1930s Bathroom Faucets

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Randolph Morris Victorian Centerset Bathroom Faucet with Porcelain Lever Handles
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Strom Plumbing Columbia Bridge Style Bathroom Sink Faucet - 12 Inch Centers Strom Plumbing Fuller Faucet Set Bathroom sink faucets are no longer just for washing your hands and teeth. They are accent fixtures that harmonize your bathroom. Each faucet is different and can add more character to your bathroom. Kohler Bathroom Faucets – Jewelry for the Bathroom When it comes to choosing a faucet, installation type is a matter of logistics and the number of handles is a question of function. Widespread faucets feature separate hot and cold handles that are independent from the spout. They can be mounted on the countertop or on sinks with three holes that fit 8" to 16" from one side to the other. Compact and space efficient, centerset faucets fit sinks with three faucet holes that measure 4" from one side to the other. The spout and handles make up one compact connected piece. Single-handle faucets allow you to control water volume and temperature with a single handle – typically placed above the spout.

They're designed for sinks with a single hole or, when combined with an escutcheon plate, for sinks with three centerset holes. Mounted on the wall behind the sink, wall-mount faucets work well with vessels, wall-mount and under-mount sinks. They provide a streamlined look and help keep countertops clear. Kohler products offer intrinsic quality born of tradition. Skills passed down through generations combined with innovative techniques and timeless design to establish the enduring character for which Kohler is known. There is no substitute for the reliable performance ensured by our ceramic disc valving or the authentic beauty of our hand-brushed faucet finishes. This experience is bold. This experience is art. Press Room - Press Release Strength and Glamour of 1930s Design Returns in CHICAGO, KITCHEN/BATH INDUSTRY SHOW (April 2, 2004) — Design naturally reflects the times and mood of the country. Today, American consumers are seeking security, reliability and comfort in their lives, as well as warm, inviting elegance in their homes.

So it was in the 1930s, the design period that inspired American Standard’s new Retrospect™ Collection of fixtures and furniture for the bathroom. “The 1930s was a time of doubt and concern, and the designs from that period reflected the need to surround ourselves with things that were reliable and secure,” says Gary Uhl, director of design for American Standard. “The designs had mass and scale but were graceful. Think of the old silver Airstreams and thick elegant tweeds from Coco Chanel.” Interestingly, recreating the scale of 1930s allows for expansive work areas on Retrospect’s pedestal sink and furniture. The collection includes a pedestal sink in fine fire clay, a countertop sink with a generous interior bowl, a round front two-piece toilet and an elongated toilet featuring American Standard’s exclusive Right Height™ for comfort. Retrospect fixtures are available in white.Retrospect furniture consists of a metal console table and wood washstand. The metal console is available in either polished chrome or satin chrome, with a large white washbowl and glass shelf.

The washstand has a white washbowl set on select hardwoods with a large bottom storage drawer, all finished in white. The Retrospect collection will be on display at booth 3231 at the Kitchen/Bath Industry Show in Chicago April 2 – 4. One of my best friend’s Holocaust-survivor bubbies had an expression. She’d say — and you have to imagine this in an old-country accent — “Everywhere is it nice, but home is it the best.” This is more or less my own life’s most fundamental mantra, and the underpinning beneath every word written on this blog. I want to go everywhere and see everything, and in between I want to come home to my own coordinates, on my teeny-tiny piece of the earth, and sit in my sweet little 1,350-square-foot house, surrounded by my family and my friends and rascally cats. That’s the nougat filling if travel is the chocolate coating. So quite literally every time I touch down at LAX, or pull into the driveway after a long time away, I say out loud — affecting the same Yiddish accent — “Everywhere is it nice, but home is it the best.”

After more than six weeks out of our house, living with parents and in-laws and traveling out of town every single weekend, our bathroom remodel finally wrapped up and allowed us to move back in earlier this month. And by then, home felt more luxurious than even the most far-flung five-star resort. Sure, we may not have had shower doors right away (so I bathed in that sumptuous tepid bathwater of a pregnant lady not advised to take a hot soak), nor cabinet hardware (eh, opening drawers is overrated), but we were home. And with a brand new black-and-white bathroom (among other improvements)! The inspiration for our 1930s bathroom remodel came from a revamped bathroom I’d seen at an open house down our street; I loved that it was clean and modern, but in keeping with the vintage ’20s/’30s style of homes in our area of Los Angeles in particular. My mother-in-law, Linda Rosen of Linda Rosen Interiors, helped us execute the concept. (And she’ll be taking pro photos next week, but I just couldn’t wait to share!