Seta, a living kitchen, with its new version in teak adds a touch of warm sensation to its natural elegance and refinement.
Seta Teak is today at the top of this sensitiveness, gathering the trends and joining the program with a kitchen of an ‘oriental’ soul, thanks to the strictness, the straight lines and the warm sensations of an important wood.
Surely, the style of GeD allows original combinations with white and black lacquered finishes: for those, even loving contemporaneousness, who are irresistibly attracted by the values of the materials being part of the new classic.
White hi-gloss lacquer is elegantly combined here with a teak finish.
Of note, the island sink block with integral table. The photo top right shows a detail of the Shell System framework, in this case with an aluminium finish. The worktops of the “Technoglass” lineare in white glass.
The aesthetic mixture of the collection combines the particular usage of the horizontal space in the large base units along with the walnut slats with black fillets, which are made precious with semicircular metal handles. The fronts are also available in shiny or mat lacquered finishes and in laminate.
With this collection Schiffini has offered the market, since 1995, an innovative and exclusive solution with a new modularity which entirely exceeds the traditional system of furnishing kitchens. Solaro represents a more functional and efficient way of organizing space.
Order and freedom from the worktop to the cupboard space with double stainless-steel oven and double "cantinetta"; work spaces and equipment that become promises of a great kitchen. The worktop in ginger Jaipur quartz brings to the kitchen the natural shades of oriental lands and spices, while the strong material expression of the Jaipur comes from the uneven surface that makes every piece truly unique. An innovative execution makes the material perfectly hygienic and easy to clean.
New, minimal, free of any restrictions. Keramos combines modern rationality with an old Oriental discipline that becomes its aesthetic inclination, especially in the texture of the door, defined by the alternating horizontal and vertical grain of the Wenge wood.