5 Bathroom Trends For The Future
Any remodel or new build is a big project, whether your budget is big or small. That means you want to create spaces that will last - something interesting but not on trend. Something that you can enjoy for years without a time stamp. Here are some options for home adventurers with an eclectic style, blending clean and playful with timeless aesthetics that are finding their way into more dream boards and wishlists every day.
If you don’t particularly like color but love to create interest, a play on texture and subtle tones could be for you. Terrazzo offers a more interesting and cost effective stone look than marble, and comes in sculptural tiles that offer a unique 3-dimensional variation to your bathroom. Definitely a change from the ever-sleek tile options you seen everywhere else. Bring in some nature with wood slats, clay sinks, and black fixtures to tie it all together.
Marble is timeless, but new technologies have created new applications that aren’t only for celebrity homes. Marble bathtubs or other bathroom staples are a great opportunity for a pop of color, especially to integrate earthy tones into an otherwise sterile space. It’s a real level up on a luxurious bathroom experience.
Some people love color, and the bathroom is a great place to try it out. If you want to play with fixtures and furniture in bright colors you’re not limited to walls and floors. Why not try epoxy flooring instead of tile? It comes in virtually any color and patterns and is much more cost effective than time. Pair it with rose gold elements and vibrant marble or quartz.
Brick tiles are here to stay, whether square, rectangle, long, short, fat, etc. Available in any color and finish, a clean bathroom can choose white but add interest with different colored fixtures and hardware, frameless glass doors, and different shapes to distinguish the floors from the walls.
Wood look tiles are some of our favorite materials to shake things up in previously predictable rooms. A wood shower or wood tile flooring in a bathroom is a great example of that, and adds a surprising warmth and texture to what has always been a cold and hard space.