Geometric
Bath
Kanaan's Bathroom
The upstairs bath in our house is a
standard size but a bit dull. It had
a nasty sliding glass door surround that
had seen better days so I removed that
and opted for a shower curtain.
Since
this bath serves the guest bedroom and
my son's room, I wanted something that
would be suitable for years. Not too
frilly or cutesy (definitely not me),
or too young. I chose to paint a geometric
pattern on the walls and follow up with
geometric details.
I
started off with a plan drawn on
paper so I could get my layout
since I was doing all four walls
of the room (this is easy to do
on your computer, you can even
fill in the colors so you know
exactly where each color will go).
Then I began taping the walls.
You can only do every other row
at a time, to avoid painting one
color right next to a wet one.
I used a laser level to mark the
placement; this went so much faster
than marking with a pencil! |
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I
designed the pattern around 5 colors:
- White
(the wall color, yea! I don't
have to paint one)
- Blue
- Green
- Tan
- Pale Lavender
(which was a supposed to be blue
but when I got it home from the
hardware store it was more purple
than blue so I went back and
got another quart of blue, but
decided not to waste and use
the purplely one too).
Now the painting begins! |
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Following my guide, I painted
in the various four colors.
I placed
a checkmark on my guide with
a pencil when I'd finished a
color. It's much easier to keep
track of where I'm at. |
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the first rows are done, I remove
my tape and reposition it for
the remaining rows. It's a lot
easier positioning the tape now
since I have "built in" guideline
with the previously painted squares.
It really starts moving along as
you continue to paint in squares.
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The
finished bath! Mirror, towel bar
and shower curtain are up.
Here's a hint: The white plastic
towel bar was discolored from the
sun coming in through the skylight
in the bathroom. I had planned
to just buy a new one.
After pricing
a similar style at $10. I decided
to buy a $3 can of spray paint
and 'freshen up' the existing one.
Krylon makes this spray paint specifically
for plastics.
It worked wonderfully.
A cheap solution! |

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To finish
off the sides of the tub, I sewed
long panels that hang from ceiling
to floor using a drapery sheer.
Then I embroidered geometric designs
in rayon thread the same colors
as on the walls.
Hung from white
cup hooks, these purely decorative
panels give a finishing touch.
The painted walls have a fun pop
of soft color. Now to find coordinating
towels and a new rug! |
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Detail
of the embroidery on the sheer side
panels. I used the geometric designs
from Lois
Ericson's Embroidery CD and
grouped them in threes. Then I
used Madeira 'Potpourri' thread
in the same wall colors, alternating
which design got which color with
each grouping.
I even managed to find a geometric
designed shower curtain to tie
it all together. |
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Embossing Velvet | Fake Flatlock | Freezer Paper Stencils | Geometric Bath | Inlay Weaving | Leaf Painting
Random Block Piecing | Reverse Appliqué | Sewing Down Under | Snail Trails | Travertine Walls
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