Faucets jewelry | The Press

The world of faucets continues to amaze with increasingly intelligent accessories, new finishes and innovative lines that contribute not only to decor, but to comfort. Overview of new products and strong trends of the moment.

Posted at 12:00 p.m.

Isabelle Morin

Isabelle Morin
The Press

A choice of colors

  • Matte white will be more and more present.  Here, a set including a rain shower, by Rubinet.

    PHOTO PROVIDED BY RUBINET

    Matte white will be more and more present. Here, a set including a rain shower, by Rubinet.

  • A touch of audacity at Rubinet

    PHOTO PROVIDED BY RUBINET

    A touch of audacity at Rubinet

  • The smoked chrome is installed as here in a model of Smart Control valve with triple function of Grohe, allowing to control the temperature and the size of the drops.

    PHOTO PROVIDED BY GROHE

    The smoked chrome is installed as here in a model of Smart Control valve with triple function of Grohe, allowing to control the temperature and the size of the drops.

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Chrome finishes are still present and remain timeless, but while they monopolized the bulk of sales, they now share the market with matte black, the all-purpose par excellence, and brushed gold, which have imposed in recent years. Copper, more delicate to arrange, offers a timid presence and remains a nested choice, while brushed nickel tends to slip away. Newcomers such as graphite – and mainly matt white, which promises to be a strong trend – may however make us hesitate for a long time when choosing kitchen or bathroom faucets. With some brands, audacity is pushed further with color accents that add a touch of fantasy to the environment and remind us that the fittings are indeed a jewel in the decor.

Simplicity and natural

  • Designed in collaboration with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, this new Brizo collection innovates with faucets honoring the heritage of the famous architect.

    PHOTO PROVIDED BY BRIZO

    Designed in collaboration with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, this new Brizo collection innovates with faucets honoring the heritage of the famous architect.

  • Copper, more nested, nevertheless retains its place in more organic decors that acquire a patina over time.  By Rubinet.

    PHOTO PROVIDED BY RUBINET

    Copper, more nested, nevertheless retains its place in more organic decors that acquire a patina over time. By Rubinet.

  • Faucet model with rounded shapes at Riobel

    PHOTO PROVIDED BY RIOBEL

    Faucet model with rounded shapes at Riobel

  • Simplicity is in the spotlight with the island faucet with dual jet spray, by Baril.

    PHOTO PROVIDED BY BARIL

    Simplicity is in the spotlight with the island faucet with dual jet spray, by Baril.

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Obtuse lines have given way to curves. “Even when it is graphic in its design, the fittings are rounded in the corners, observes Jennifer St-Cyr, co-owner of the Eau tendency boutique. The natural is really on the rise. The shapes of the fittings follow with flowing lines. I think we need to do good. People are turning to softness, color, less clinical and more enveloping environments. » Make way for organic design with “living” materials such as copper, which acquires a patina over time, and wood which is displayed in bathroom furniture and accessories, as well as on high-end taps such as the one from the Frank Lloyd Wright collection for Brizo. “It’s kept simple and without frills,” says designer Arianne Palermo of the Ossom boutique. The very massive models disappear. »

The mix of genres


PHOTO PROVIDED BY DXV

DXV’s Belshire faucet captures the opulence of Art Deco in a contemporary twist.

It is no longer excluded to combine different finishes in the same decor or on the same accessory: a black faucet with gold, copper or silver accents, for example. The same goes for lines. The more traditional models are revisited in a transitional style that combines the old with the contemporary, while the more graphic accessories rub shoulders with curves. “We are much less “little kit”. We decompartmentalize by having fun varying styles and eras to go from modern to classic or by integrating a piece of mid-century furniture into a very refined bathroom, illustrates Jennifer St-Cyr. Round handles can also be paired very well with a more square faucet. »

On the side of the big brands, offering versatile and modular accessories is a consideration. “You can opt for a spout with the handle of your choice or choose the height of your faucet according to your preferences”, gives as an example Donald Bouchard, marketing manager at Lixil Americas, which includes, among other brands, American Standard, Grohe and DXV faucets. “This versatility makes the decors more personalized and more timeless,” adds his colleague Anne-Marie Hébert, representative for luxury products. Being able to buy a rainhead, mixer and diffuser separately allows customers to place them wherever they want in the shower and opens the door to greater flexibility in design, notes Arianne Palermo.

Bring the spa home


PHOTO PROVIDED BY BARIL

Bathtub and shower combined in a spa atmosphere seen by Baril

“People are investing more to have comfort at home. If we can no longer go to the spa, we bring it home, with steam showers, for example, to which can be added the diffusion of essential oils, ”describes Jennifer St-Cyr. This comfort, already seen in the past, is however expressed with sobriety and new functionalities. Columns with multiple jets, spraying water over the whole body, have given way to more efficient, more ecological hand showers, and now rain heads that adopt these features to offer a more or less powerful jet depending on the tastes of the user, whether it is to obtain a massage, a deep rinsing of the hair or to feel the caressing effect of a “champagne” trickle with hydrogen peroxide which pearls gently on the skin. The “wet room”, in which the freestanding bath and the shower share the space behind a common partition, is also gaining ground. “The effect is very interesting and visually enlarges the bathroom,” says the designer. This allows for a very open shower that can accommodate a faucet for two, each with their own. »

The industrialist migrates to the bathroom


PHOTO PROVIDED BY RUBINET

The industrial revisited by Rubinet

Have the catering taps had their day? This is what we see in specialized shops. The beaded spouts, massive and difficult to clean, fade away in favor of a more discreet combined faucet. The industrial style nevertheless remains present in the bathroom with handles replicating industrial valves or borrowing bumpy textures from hardware and support bars. The effect adds to the ergonomics, if not the aesthetics which becomes most elegant in the context.

An increasingly “intelligent” faucet

  • The Grohe Blue model with a retractable spray head provides filtered water that is more or less carbonated according to taste.

    PHOTO PROVIDED BY GROHE

    The Grohe Blue model with a retractable spray head provides filtered water that is more or less carbonated according to taste.

  • Brizo

    PHOTO PROVIDED BY BRIZO

    Brizo “smart touch” kitchen faucet with smart technology

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Technology is at the service of comfort. “We invest a lot of money to improve the kitchen or bathroom experience, while maintaining aesthetics. And I think that’s where the trend will be expressed the most in the coming years,” says Anne-Marie Hébert. Already, “touch” or “touchless” fittings (without touching) are in favor and make it possible to reduce handling or eliminate it thanks to motion detectors. They not only activate the faucet, but change the flow of water or the degree of heat. Water filters, integrated into the kitchen faucets, now add sparkling chilled water with fine bubbles or large bubbles to their offer. In the shower, faucets remember the preferences of their different users. “Our research is pushing in this direction,” adds Anne-Marie Hébert. In making people more comfortable, and taking showers from ordinary to extraordinary. »


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