Cohesive Versatility – The Curated Finishes Collection by Phoenix
Phoenix Brushed Gold
Drawing on a three-decades-strong tradition of creating quality, design-focused bathroom and kitchen fixtures, Phoenix’s latest showcase, The Curated Finishes Collection, highlights its range of eight finishes – the recently-launched Matte White and Brushed Carbon alongside the established Brushed Gold, Brushed Nickel, Chrome, Gun Metal, Matte Black and Stainless Steel. Encompassing the full spectrum, The Curated Finishes Collection represents a cohesive response to the contemporary evolution of bathroom and kitchen design.
For over 30 years, Phoenix has continually refined its designs informed by a global sensibility and a local sensitivity. The Curated Finishes Collection represents this design-led approach. The eight finishes feature across the brand’s tapware, showers and accessories lines, offering unparalleled cohesion paired with Phoenix’s signature quality and longevity.
At a time when kitchens and bathrooms are increasingly becoming personal sanctuaries, The Curated Finishes Collection is conceived to offer for both designers and homeowners the freedom to find the ideal finish that complements their overall material and colour palette. Considering tapware, mixers, shower heads and accessories like towel rails, shower shelves, soap dishes, robe hooks and toilet roll holders all within the same ethos, The Curated Finishes Collection seeks to embolden design visions.
When it came to finding inspiration for the imagery to represent the collection, the team at Phoenix looked no farther than the Australian landscape. Connecting to the organic forms and textural depth of the local natural environment and the clarity of Australian sunlight, Phoenix sought to evoke the same qualities in atmospheric style. “We identified a need for people to be able to conceptualise how Phoenix finishes could complement their upcoming project,” says Chantelle Malone, Project and Marketing Manager at Phoenix. “To bring this idea to life, we knew that we needed to show actual product rather than artistic representations. Our requirement was to show how the light moves across our tapware, just as it does in a bathroom and how it can be brought to life in homes with trending materials.”