Room logic
An entry console has to edit the room, not fill it.
The starting point is the wall width, circulation path, view from the front door, and whether the console is a functional landing surface or a sculptural arrival piece.
A console succeeds when it feels permanent without making a narrow room feel crowded.
A console product study for clients who need to understand proportion, wall pressure, stone weight, stability, and arrival-room restraint before committing to a custom quote. This is a product study, not a completed Australian installation. It shows how April's Form turns a product direction into a serious project conversation.
Study logic
The study format keeps proportion, material, access, care, and commercial risk in the same conversation.
Room logic
The starting point is the wall width, circulation path, view from the front door, and whether the console is a functional landing surface or a sculptural arrival piece.
Material logic
Calacatta Viola or Rosso Levanto can become the room's editorial note, while Panda White and Nero Marquina keep the project sharper and more graphic.
Quote logic
A useful brief names length, depth, height, wall clearance, intended object load, whether fixing is being considered, and who owns the installation boundary.
Visual sequence
A calm silhouette allows the stone and room geometry to do the work.
Compare console mass, leg rhythm, and stone movement before selecting a direction.
Samples should be read beside flooring, wall colour, and natural light.
Specification decisions
That range protects circulation while still allowing the stone to read as furniture.
Narrow, heavy pieces need a stronger safety conversation than standard decorative furniture.
The piece should feel collected and permanent, not visually noisy.
Quote risk
The right project record shows what has to be checked before money, manufacturing, freight, and delivery are committed.
Constraint
Depth, stability, wall clearance, object styling, and delivery turns define whether a stone console is elegant or awkward.
Access note
Send corridor width, doorway turns, stairs, lift size, wall finish, and whether the piece sits behind a sofa or against a gallery wall.
Delivery note
Narrow stone forms need handling protection and a placement plan because edges and corners carry the visual value.
Care position
A console can carry more expressive stone than a high-use dining surface when object placement and cleaning expectations are controlled.
Next step
Send the room, dimensions, stone direction, city, access notes, role, and timing so the next conversation starts from project context.