Bathroom design: Grand traditional salon
Bathroom design problem
![Bathroom design problem](/assets/img/blank.gif?v=1719749188#https://m1.quebecormedia.com/emp/sah_prod/style_at_home-_-c94af802-15a4-4a14-8ca7-b6aa5fef4e63-_-44414)
Image by: Style at Home By: Jennifer Hughes Source: Donna Griffith
The original bathroom was cramped and poorly laid out, with 1930s-era tiles and fixtures that were badly in need of updating.
After the renovation
![After the renovation](/assets/img/blank.gif?v=1719749188#https://m1.quebecormedia.com/emp/sah_prod/style_at_home-_-c374fbf2-2de7-4175-87bb-44b48ee2031a-_-44415)
Image by: Style at Home By: Jennifer Hughes Source: Donna Griffith
A complete gut job was done as part of a larger upstairs home renovation, with space created by removing two closets and annexing some space from an adjacent bedroom.
Properly appointed salon
![Properly appointed salon](/assets/img/blank.gif?v=1719749188#https://m1.quebecormedia.com/emp/sah_prod/style_at_home-_-9fe85f7c-9fe3-49b2-853a-484d49442ac2-_-44416)
Image by: Style at Home By: Jennifer Hughes Source: Donna Griffith
"I wanted the space to feel like a properly appointed salon, not a regular old bathroom," says Style at Home design editor and homeowner Jessica Waks.
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