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Homes & Gardens
Homes & Gardens
Nina Takesh

5 Bathroom Decor Rules I Always Follow – Even When No One Else Does –That Make My Space Feel More Luxurious, Thoughtful, and Surprisingly Functional

Bathroom with floral wallpaper and large mirror above a stone basin.

Whenever I tell people I hang art in my bathrooms, they look at me like I’ve done something slightly reckless. And I get it – after all, bathrooms are practical spaces. They’re not usually the room anyone tries to impress.

But that’s exactly why so many bathrooms are disappointing. It’s not because they lack beautiful materials or careful planning – it’s because they lack a point of view. Everything might be specified perfectly, but if no personal choice shines through, the room ends up finished, not felt.

Over the years, I’ve developed a few rules for how to design a bathroom that feels intentional, personal, and surprisingly inviting. These simple choices are my go-to bathroom ideas that transform a space from merely functional to memorable. Here are the five things I always do to make it happen.

1. Hang Something Above the Tub That Has No Business Being There

(Image credit: Tom Bassett/Design by Nina Takesh)

The wall behind a freestanding bathtub is one of the heaviest hitters in a home. Usually, it’s dressed in more stone, more tile – more of whatever already fills the room. I like to take a different route. A large framed photograph. A painting someone truly loves. Something that feels like it belongs in a living room but somehow ended up here instead.

It might sound daring, but it rarely feels risky. What it actually does is change everything. The room stops reading as just a bathroom and starts reading as a space someone actually lives in. And that shift? That’s what makes walking in feel unexpectedly personal – and endlessly more interesting.

2. Let Pattern Do the One Thing Neutrals Can’t

(Image credit: Tom Bassett/Design by Nina Takesh)

A checkerboard bathroom floor is one of the rare pattern choices that truly stands the test of time. Not because it’s safely classic, but because the bold contrast at floor level gives a room a sense of foundation and balance that feels completely resolved. You don’t need to force personality anywhere else – the room already has it, quietly working underfoot, shaping the space so it feels deliberate, thoughtful, and utterly intentional.

3. Build Warmth From the Vanity Out

(Image credit: Tom Bassett/Design by Nina Takesh)

In bathroom design, stone and marble usually steal the spotlight, while cabinetry is treated like a background player – just something to hold the sink and stay out of the way. I see it differently. A warm-toned bathroom vanity, crafted with the presence of furniture rather than mere millwork, can change the entire feel of a room. It grounds the space, softens whatever is happening on the walls, and makes the bathroom feel furnished, not just fitted.

The difference may seem subtle on paper – but in person, it’s the first thing you notice.

4. Commit to One Material and Don’t Look for an Exit

(Image credit: Tom Bassett/Design by Nina Takesh)

The urge to mix, to introduce contrast, to give the eye a place to rest – it’s understandable. It’s also exactly what makes most bathrooms feel slightly unsettled. The ones I find truly compelling usually do the opposite. One stone, carried seamlessly from floor to walls to shower, uninterrupted. No relief material, no visual break – just a single decision trusted enough to repeat until it stops being a choice and becomes an atmosphere.

That kind of commitment is deceptively difficult. But the rooms that result have a presence, a calm intensity, that no amount of careful mixing ever quite achieves.

5. Use Brass Because It Connects, Not Because It Reads as Luxury

(Image credit: Tom Bassett/Design by Nina Takesh)

There’s a version of this conversation where brass is treated as a trend. I’m not interested in that version. What fascinates me is what happens when you place it next to aged oak and veined marble. Suddenly, it anchors everything. It becomes the quietest choice in the room – and somehow the one that holds the whole space together.

The so-called 'unexpected rules' aren’t about shock or novelty. They’re about intention. About treating a bathroom with the same care and thoughtfulness as any other room in the house – and letting that seriousness show up in the details, even the ones nobody asked for.

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