Hardware & Fixtures
The detail no one can name, but everyone notices.
Hardware is where a room stops being designed and starts being owned.
Made to order in North London, by hand, the same way they've done it since the Dorchester commissioned them in the 1930s. The Savoy. Claridge's. The Royal Households. Barber Wilsons holds a Royal Warrant for the manufacture of kitchen and bathroom taps — the only plumbing manufacturer to hold one. Two styles: the 1890s traditional range and the Art Deco Mastercraft line. Six weeks from order. Worth it.
Barber Wilsons & Co.
Buster + Punch
Machined in steel, brass, and black. Buster + Punch makes the switches, outlets, and dimmers most showrooms don't think to carry — a build-your-own system where every plate, toggle, and finish is specced to the room. When the thing you touch to turn on a light is as considered as everything else, it shows.
Modern Matter
A jewelry atelier that started making cabinet hardware when a client asked if they could turn earrings into pulls. Every piece is hand-cast in solid brass, hand-finished, and available with semi-precious stone accents — pink quartz, tiger eye, dalmatian jasper. The hardware equivalent of the right piece of jewelry on the right outfit.
Notting Hill Hardware
Hand-cast in the USA in fine pewter and bronze. Arts and Crafts, Art Nouveau, Victorian, Prairie — the range is wide but the standard is consistent: high relief, exceptional hand-finishing, and the option for enamel or semi-precious stone accents. For cabinetry that means something.
See it. Hold it. Decide.
Most hardware gets chosen from a website. At Heritage Home, you can hold it, compare finishes side by side, and see how it lives next to the cabinetry on the floor.