Click here to order a sample piece of this Multipanel.If you’re not sure which Multipanel panels and accessories you need for your installation, look at our easy to order complete solutions hereFor many years it seemed as though tiling was the only way to go in the bathroom, but these brilliant wall panels brought to you by Multipanel are a wonderful, fuss-free alternative. This innovative solution allows homeowners to bring the kind of luxurious aesthetic normally reserved for high-end hotels into their bathroom – without breaking the bank and without the fuss of tiling. They really are the obvious choice for the smart renovator.Arctic Stone is a highly textured finish that mimics slabs of grey stone, ideal for a subtle industrial look.Key features:Fully waterproofedQuick and easy to installCan be installed over your current tilesBrilliant alternative to tilingSingle panel designed to fit one wallFurther information:Easy to install and cleanBathroom wall panels stick to your walls using high-grab adhesive. This means instead of fitting 50 smaller tiles you just need to fit one. And because these are large panels, they’re really easy to keep clean because you’ve got no grout lines.Seamless Hydrolock® jointsPrecisely engineered with Hydrolock® edges, you won’t find any mid joins on these bathroom wall panels. Adding to their seamless finish they benefit from a 6mm tolerance and with no need for grout, they’re not only visually more impressive than tiles but completely waterproof too.Made in Britain using Medite Exterior MDFMade in Britain using the highest quality timber and from sources sustainably managed via the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC). Medite Exterior MDF has undergone rigorous testing proving it to be high quality exterior grade, high performance MDF, which can withstand extreme exterior conditions. Perfect for damp and humid bathroom conditions.30-year guaranteeCan be cut to sizeManufactured using Forest Stewardship Council® (FSC®) C128180 certified materials100% recyclable11mm thicknessAvailable in different panel sizes
Lynnewood Hall is a spectacular Neoclassical Revival masterpiece and is considered one of the greatest surviving Gilded Age mansions in the United States. The stately home was once one of the fines…
Comfort and glamour go hand in hand in this lovely master bedroom. Decorative pillows mixed with mirrored vanities and side tables create an enchanting escape from reality.
Whether it’s for a small powder room or your family bathroom, the Kansas bathroom vanity from Gracie Oaks brings that beach cottage feel to your home. Available in several colors and sizes, Kansas is both stylish with its beadboard detailing and functional, making this a piece of furniture you will enjoy for years to come. Featuring an engineered stone countertop with an undermount ceramic sink and matching backsplash, this freestanding vanity is big on storage and includes a two-door cabinet with an adjustable interior shelf and a bottom drawer, all with soft-closing mechanisms. The vanity comes with premium-quality hardware in a brushed nickel finish. Pre-assembled for easy installation, Kansas is available in widths of 18-in, 24-in, 30-in, and 36-in. What's Included? Cabinet Handles Sink Backsplash P-Trap Mounting Bracket Faucet Mirror Drain Assembly Features Traditional bathroom vanity with a premium quality countertop The vanity is fully assembled and ready to be installed Includes 2-door cabinet with a soft-closing hinge mechanism Includes bottom drawer with soft-closing drawer glides Features adjustable interior shelf in the cabinet for versatile storage options Handle dimensions( center to center): 157 mm, or 6.18 inches Includes an 18-mm engineered stone countertop with a 3-in matching backsplash 20-in undermount ceramic sink is pre-assembled to the vanity cabinet See More
Adjacent to a national park, this spacious residence uses nature as its muse, with a natural palette and mahogany accents. The architects and interior designers of Harrison Design crafted a personal reflection of the family. Large windows draw the eye outdoors and bring the outdoors in. Arches, whether doorways, windows, halls or ceilings, impart a […]
Catherine Bentley and Louis Hagen Hall comprise Bentley Hagen Hall, a London architecture and interior design studio. For a recent remodel of their own fla
In 2019, artist-designers Luke Edward Hall and Duncan Campbell were looking for a place in the country, somewhere to plant a garden and have friends for the weekend. They found it here, at the Gloucestershire end of the Cotswolds where the Chelsea tractors give way to real
The second installment with pictures from midcentury modest bathrooms and midcentury modern bathrooms.
A MESSAGE FROM THE AUTHOR: If you're free after work on Tuesday, September 16th, and are so inclined, you can watch me accept a Preservation Award from the American Friends of the Georgian Group at a swell cocktail reception on the roof of the Central Park Armory (64th and Fifth). The venue has views of the park and the zoo most of us never see, and if you're worried about not knowing anybody, well, so am I, but I'm going anyway. A description's on the link below. If you want to attend, email me at [email protected] so I can put you on the list. The ticket costs $45 and you can pay at the door. http://www.americangeorgians.org/calendar.htm NOW, BACK TO BIG OLD HOUSES: This is Stan Hywet Hall, the Akron, OH manse of tire mogul Frank A. Seiberling (1859-1955), a magnificent anachronism from the moment it was built. Last week, we walked around (and around, and around) outside. This week, we're going indoors. Curator Julie Leone is my guide on a challenging tour. How do I document, in my usual exhaustive manner, a 65,000 square foot house and not lose my readers somewhere between the infirmary and the cook's pantry? Answer: by leaving a lot out. Here's the Great Hall at Stan Hywet, photographed in 1916, a year after the house was finished. When planning started in 1912, houses this big still fit into the context of an established world. By the time this one was finished, the First World War, though still ongoing, had already demolished that world. Stan Hywet's site, adjacent to downtown Akron, is hardly that of a country retreat or a villa in some fashionable resort. The site was chosen for convenience to work. Stan Hywet was a full-time family home on a 3000-acre edge-of-town lot. Seiberling, a co-founder with his brother George (1869-1945) of Goodyear Tire and Rubber, was immensely rich. Despite spectacular ups and downs in his career, he managed quite well to live up to this house. The view below shows multiple generations of the Seiberling clan gathered at Christmas to watch one of Grandpa Seiberling's farm horses drag a Yule Log into the Great Hall at Stan Hywet. In 1937, Frank Seiberling (on the right) and his wife Gertrude celebrated their 50th anniversary at Stan Hywet. Seen with brother Charles on the West Porch, they are the apotheosis of period Midwestern American pomp, combining era-specific style and grandeur with "can-do" American achievement. Today, the orientals and the bear skin rug are gone, the furniture has been pushed against the walls, and changing exhibits occupy center stage in the Great Hall. At the time of my visit a scale model of the RMS Lusitania made from 194,000 toothpicks had been tied, tenuously I thought, into a narrative of Seiberling family foreign travel. The arched door in the image below leads to the front stoop. The steps to the left of it lead to the main stair. We'll take a peek at the powder room, then head down the south corridor. You can keep track of our tour with floor plans at the end of this post. I am particularly fond of high class old houses with phone rooms. Immediately south of the Great Hall is a library that overlooks the lawn terrace we explored last week. Things to note: sumptuous overstuffed furniture, fringed lampshades, and a "secret" panel that leads to another which opens by the fireplace in the Great Hall. There's a small reception room across from the library, but it's so full of display stuff I decided to skip it. Instead, we'll proceed to the conservatory, or solarium as they call it, which faces the driveway through a curved wall of windows. Given the running water and the stone floor, I assume it was once a miniature emerald forest. The glory of Stan Hywet, more than the Great Hall, is its 2700 square foot drawing room, or music room as they call it. This is a good place to talk about the Panic of 1920, a financial crisis with which most people today are unfamiliar. The sudden end of wartime inflation brought about an equally sudden deflation in the American economy. The federal government handled the situation poorly. Unemployment jumped from 3% to 10% and more than 100,000 American businesses declared bankruptcy. Assuming wartime government contracts would continue, or peacetime demands for tires and consumer goods would replace them rapidly, Seiberling committed Goodyear to large scale forward contracts for rubber, etc. at inflated prices. Instead, the economy tanked and his company went from a $51 million profit in 1920 to a $5 million loss by mid-1921. Goodyear's board of directors peremptorily voted him and 26,000 company employees out of their jobs, then turned to Wall Street investment banker Clarence Dillon of Dillon, personal Read & Co. to rescue the company from bankruptcy. Making the situation worse, Seiberling had propped Godyear up with his own money during the countdown to disaster, and now all that money was lost. At the end of May, 1921, Frank Seiberling was 62 years old, unemployed, broke, and the owner of this extremely high maintenance house. Amazingly, 6 months later he managed to raise enough capital to start the Seiberling Rubber Company with his brother Charles. By 1927, the new firm had become the world's 7th largest manufacturer of tires. Frank Seiberling's son, Penfield, took over as president in 1938; Frank Seiberling remained chairman of the board until his retirement in 1950 at the age of 90. A musicians' gallery is located directly over an organ, the latter being a more or less obligatory feature of big houses of the era. The door below on the north wall of the drawing room leads to the West Porch, where the 50th Anniversary portrait was shot. The Great Hall is located at Stan Hywet's approximate mid-point. We've looked at main rooms to the south. Let's now explore those to the north starting with the dining room, whose entrance is under the left side of the hanging tapestry. If you went straight ahead instead, you'd wind up on the long arcade that leads to the garden in last week's post. I've seen Chaucer's Canterbury Tales more than once on a dining room frieze. It's driving me nuts that I can't remember where. The screen below would originally have better obscured the door to the serving pantry, seen behind the rope on the right. First stop on the rear hall is the kitchen, located through that door on the left. I could have posted 20 pictures of Stan Hywet's fantastic and totally intact old kitchen, but...we gotta move on. The service corridor (not to be confused with the rear hall) starts at the north end of the kitchen and leads to the cook's pantry and servants' dining hall seen below. We glimpsed the vista below, down the garden-bound arcade, from the main hall. The cook's pantry and assorted storage areas are behind the wall on the left; we're headed for the breakfast room behind us on the right; adjacent to the breakfast room is a vintage serving pantry. Stan Hywet's main stair is in the square tower next to the front door; the Great Hall is behind the camera; a billiard room and Mr. Seiberling's office are located beyond the arch on the first landing. It is a curious love that proclaims itself in the form of taxidermy. Her name is - sorry, was - Sophie, the beloved pet of a long forgotten Goodyear exec. She spent many motionless years in his office before being moved to the now defunct Goodyear World of Rubber Museum. A former Stan Hywet curator with an odd sense of humor plopped her down on Frank Seiberling's office rug. If Frank could see her now, he'd be more surprised than anyone. Time to go upstairs. Sleeping arrangements at Stan Hywet are typical of upper class households with children of both sexes. From Ipswich to Greenwich, I've seen the bedrooms of daughters and parents clustered in adjacent suites at one end of the house, while sons and guests are billeted at the other. Long hallways, purposeless lobbies or in this case, an open sided catwalk over the Great Hall, form a psychological barrier between them. The ornate timbered ceiling, by the way, is a stage set enclosed within the outer structure of the house. Irene and Virginia shared a pair of room with a bath in between. Their parents' room is located directly above the library. The library has a secret door to the Great Hall; the bedroom has a leaded window overlooking it. Mrs. Seibering's dressing room adjoins her bathroom, which is almost too divine for words. A corner sleeping porch connects to Mrs. Seiberling's and Mr. Seiberling's baths. Across the hall from Mr. S's bath is a so-called morning room. In another house, this might have been Mrs. S's boudoir or, just as easily, Mr. S's bedroom. The entrance to the musicians' gallery, oddly enough, required musical help to wiggle up a tortuous hidden stair from the music room, then cross the south end of the Seiberlings' private bedroom corridor. North of the Great Hall, sons Franklin, Penn and Willard shared bedrooms named Red and Blue with guests in other rooms named William and Mary, Colonial and Adam. By the time the house was built, brother Fred was already married and in the military. A housekeeper and four maids occupied spacious and much better than usual servants' rooms at the north end of the second floor. We saw this stair outside the kitchen on the floor below. Above it on 3 are more service, guest and storage rooms. Also on the 3rd floor is the curiously labeled "serving room." It's now full of stored junk but looks to have been intended for visiting grandchildren. This skinny corridor connects the north and south ends of the third floor. If we peek through an access door to the attic over the Great Hall, we can see how the Great Hall ceiling is supported. The south end of the house is used today for archival storage, but was designed as two large dormitories. But wait, there's more. Four floors up, at the top of the tower over the main stair, is an infirmary. I'm not leaving this place without a look at the basement where, among other things, there is a remarkable vintage laundry room. There is also an antique spa, complete with antique sauna... ...and an antique plunge. Truth be told, as fabulous as it is, I don't really like to swim indoors. Not an issue here, since this one hasn't had water in it for generations. Seiberling Rubber was eventually absorbed by Firestone Tire and Rubber. Seiberling tires are still marketed overseas, but have been reduced to "budget" status. Subdivision of the Stan Hywet estate began in the early 1920s after the Goodyear debacle. Frank Seiberling's death in 1955 forced the family to sell 900 more acres in order to keep the place going until they could donate it to a non-profit foundation. Until that foundation obtained tax exempt status, still more acres were sold and more ranch houses built, until the original 3000 were reduced to today's 70. Reduced or not, the house and its gardens maintain a gratifying integrity of site and are wonderful places to visit. The link is www.stanhywet.org.
Made of metal and glass in a Brass, Silver or Black finish. Backing is made of MDF. MDF is an engineered wood that lends exceptional strength and ensures the product’s structural integrity over time. Meant to be displayed vertical. Hardware included; d-ring. Imported. Wipe with a soft dry cloth.
Haunted Ellicott City Maryland: Howard County/ Mount Ida Home Ghost Expedition 2014 [The "Benevolent" Spirit of Miss Ida Tyson] Mount Ida was constructed in 1828 for William Ellicott, son of Jonathan...
Seriously though.
This bathroom mirror size calculator will help you decide what size mirror best suits the vanity or sink in your bathroom.
50 Cent may have filed for bankruptcy, but he still has his massive Connecticut mansion with its own helipad.
The new development by Obbard tips its hat to the heritage of SW1Y