Photo: @simplywalldecor1 Bathroom Photo
In a powder room, Hikers Paradise can be used floor-to-ceiling to create a dramatic, high-impact experience for guests. Because these rooms are small and transitional, they can handle the full intensity of the color's personality without feeling overwhelming.
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Hikers Paradise — japandi bathroom
@simplywalldecor
1 Bathroom Photo
In a powder room, In The Cloud can be used floor-to-ceiling to create a dramatic, high-impact experience for guests. Because these rooms are small and transitional, they can handle the full intensity of the color's personality without feeling overwhelming.
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In The Cloud — japandi bathroom
@simplywalldecor
1 Bathroom Photo
In a powder room, Rabbit's Ear can be used floor-to-ceiling to create a dramatic, high-impact experience for guests. Because these rooms are small and transitional, they can handle the full intensity of the color's personality without feeling overwhelming.
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Rabbit's Ear — japandi bathroom
@simplywalldecor
1 Bathroom Photo
In a powder room, Rocky Road can be used floor-to-ceiling to create a dramatic, high-impact experience for guests. Because these rooms are small and transitional, they can handle the full intensity of the color's personality without feeling overwhelming.
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Rocky Road — minimalist bathroom
@simplywalldecor
1 Bathroom Photo
Winter Cocoa is the perfect "clean" color for a bathroom that still wants to feel cozy. It lacks the clinical coldness of a pure white but retains a sense of hygiene and order that is essential for a space dedicated to self-care and grooming.
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Winter Cocoa — coastal bathroom
@simplywalldecor
1 Bathroom Photo
For bathrooms with limited natural light, Thunderstruck provides a necessary "glow." It uses its subtle undertones to mimic the warmth of sunlight, preventing the space from feeling subterranean or overly dark, even in windowless layouts.
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Thunderstruck — wabi-sabi bathroom
@simplywalldecor
1 Bathroom Photo
The psychology of Silver Feather in a bathroom is all about the "slow down." It's a visual cue to breathe, relax, and take your time, turning a utilitarian room into a true retreat from the frantic pace of the rest of the world.
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Silver Feather — japandi bathroom
@simplywalldecor
1 Bathroom Photo
Pairing Gypsum with natural stone like travertine or slate creates an earthy, elemental bathroom that feels connected to nature. It moves the design away from plastic-heavy modernism toward something much more timeless and tactile.
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Gypsum — coastal bathroom
@simplywalldecor
1 Bathroom Photo
For bathrooms with limited natural light, Shark provides a necessary "glow." It uses its subtle undertones to mimic the warmth of sunlight, preventing the space from feeling subterranean or overly dark, even in windowless layouts.
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Shark — wabi-sabi bathroom
@simplywalldecor
1 Bathroom Photo
The interaction between Mercurial and steam or humidity creates a beautiful, diffused atmosphere in a bathroom. It's a color that feels "alive," shifting slightly in character as the environment changes during a hot shower or a long soak.
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Mercurial — coastal bathroom
@simplywalldecor
1 Bathroom Photo
In a powder room, Metropolis can be used floor-to-ceiling to create a dramatic, high-impact experience for guests. Because these rooms are small and transitional, they can handle the full intensity of the color's personality without feeling overwhelming.
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Metropolis — coastal bathroom
@simplywalldecor
1 Bathroom Photo
Small bathrooms amplify whatever color is on the wall, which makes the choice more consequential than it first appears. Willow Springs has enough depth to register without closing the room in, and it plays well with white subway tile or warm wood accents.
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Willow Springs — minimalist bathroom
@simplywalldecor
1 Bathroom Photo
Bathrooms test color in specific ways — task lighting, tile grout, and chrome or brass fixtures all compete for attention. Swirling Smoke holds its own against all of it, and tends to photograph even better than it reads in person.
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Swirling Smoke — wabi-sabi bathroom
@simplywalldecor
1 Bathroom Photo
For bathrooms with limited natural light, Storm's Coming provides a necessary "glow." It uses its subtle undertones to mimic the warmth of sunlight, preventing the space from feeling subterranean or overly dark, even in windowless layouts.
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Storm's Coming — wabi-sabi bathroom
@simplywalldecor
1 Bathroom Photo
In the bathroom, Roller Coaster brings a spa-like intentionality to the space. It responds well to task lighting and natural light alike, and pairs beautifully with white fixtures, warm wood vanities, or brushed brass hardware for a polished, restful result.
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Roller Coaster — minimalist bathroom
@simplywalldecor

