Attentive, precise, mindful, thoughtful – no amount of adjectives can describe what this interior door model can do for you.
And that’s apart from all the wonderful features characteristic of this collection, which would be as follows:
It is built (this interior door model is built) using the latest breakthroughs in Twenty-First Century interior door manufacturing technology. To wit, the “wrap” method of applying the finish is in fact superior in many ways to the traditional approach in that it fuses (through heat and pressure, working on molecular level, no less) the finish with the surface, which naturally renders the final product scratch-resistant, moisture-resistant, fade-proof and warp-proof.
Its sound-proofing and thermal-insulation properties are off the chart.
It comes with our magnificent state-of-the-art hardware, including the Italian-made 3D-adjustable self-lubricating concealed hinges, which will make the installation a walk in the park, not to mention their enormous aesthetic value; soundless magnetic lock; and automatic sweep.
In certain ancient cultures, a single vertical band of light represented wisdom, discernment, and sound judgement (and, we hasten to add, good taste as well). Not merely a welcome addition to your decor, this interior door can vastly improve it, harmonize it, bring it all together.
… White is the color most often associated with perfection, honesty, cleanliness, newness, neutrality, and exactitude. In ancient Egypt, white symbolized purity. Roman patricians paraded in white togas to distinguish themselves from the common folk. It was the color of choice of French monarchs. Architects of all epochs used white, with much enthusiasm, in various projects and for various reasons. During the first heyday of American architecture, builders favored white when designing churches, capitols, and municipal buildings – a tradition they inherited from Roman and Renaissance designers.
According to some experts, most of the buildings in the Roman Forum were either made of, or clad in, white marble.
In Taoism, white represents the yang or masculine energy, one of the two complementary natures of the universe.
Many authors, both classical and contemporary, have referred to the color white as a sign of purity, either physical (like William Shakespeare, whose treacherous usurper wishes for a heavenly rain to cleanse his blood-stained hand, washing it “white as snow”) or spiritual (like Tennessee Williams, who named his lead character Blanche (derived from the Germanic word blanc, meaning “white”) as a symbol of her innocent child-like spirit.
The scientific basis for all this dates back to the Seventeenth Century, when Sir Isaac Newton discovered that sunlight is composed of light with wavelengths across the visible spectrum which the human eye perceives as white.
White is the lightest color of all, and is achromatic (hue-less), because it fully reflects and scatters all visible wavelengths of light, absorbing none. White objects stand out in the dark. Depending on the surroundings, an interior door with white finish can come off as emphatic or tactful, dominant or complementary. It will blend seamlessly into nearly any interior design and, depending on its owner’s needs and disposition, can symbolize - oh, so many different things, while bringing back a myriad memories: from those glorious snowy Alpine slopes and peaks to the fluffy tops of the wayward herd of cumulus cloud heap over the horizon on a balmy afternoon in the Caribbean. Tropical sand beaches are white due to the high quantity of calcium carbonate they get from tiny bits of seashells ground to powder by the waves. In many cultures white is also the color of festivity, used lavishly to brighten up weddings, birthdays, and anniversaries.