Think Fabricate Returns to AD Home Design Show
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Designed to complement the award-winning Wall*nut Medicine Cabinet, every inch of the new Wall*nut Vanity facilitates storage and organization.
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Besides functional considerations, natural forms are a continual source of inspiration for Think Fabricate’s designs.
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Beyond the Bridge plates

Brooklyn, NY – Coinciding with the first day of spring, Think Fabricate is kicking off a new season of design at the Architectural Digest Home Design Show, held at Pier 94 in NYC. During the four-day luxury design fair (March 20-23, 2014), the Brooklyn-based multidisciplinary design studio will showcase a contemporary range of handcrafted furnishings and accessories for every room in the home. The theme of the booth (#122) is Look Inside – a poetic idea that ties together a dynamic display both literally and figuratively: inviting visitors to open a drawer, slide a door, peer into a mirror and explore a whole new range of products including a cascading chandelier (Lantern Helix), bathroom vanity (Wall*nut Vanity XL) and sculptural console table (Reeds Table).

This year, Think Fabricate’s solutions for better living are extending to the bathroom, which can be seen in the booth’s centrally located, wall-mounted medicine cabinet and vanity set. Designed to complement the award-winning Wall*nut Medicine Cabinet, every inch of the new Wall*nut Vanity facilitates storage and organization. The XL configuration, which will be on view at the show, features a narrow side cabinet, four seamless drawers with glimmering gold ash fronts, and a sliding door that not only hides plumbing but creates a space to stow away larger cleaning and bathroom supplies. Sharing the cabinetry’s elegant simplicity, bathroom fixtures including Duravit’s Happy D.2 sink and Hansgrohe’s Metris S faucets complete the vignette.

According to Jason Gorsline, design director of Think Fabricate, “We’re excited to expand our line of cabinetry with a new collection of vanities. Each piece incorporates the same defining characteristics that drew people to the original Wall*nut medicine cabinets: the asymmetry, the rounded edges, and the furniture-quality elegance of walnut and other hardwoods, plus gold lacquer to bring out the wood grain on some versions.”

Besides functional considerations, natural forms are a continual source of inspiration for Think Fabricate’s designs. Part of the brand new Reeds collection, the Reeds Console Table features a topographic walnut tabletop and two groups of long, jointed legs in walnut and gold-lacquered ash and maple that emulate the form of reeds on a shoreline. The console also echoes the ebbs and flows of the six-panel Your Reflective Cadence Mirror, which has beveled glass edges and gold lacquered accents. Adding light and glimmer to the entire space is the Lantern Helix – a cascading amalgam of 14 Think Lanterns in multiple styles, sizes and colors hanging in a graceful helix formation.

In addition to new introductions, Think Fabricate is showcasing some of its most popular items, including the multifunctional Brooklyn TV Quilt XL. Striking a balance between work and play, the wall-mounted storage system features a bar at one end and workstation at the other, plus a number of built-in organizational units including space for a 32” TV. The firm’s beloved Beyond the Bridge plates will also make an appearance along with a new line of wall art featuring the same historic balloon view of Brooklyn.

About Think Fabricate

Think Fabricate is a multidisciplinary design studio based in Brooklyn, New York. Co-founded by Susan Doban and Jason Gorsline, Think Fabricate is dedicated to the exploration of function, detail, and character in their design solutions, which range from furniture and product development to residential interiors, branded environments, and public art installations. Their design process is driven by the idea of collaboration—with other designers and clients alike— resulting in compositions full of color, interesting material palettes, meaningful visual motifs, and modern forms. For more information, visit www.thinkfabricate.com and follow them on Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest @ThinkFabricate.

Source: Think Fabricate

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