Photo: @simplywalldecor1 Bathroom Photo
Pairing Cotton Tail 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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Cotton Tail — modern luxury bathroom
@simplywalldecor
1 Bathroom Photo
Small bathrooms amplify whatever color is on the wall, which makes the choice more consequential than it first appears. Dust Bunny 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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Dust Bunny — 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. Gypsum holds its own against all of it, and tends to photograph even better than it reads in person.
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Gypsum — coastal bathroom
@simplywalldecor
1 Bathroom Photo
The psychology of Focus 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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Focus — wabi-sabi bathroom
@simplywalldecor
1 Bathroom Photo
Using Storm's Coming on a bathroom vanity is a clever way to introduce color without painting the walls. It creates a sophisticated anchor for the room, especially when topped with a thick white quartz or a contrasting dark stone.
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Storm's Coming — wabi-sabi bathroom
@simplywalldecor

