|

1926 is the international brand of solid-wood cabinets. The lead designer is John Avram. John Avram is known as the Godfather of Cabinets in the United States. The cabinet series designed by him is a representative of American luxury cabinets, and is the most favored solid-wood cabinets by American high society. The Kennedy family and celebrities such as Marilyn Monroe have both looked for John to design cabinets.
The producer of 1926 is Fujian BaiDeBang Timber Limited Company. BaiDeBang is famous for series of products including the solid-wood cabinets, vanity, and wardrobe. With the policy and practice of the enterprise concept, “Perfection is in the details reflect integrity”, BaiDeBang offers one-stop superb service, goods at reasonable prices, novel design, high quality and satisfaction of dealers and consumers. After years of rapid development, its annual output reaches hundreds of thousands of units of cabinets. BaiDeBang’s strength and good developing prospects are further confirmed by the new own brand 1926.
As the international brand of cabinet, 1926’s birth has some legendary cabinet colors. 1926 is the birth year of American kitchen cabinets. The fore-runner of modern fitted kitchens was built in 1926 by Austrian architect Margarete Schite Lihotzky and been called “Frankfurt kitchen” ever since. This kind of design symbolized the unified concept of the standardization of a low-cost and function-driven kitchen and which fulfill the developing progress of a kitchen cabinet, such as” Unit”, “Standardization”, and “Integrity”. The leading designer of 1926 Series, also accredited as the “Godfather of Cabinet”, Mr. John Avram, has hastened the processing of the standardization of the integral kitchen cabinet. He unified all sorts of function; not just helping people successfully utilized and allocated the kitchen’s space but also increased their efficiency. He also added the aesthetics into the design of the kitchen cabinet, and used the precious solid wood as the raw material plus his remarkable craftsmanship so as to make the creations of kitchen cabinets become a permanent art.
|