Brown Powder Room Design Ideas with an Undermount Sink
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timothyj kitchen & bath, inc.
Modern cabinetry by Wood Mode Custom Cabinets, Frameless construction in Vista Plus door style, Maple wood species with a Matte Eclipse finish, dimensional wall tile Boreal Engineered Marble by Giovanni Barbieri, LED backlit lighting.
Two Hands Interiors
Grass cloth wallpaper by Schumacher, a vintage dresser turned vanity from MegMade and lights from Hudson Valley pull together a powder room fit for guests.
Douglah Designs
This Lafayette, California, modern farmhouse is all about laid-back luxury. Designed for warmth and comfort, the home invites a sense of ease, transforming it into a welcoming haven for family gatherings and events.
This powder room is adorned with artful tiles, a neutral palette, and a sleek vanity. The expansive mirror and strategic lighting create an open and inviting ambience.
Project by Douglah Designs. Their Lafayette-based design-build studio serves San Francisco's East Bay areas, including Orinda, Moraga, Walnut Creek, Danville, Alamo Oaks, Diablo, Dublin, Pleasanton, Berkeley, Oakland, and Piedmont.
For more about Douglah Designs, click here: http://douglahdesigns.com/
To learn more about this project, see here:
https://douglahdesigns.com/featured-portfolio/lafayette-modern-farmhouse-rebuild/
DANE AUSTIN INTERIOR DESIGN Boston & Cambridge
Dane Austin’s Boston interior design studio gave this 1889 Arts and Crafts home a lively, exciting look with bright colors, metal accents, and disparate prints and patterns that create stunning contrast. The enhancements complement the home’s charming, well-preserved original features including lead glass windows and Victorian-era millwork.
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Project designed by Boston interior design studio Dane Austin Design. They serve Boston, Cambridge, Hingham, Cohasset, Newton, Weston, Lexington, Concord, Dover, Andover, Gloucester, as well as surrounding areas.
For more about Dane Austin Design, click here: https://daneaustindesign.com/
To learn more about this project, click here:
https://daneaustindesign.com/arts-and-crafts-home
Cherry Hill Custom Homes
The powder room includes gold fixtures and hardware, and a freestanding furniture-style vanity.
Signature Designs Kitchen | Bath | Interiors
Light and Airy shiplap bathroom was the dream for this hard working couple. The goal was to totally re-create a space that was both beautiful, that made sense functionally and a place to remind the clients of their vacation time. A peaceful oasis. We knew we wanted to use tile that looks like shiplap. A cost effective way to create a timeless look. By cladding the entire tub shower wall it really looks more like real shiplap planked walls.
Grandeur Hills Group,Inc.
This powder room is decorated in unusual dark colors that evoke a feeling of comfort and warmth. Despite the abundance of dark surfaces, the room does not seem dull and cramped thanks to the large window, stylish mirror, and sparkling tile surfaces that perfectly reflect the rays of daylight. Our interior designers placed here only the most necessary furniture pieces so as not to clutter up this powder room.
Don’t miss the chance to elevate your powder interior design as well together with the top Grandeur Hills Group interior designers!
Coats Homes
Description: Interior Design by Neal Stewart Designs ( http://nealstewartdesigns.com/). Architecture by Stocker Hoesterey Montenegro Architects ( http://www.shmarchitects.com/david-stocker-1/). Built by Coats Homes (www.coatshomes.com). Photography by Costa Christ Media ( https://www.costachrist.com/).
Others who worked on this project: Stocker Hoesterey Montenegro
Schoener
The room was very small so we had to install a countertop that bumped out from the corner, so a live edge piece with a natural branch formation was perfect! Custom designed live edge countertop from local wood company Meyer Wells. Dark concrete porcelain floor. Chevron glass backsplash wall. Duravit sink w/ Aquabrass faucet. Picture frame wallpaper that you can actually draw on.
HomeClick
This is easily one of the most quaint, farmhouse styled bathrooms we've yet to come across. From the checkered wallpaper to the barn-styled door vanity, it is just beyond charming!
Patrick A. Finn, Ltd
The farmhouse feel flows from the kitchen, through the hallway and all of the way to the powder room. This hall bathroom features a rustic vanity with an integrated sink. The vanity hardware is an urban rubbed bronze and the faucet is in a brushed nickel finish. The bathroom keeps a clean cut look with the installation of the wainscoting.
Photo credit Janee Hartman.
Design Directives, LLC
This bathroom features floating cabinets, thick granite countertop, Lori Weitzner wallpaper, art glass, blue pearl granite, Stockett tile, blue granite countertop, and a silver leaf mirror.
Homes located in Scottsdale, Arizona. Designed by Design Directives, LLC. who also serves Phoenix, Paradise Valley, Cave Creek, Carefree, and Sedona.
For more about Design Directives, click here: https://susanherskerasid.com/
To learn more about this project, click here: https://susanherskerasid.com/scottsdale-modern-remodel/
Nautilus Architects
Cathedral ceilings and seamless cabinetry complement this home’s river view.
The low ceilings in this ’70s contemporary were a nagging issue for the 6-foot-8 homeowner. Plus, drab interiors failed to do justice to the home’s Connecticut River view.
By raising ceilings and removing non-load-bearing partitions, architect Christopher Arelt was able to create a cathedral-within-a-cathedral structure in the kitchen, dining and living area. Decorative mahogany rafters open the space’s height, introduce a warmer palette and create a welcoming framework for light.
The homeowner, a Frank Lloyd Wright fan, wanted to emulate the famed architect’s use of reddish-brown concrete floors, and the result further warmed the interior. “Concrete has a connotation of cold and industrial but can be just the opposite,” explains Arelt. Clunky European hardware was replaced by hidden pivot hinges, and outside cabinet corners were mitered so there is no evidence of a drawer or door from any angle.
Photo Credit:
Read McKendree
Cathedral ceilings and seamless cabinetry complement this kitchen’s river view
The low ceilings in this ’70s contemporary were a nagging issue for the 6-foot-8 homeowner. Plus, drab interiors failed to do justice to the home’s Connecticut River view.
By raising ceilings and removing non-load-bearing partitions, architect Christopher Arelt was able to create a cathedral-within-a-cathedral structure in the kitchen, dining and living area. Decorative mahogany rafters open the space’s height, introduce a warmer palette and create a welcoming framework for light.
The homeowner, a Frank Lloyd Wright fan, wanted to emulate the famed architect’s use of reddish-brown concrete floors, and the result further warmed the interior. “Concrete has a connotation of cold and industrial but can be just the opposite,” explains Arelt.
Clunky European hardware was replaced by hidden pivot hinges, and outside cabinet corners were mitered so there is no evidence of a drawer or door from any angle.
Brown Powder Room Design Ideas with an Undermount Sink
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