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BATHROOM FURNITUREBathroom furniture, a bathroom vanity cabinet or a large selection of bathroom vanities are available for delivery to your door-step. Please click on the links below to search for products other than Bathroom Furniture, bathroom vanities or bathroom consoles that you will need to complete your home improvement project. CLICK HERE TO VIEW OUR BATHROOM FURNITURE
Faucet
and Sink Connection has a vast selection of bathroom furniture,
bathroom vanities and bathroom cabinets to choose from. If
it's a vessel sink vanity you're looking for try RonBow or Azura.
They have smaller bathroom vanities that fit easily in to a powder
room. Azura also offers larger traditional bathroom vanities
with single bowl or double bowls as well as contemporary glass
consoles.
In the 1930s and ’40s one of the most important beauty aids a
woman could own was a dressing table. The vanity — be it a demure
skirted model or round-mirrored, art deco style — was both
sanctuary and battle station, the place she spent an essential part
of every day in pursuit of glamour’s high calling. By the time the new millennium rolled around, glamour was on the
skids and dressing tables had all but disappeared. Today, though,
dressing tables have roared back into vogue. High end to low, modern
to traditional, vanities are everywhere. The vanity revival seems to have gotten its start in 2002. That
year fashion designer Isaac Mizrahi predicted in an article for House
& Garden that dressing tables would come back with a
vengeance, and Thomasville introduced an attention-getting
deco-inspired vanity as part of its Bogart Collection. Interior designer Louis Navarrete has seen increasing call for
the custom-made vanity tables he sells out of Louis N., his
furniture and accessories showroom. Recent projects have included
lavishly mirrored pieces and one coated in silver leaf with a
mercury-glass top. His designs start at $4,500, but Navarrete thinks a vanity is an
ideal item on which to splurge. “You use a vanity every morning and again if you go out at
night,” he said. “You may as well get something fabulous that
you are happy with.” Jackie Hirschaut, vice president of public relations for the
American Home Furnishings Alliance, sees the re-emergence of the
vanity as part of a larger home-decor trend — the sumptuous master
suite. “It’s all part of creating comfort zones in the home. And a
vanity is one more little luxury you can have under your roof,”
Hirschaut said. Other observers, though, see the dressing table’s return as an
indicator of social change. “There has been a re-emergence in recent years of traditional
markers of femininity,” said Linda M. Scott, author of Fresh
Lipstick: Redressing Fashion and Feminism (Palgrave Macmillan).
Among the signs, according to Scott: the popularity of pink, the
return of glitter and beading, and fashions that favor
close-fitting, body-baring styles. “Some of what is going on is that there is a new generation of
women who don’t agree that femininity is a bad thing,” who
believe that a woman can be powerful, intelligent and sexy, said
Scott, a professor of media and popular culture at the University of
Illinois. But Scott suspects it’s not just young women who are embracing
dressing tables. She also thinks an older generation is reclaiming
the pleasures to be found in beauty rituals. In addition, aging baby boomers find that looking good takes a
lot more time, and far more beauty products, than it used to. It’s
simple: They need a place to rest and somewhere to store all that
stuff. The idea comes through in a spread on vanities in a recent issue
of Domino magazine, which bills them as “me stations.”
It’s a silly expression that’s unlikely to catch on, but the
magazine’s images present an appealing alternative to standing in
front of the bathroom mirror with a blow dryer. One photo pictures
an elegant mirrored vanity table that holds perfume, a vase of red
roses and a white teacup and saucer. Now, that’s the way to start the day. Faucet and Sink Connection will help you complete your home improvement design projects no matter where you live. We ship in the U.S. and abroad. Click on the links below to find what you need to complete your project. Faucets Franke Sinks Shower Panels RonBow Sinks Bathroom Faucets Blanco Sinks Shower Heads Stone Forest Sinks Kitchen Faucets Deltana Kitchen Sinks Shower Sets Kreana Sinks Bar Faucets Vessel Sinks Bathroom Accessories Azura Bath Kohler Kitchen Faucets Pedestal Sinks Kitchen Accessories DecoLav Sinks Moen ShowHouse Faucets Console Sinks Bathroom Furniture Hastings Sinks Sinks Wall Mount Sinks Bathroom Vanities Shower Towers Bathroom Sinks Drop-in Sinks Magnifying & Cosmetic Mirrors Glass Sinks Kitchen Sinks Under Counter Sinks Toilets and Bidets Granite Sinks Bathtubs Vessel Faucets Santec Faucets Marble Sinks California Faucets Legacy Brass Faucets Adagio Sinks Onyx & Travertine Sinks Crystal Vessel Bathroom Sinks Wood Sinks Copper Sinks Farmhouse Kitchen Sinks Fusion Faucets Kingston Brass Faucets Altmans Faucets Andre Collection Faucets Oceana Glass Lavatories Tebisa USA Faucets Herbeau Sinks & Faucets Coyote Glass Design
Feel free to contact Faucet and Sink Connection with any questions or concerns.
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Product
selection is not limited to what is shown on the
website.
If you don't see exactly what you're looking for, e-mail us! We will be happy to get it for you. Thank you for shopping with us, we look forward to your order. * FREE SHIPPING offer is limited to standard ground shipping within the 48 contiguous states. Overnight shipping where available requires a minimal additional charge. Copyright © 2004 Faucet and Sink
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