Oh, the money that is spent to no avail. I have seen way too many of these mishaps. They all have the same things in common, mismatched appliances, ugly counter tops and floors made from poorly planned materials. They usually also look.....manly. When I met my husband, he had just bought a neat little two bedroom home in a nice neighborhood. But, I came on the scene too late. He had already had a 'friend' put down a white tile floor throughout the entire house. Sounds nice at first, until I tell you that it was the cheapest 10 x 10 inch white tile ever. It had huge grout marks like the image to the right. The grout took on a dirty look almost immediately. Well......within 18 months, there was a row of tiles lifting from the floor in the kitchen. There were countless cracks throughout the house and the floor was impossible to keep clean looking. Nothing that a nice rug won't cover. Right?! NO! Bad design is bad design. Cheap is cheap. Man Cave inspired decisions are just so much more....uh.....shall be say.....'Man Cavy.' Good thing I came around. He is great at a lot of things, but he leaves the design work to me. (It's a good arrangement.)
Enter......my current master bathroom completely re-done by Mr. Macho, Man Cave Dude. (The previous owner. Not my hubby.) Yikes! Mr. Macho Man Cave obviously spent some money because these are granite tiles. But come on people. What was he thinking?!
This is only hours after cleaning. See those water spots?! Ugg. |
Looking back, I anticipated a problem with this bath. It had that 'Man Cavy' design sense. There was no hiding it. So, when we placed a bid to buy this home I said to my hubby, "If we get this house, the first project is that master bath. It has to go!" He agreed. (He has agreed with most of my thoughts in this category since the white tile incident.) So first thing.....we did nothing. I painted the room in a set of colors that I took off a Martha Stewart color family swatch and did my best to make it work. After almost 7 years.....it's still there! (I am stopping now and calculating the amount of spots I have cleaned up in vain.)
But the time has come to address this issue. I have spent months researching the possibilities. I have combed magazines, books, and surfed idea pages online. I have walked countless bath design and tile centers. Professionals have come out. All of them want me to gut the bathroom completely. But, the quotes that I have received would give most people a heart attack. In this current real estate market, I cannot justify that cost. So I have settled on a plan. There are some things that must happen to make this hospitable. It's me, or the bathroom! I pick me.
The plan:
Keep big ticket items like the spa tub, white toilet and bidet, shower walls, faucets and cabinetry interiors in the current locations.
1. Replace the floors, the counter tops and sinks.
2. Resurface the cabinet doors.
3. Add a bead board/wainscoting to the walls in the same style as the re-surfaced cabinets.
4. Add a decorative element in the window over the spa that will allow in light, without sacrificing privacy.
5. Re-paint the walls a neutral shade to tie the adjacent master bedroom and the bath together.
-BEFORE IMAGES-
Keep this spa in it's current place. |
Re-surface the cabinet doors to fit my style. |
Keep the shower as is. It has a steamer inside and suits us just fine. Needs a few repairs. |
-The End-
3 comments:
I like the bathroom. Black is cool.
The black really looks nice in the bathroom. Looks modern.
lisa
The black really looks nice in the bathroom. Looks modern.
lisa
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