Straight and crossed lines
Tour Eiffel
French style furniture with a minimal approach
Tour Eiffel furniture collection due its name to one of the most famous architectural symbols of the world. Arte Veneziana chose to name this collection Tour Eiffel because the main design and etchings recalls the straight line of this famous building.
This French style inspired line is made of different pieces of furniture that has in common straight lines that reminds crosses and a particular finishing called thumbnail bevelling. This kind of work is an artistic bevelling that enrich and better decorates each kind of mirrored furniture.
This collection is the best choice for people who loves clean lines and a French revisited style.
Lines and spheres
Hulon
Wash cabinet and mirror
Hulon is the wash cabinet from the Tour Eiffel Collection of Arte Veneziana that adds some glamour to your design scheme by creating a dedicated area for getting ready.
Mirror | Materials
Structure made of wood with a rectangular opening for housing the wash cabinet.
Glass with hand silvered clear finishing.
Hand beveled and glass tiles on the edges.
Wash cabinet | Materials
Two doors wash cabinet with push-pull opening mechanism.
Structure made of wood with shiny gray lacquered finishing.
Glass with hand silvered clear finishing.
Molten hand basin top made of 15mm thick glass with hand silvered clear finishing.
On the back side there is a central opening for bathroom pipes. Its perimeter edges are made of aluminum with satin finishing.
One adjustable shelf made of wood with shiny gray lacquered finishing.
All you need to know
Hulon | More info
Decorations
Handmade etching of "Criss-Cross" and motifs and shiny spheres.
Peculiarities
Size wash cabinet: W. 108 cm, D. 56 cm, H. 74 cm
Size wash cabinet: W. 42" 1/2, D. 22, H. 29" 1/8
Code: FWC-LDC-006-1020B
Size mirror: W. 135 cm, H. 230 cm
Size mirror: W. 53" 1/8, H. 90" 1/2
Code: MCX-LDC-006-1020S
Custom to specification
I need a Hulon wash cabinet
Product Designer
Leo De Carlo
Venice
Leo De Carlo was born in Venice in 1972. He graduated in Industrial Design from the Milan Polytechnic in 1998. He worked for Philippe Starck in Paris from 1999 to 2003, handling furnishing, lighting, electronics and interiors projects.
He returned to Italy in 2003 and went into business on his own. He currently lives and works in Venice.