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✨ Reflect Your Style with Every Glance!
The Fresca Bath FMC8013 is a stylish 50" bathroom medicine cabinet featuring a modern frameless design, three mirrored doors, and four glass shelves. Constructed with a durable anodized aluminum frame, it offers moisture and dust resistance, making it a perfect addition to any contemporary bathroom. With versatile mounting options, this cabinet combines functionality with elegance.
Item Weight | 49 Pounds |
Size | 50" |
Item Dimensions D x W x H | 5"D x 49"W x 26"H |
Door Style | Mirrored |
Item Shape | Rectangular |
Finish Types | Mirror |
Style Name | Modern |
Color | Silver |
Handle Material | Anodized Aluminum |
Frame Material Type | Anodized Aluminum |
Back Material Type | Aluminum |
Top Material Type | Aluminum |
Material Type | Aluminum, Glass, Plastic |
Required Assembly | No |
Mount Type | Surface & Recessed Mounting Options |
Base Type | Cross |
Is Customizable? | No |
Number of Racks | 4 |
Is Electric | No |
Number of Levels | 4 |
Number of Doors | 3 |
Number Of Shelves | 4 |
Number of Pieces | 1 |
Additional Features | Resistant |
Mounting Type | Surface & Recessed Mounting Options |
W**.
Recommended
Fair price, good quality and a clean contemporary look. The only problem I had was with the flush mount. The unit comes in two pieces with seperate mounting rails for each piece. Linning up the two mounting rails where a 1/16 of inch off is noticable makes installation time consumming; a single rail wood be better. Obviously using a straiteage is the way to go but still challenging with the weight of the units.
L**M
Two different cabinets but nice mirrors
This cabinet is just what we needed. However, I didn't realize it came in 2 parts. One cabinet has one door, then the other cabinet has two doors, and you install them next to each other to look like one cabinet. So you have to be careful to line it all up perfectly. We're not the handiest of people, but we figured it out. We got them to look very close so nobody can tell they're two cabinets unless they really look, but it was tricky for us hardly handy types. They're pretty heavy and absolutely requires two people.Read the instructions, even though they are horrible (most instructions are) because we watched a youtube video that led us astray on installing the bars and we had to remove them and re-do them. We now have some huge holes to repair one day when we get to it.When you install these, put the bottom bar on first, make sure they line up with each other. Place the cabinet on the bottom bar and have someone hold the cabinet against the wall while the other person installs the top bar. It's the only way the cabinets don't wiggle. You have to have good eyes to see if the cabinet is seated on the bar and properly in the tiny groove.A dig on this product is that the "one door" cabinet actually seems like a different brand, or doesn't really match with the other (2 door) cabinet. The hinges are different and its adjustment screws are different, and it closes wonky. It makes a tapping noise as opposed to a soft close noise, even though I have the little rubber stoppers on the corners. I posted a photo of the hinges so you can see they're different cabinets.I really like that there are mirrors inside the doors and outside so you can see the back of your hair when getting ready. Plus the shelves are adjustable to any height you need them to be inside all the cabinets, so it holds items of different heights. That's very nice!Good luck!
S**4
Slight damage from shipping, difficult to install
Halfway through the install (got the single side up). I'll update this review after the installation's fully complete.Seems like a nicely made unit. We purchased this largely because the more commonly available cabinets (Pegasus and Jensen) all had such lousy reviews regarding packaging...they seemed to arrive broken as often as not, even if you ordered from a store. The Fresca didn't seem to have that problem, and when we got it (in two large boxes) we could see why. The packaging seemed to be done quite well and the mirrors were intact. However, there was a problem...the doors are mirrored on the inside and there are tiny rubber bumpers stuck on them to prevent the doors from contacting the metal frame when closed. Well, the adhesive on those bumpers isn't great (like most of these kinds of things) and they fell off or moved, allowing the mirrored inside to rub against the frame. See the pic.Since it's on the inside of the door, I'm not tremendously bummed out about it. Certainly not enough to want to pack it all up and ship it back. There's a much smaller scratch on the larger of the 2-door panes, caused by the same problem. It's only about 1/4" and much less conspicuous, so I'm not going to worry about it. I contacted the seller and they contacted the manufacturer....sounds like a new single door is forthcoming.On the installation, the other commenters are correct; it's no picnic. I'm doing a surface mount rather than a recessed mount and frankly, I'm thinking recessed might actually be easier. While the bracketry that holds the cabinets on the wall is completely straightforward, the instructions provide no accurate numbers concerning the relationship between the brackets and the front mirrored surface, which is obviously what you'll be looking at and want to have properly positioned on the wall. If you were just hanging the small single cabinet, it'd be much easier, but since you have to hang it IN RELATION TO THE OTHER ONE so the entire aggregate is where you want it to be, this requires a lot of measuring and drawing out and thought. Or at least it did for me, and I'm no slouch at this kind of thing. Since my wall is 54" wide and the medicine cabinets are around 50" wide together, it's important I get them centered exactly, since you'll see it if not. A diagram showing where the brackets need to go to achieve a specific position with the entire cabinet group would be extremely helpful.The installation is a 2-person job, I'm thinking. The double cabinet is fairly heavy and has to be rotated into the bottom support bracket with a fair amount of precision. I could deal with the single cabinet alone, but even then it did some minor damage to the wall surface, since the corners of the frame are sharp and dig in slightly when you line up to rotate.(Update 3/7/2015)Okay, the 2-door cabinet is now up as well. I'm going to offer an opinion that this thing was quite a challenge to install, at least to do it well. Two people is a MUST with a surface-mount installation and we still ended up gouging the crap out of our drywall with the sharp corners of the chest as we moved it around. I can see that this is really something best installed while a house is being built, not as a later add-on.With the brackets from both cabinets mounted to the same perfectly level line (5-ft carpenter's level, so no messing around moving it), once the 2-door cabinet was laid on the bracket, the two cabinets were nowhere near level to each other. After much screwing around, we discovered that the 2-door cabinet bracket wasn't fitting into the proper groove on the aluminum extrusion on the back of that cabinet, which caused it to sit high. The bracket wasn't sticking out enough from the wall to catch that groove. I checked the trueness of our wall and yes, it was a tiny bit off, but nothing you wouldn't see in any other house. I ended up adding washers behind the bracket to shim it out enough to catch the groove. And once THIS was done, the two cabinets were still not level to each other, by about 1/8" where they met, which is pretty noticeable on this type of cabinet.I ended up removing the bracket for the 2-door cabinet and Dremeling the one hole until it was more oval, so I could adjust the height of that side (the holes come exactly the same size as the screws, so no adjustment is available). Once that was done, we nailed it perfectly. Unfortunately, I worry that as time goes on, the weight of the cabinet will cause that side of the bracket to slide in that oval hole and we'll be back where we were. I may screw a piece of 1x2 to the wall, under the entire setup and spanning both cabinets. The mirrors are larger than the cabinets and would hide this addition to anyone not kneeling on the floor in front of it. Then I could stick a shim in if it sags over time.The quality of the cabinets seems pretty high. I think I'm going to drive myself nuts trying to keep fingerprints off it, since every.single.surface, inside and out, is a mirror. There's no place to touch it that won't leave a fingerprint. But that's what we paid for, so I'm not complaining.
D**Y
Great cabinet
I absolutely love my new. cabinet. It's just what I wanted. It looks great in my newly renovated bathroom. Two of the shelves were damaged during shipping, but all I had to do was contact customer service to have them replaced. The cabinet, seller and customer service are all awesome!
A**L
Mirrors becoming unglued.
I purchased this medicine cabinet back in 2018 and was extremely pleased with it. The only problem I had was that it was difficult to install. Three years later however I noticed what I thought was a misalignment of the right hand door. Upon attempting to realign the door, I discovered that the mirrors were becoming unglued, and slowly slipping down. The overall quality of this product seemed to be first rate, but for the mirrors to become unglued is not acceptable. I am hoping the door can be replaced. Whether or not this is still under warranty I dont't know.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
1 week ago