Use colours and light to guide your design lines and add accents like plants and flowers, personal items and art. Do not hesitate when combining different materials; just make sure the combination will be both visually pleasant and useful. Once you decide on the furniture you want to display, choose the correct colour combination and fixtures. Light should be an element that will help you relax in the bathroom while taking a shower or a well-deserved bubble bath. For a bathroom with modern furniture, you need to keep the same design lines as you see in the pictures that inspire you. Use bathroom tiles according to the plan, but don't forget to get creative. You should take the advice of an interior designer when remodelling, but if you want to renovate on your own, make sure you have all the information necessary before you start working on the bathroom renovation project.This way you will make sure that everything is carefully planned and it will all go smoothly.
Traditional, Contemporary, and Transitional Styles. Traditional is a popular choice for bathroom fixtures since they will go with most home designs. Transitional and contemporary styles better fit bathrooms of these specific architectural home styles. Transitional is a blend of traditional and contemporary and has simple curved lines that flow in an elegant visual movement. Matching Fixtures. Some homeowners don't like the uniform look of matched hardware while others would never consider mixing styles. Most interior designers prefer the uniform look that matching fixtures give so that the focal point of the room design isn't interrupted. For homeowners, this is considered a personal choice; however, the design rule of thumb is regardless of style, you want to use the same metal and finish for all hardware (fixtures).
I painted over the Masonite with a really good primer and then I decoupaged tissue paper in vivid colors over it — indigo blue, sunny yellow, even some silver tissue paper. It looks luminous, freckled, almost like water. Above the shower stall, I did much brighter colors and I sealed it all with a water-based polyurethane." While Cy applied his decoupage directly to the wall, his "simple French" look would work just as well applied to foam core or poster board, framed or not, and then hung on a bathroom wall for a splash of color you could change out whenever you want. "Paint the walls, or if they're mostly tile, paint the ceiling!" says Cy. "If the color doesn't work, you can paint it something else." And should you need to sell the house later, and believe the accepted wisdom that only white walls are appropriate in "For Sale" bathrooms, you can spend an afternoon painting it back. Or for just a minimal change, paint a frame and hang it on the bathroom mirror with Velcro.
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