




This one came together exactly the way it should. The centerpiece is a frameless glass shower enclosure with floor-to-ceiling marble-look tile walls, a textured mosaic tile floor, and brushed bronze hardware throughout. Every fixture - from the dual shower heads to the grab bar and built-in niche shelving - was chosen to work together as a system, not just a collection of parts.
The bronze framing on the glass ties directly into the hardware finish, which is one of those details that separates a well-executed remodel from a disjointed one. When the metal tones match from the shower door frame down to the toilet paper holder, the whole room reads as intentional. That's what polished actually means in practice.
On the vanity side, the existing oak cabinetry got new life with a fresh quartz countertop - clean white with subtle veining that mirrors the shower tile. The result is a bathroom that feels cohesive from one end to the other. That kind of continuity doesn't happen by accident. It takes planning before a single tool hits the wall.
A bathroom remodel like this works because the details weren't treated as afterthoughts. The recessed niche in the shower is tiled to match the walls. The floor tile transitions cleanly into the rest of the room. The lighting hits the glass and the countertop in a way that makes the whole space feel bigger. These are the things you don't notice when they're done right - but you'd definitely notice if they were done wrong.
We take a lot of pride in getting a bathroom to this point - where it feels finished, not just functional. If your bathroom has been sitting on your to-do list, this is what the other side of that decision looks like.