something larger, something more deliberate. Here in Madeira, where library walls carry the weight of generations and homes are expected to possess intellectual gravity, this same commanding approach to cabinetry—the raised-panel shaker profiles, the brushed gold hardware catching lamplight like punctuation marks in a well-loved sentence—translates from kitchen into study with remarkable fluency. The dark slate gray finish that felt bold against stainless steel now feels scholarly against leather spines and aged paper, the floor-to-ceiling presence no less dramatic but somehow quieter, more contemplative, as if the wood itself understands the room it occupies. Crown molding traces the perimeter in that same decisive black, drawing the eye upward past adjustable shelving bays toward a ceiling that seems almost to recede, and as you follow the millwork along the adjacent wall you begin to sense how deeply this library unfolds into