleaning products, repeated opening, towel storage, and daily contact, so the concealed structure matters even when the visible finish is warm and residential. A 304 stainless steel cabinet body supports alignment, humidity resistance, drawer stability, and long use behind the ipê-hardwood fronts, lime-washed wall plane, and aged terracotta surround in a busy bath suite.

How should buyers evaluate this module before ordering?+

Buyers should review the vanity as a design rendering for proportion and planning, then confirm drawings, samples, dimensions, freight scope, and installation timing with Fadior. Key decisions include basin count, ledge depth, mirror width, cabinet split, towel placement, floor finish, cleaning access, delivery route, site access, and whether the warm clay finish should coordinate with a courtyard, bedroom, or dressing area.

Related products

More from this collection

These references help the current product stay connected to the wider collection.