Creativity was alive and well at the 2012 Kitchen and Bath Industry Show.
Take a sneak peak at some of the high-end offerings to be featured at this year’s Architectural Digest Home Design Show.
The contest aims at finding solutions for sustainability and universal design.
The Home Depot’s trend and design expert provided insights into what consumers are buying and which European bath trends may invade the U.S. at the 2011 Kitchen & Bath Industry Show.
Two floor legs and bridge-mounted hardware furnishes the Canterbury tub filler with a Victorian flare.
Graphite finish enhances industrial-style faucets with its gunmetal tone.
These products offer style for luxury buyers and value for first-timers.
Italian tile show unveils contemporary designs and innovative technologies for the bath.
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State of Wisconsin distributes funds to Kohler and eight other businesses to improve efficiency of its manufacturing sector.
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Demand for formerly must-have item multi-head showers dropped significantly in the last year, according to quarterly AIA survey on home design trends.
A new generation of faucets makes water conservation as easy as pie.
Experts share their secrets to low-cost kitchens and baths.
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The Kitchen and Bath Industry Show (KBIS) may be half the size of the International Builders' Show-in attendees, exhibit space, and in the sheer number of exhibitors, but for a products editor it is not any easier to cover. Why? Because the concentration of cool stuff to see at KBIS is staggering.
ONE OF YOUR JOBS AS A BUILDER IS to make your houses as desirable as possible without breaking the bank. Anyone can add high-end baubles that cost serious money, but how do you achieve an upscale look for a relatively low cost? Adding cool features to the bath is a good place to start.
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The average builder buys products for his homes from a variety of suppliers: lighting fixtures from one manufacturer and faucets from another, for example. Product lines by these companies may have some similarities but, by design, will not match exactly in style and finish. But this is changing.
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This month's top shelf products include 960 locknut pliers from Channellock, the Pascal - one of the first electronic faucets for the kitchen, and a cutting-edge, stainless steel tub from diamond spas.
Here are some kitchen and bath product trends that are likely to last.
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THE QUESTION THAT WILL BE FACING attendees at the International Builders' Show in Orlando, Fla., next month is a simple one: How do you find time to attend seminars and visit the more than 1,600 exhibitors that will be displaying their wares in a show that feels as big as Rhode Island?
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THE AVERAGE NEW HOUSE has a kitchen, two and a half bathrooms, and a laundry room, which means that a buyer has to choose at least five faucets. This can be overwhelming, so North Olmsted, Ohio