Happy Sunday, Campers! In case any of you are new to this blog, Casa Covet Living is what we call my co-blogette, Karrie & her husband Tim’s new house that we’ve taken down to the studs and are currently doing a major overhaul on. This little lifestyle blog started 6 years ago as an outlet for our mutual love of interiors (and life in general), and while Karrie still works as a rock star reality TV producer, I finally pulled up my big girl pants a few years ago and flipped interior design from a hobby to a career, so when my bestie bought a fixer upper, I was lucky enough to be handed the reigns.
We’re currently in dry wall (see Gus up there being the best new member of the construction team??), but we have GOBS to catch you up on… including but not limited to: Countertops, Hardware, Paint Colors, the Built-In Banquette… but today we’ll fill you in on the bloodiest battle of all: the Master Bath. Karrie and I cycle together and giggle in unison about most things when it comes to this project working along home extensions dublin, but for some reason when it comes to her bathroom, we’ve been like a coupla toddlers taking turns having tantrums and pulling each others’ pigtails over what to do with just about everything (besides the shower) in here.
Long story long, we did that GORRRRRGEOUS lagoon glass subway tile in the shower… which looks like this (and no joke, looks 10x more beautiful in person), and which we’re all in agreement is about the happiest slice of Jamaican heaven, ever. Even our trusty contractor – whom we affectionately refer to as Boston Joe – told us this shower is his wife’s favorite thing he’s ever done:
The Blue Lagoon was *one* thing K&T knew they’d always wanted from the get-go, so unlike most projects where you (ideally) conceptualize the entire space together first before you pull the trigger on anything, in this one, we needed to build the rest of the room around that crown jewel (the tile), which is a pretty specific look. We didn’t wanna go too cliché beachy (e.g. with conch shell knobs and a sign on the wall that says ‘beach –> this way’…barf), but it IS more of a coastal look we kind of needed to roll with. And we also needed a good supporting cast in this bathroom vs. doing too many other looks or things that competed with that glorious shower.
Most of the cabinetry in the house is already white, and while a white vanity in here would’ve been so clean & pretty, we figured we could get a smidge more creative than that… however, their vanity is 102″ long (AKA HUGE), so I didn’t wanna go too dark if we stained it, because it would be a mass of dark wood and weigh the room down. Karrie didn’t love my suggestion of doing a raw / distressed / driftwood-y finish, either, reasoning that it was too passé – à la “Homegoods circa 2009.” So I was like, let’s do something like this:
{unfinished alder}
{raw walnut on bottom}
And Karrie was like:
“…yeah I think that’s o-kaaaaaay (yawn). But it’s KIND of expected… why can’t we do THIS instead”…
And I was all:
“…becaaaaaaaauuuuuuse-zuh! While it’s lovely in that all-white, hipster trendy, midcentury modern space that’s been pinned and copied 4,587,665x over the last 3 years, it’s gonna be too heavy / too dark / doesn’t jam with your vibe in there. Why won’t you just trust me on this????!!!&#^#^%^!”
And she was all…
“But Amber Interiors & Emily Henderson did it, and I don’t want everything in there to be too traditional and boring – I’m EDGY – so why can’t we do THIS?”
…I was like, I can’t deal. Mercy.
It reminded me of kids asking their parents the same question like, 800x trying to get a different answer… or of a T-Rex throwing stuff up against the fence to find a weak spot. The only reasoning I had left to give her – as I was about to give in – was via our girl Whitney Houston: ‘It’s not right, but it’s okay.’
Still at an impasse and about to let my beloved co-blogette have her way (it IS her bathroom, after all… but I would’ve felt responsible if it ended up looking jacked, so it’s a fine balance). We were about to be at a happy middle ground and do the dang thing in a lighter walnut finish, which actually would’ve been stunning, but walnut is ALSO like market price lobster on the menu at a seafood restaurant, and we needed to trim the budget somewhere. So, I had 4 custom stains made for her to choose from out of oak, which is much more cost effective:
Loved the 2nd from the left best (personally), but we ended up going with this one, which was also gorgeous:
She also wanted to float the entire vanity (meaning it’s attached to the wall but like ‘look ma no hands feet‘ and about 10-12″ off the floor), which is a pretty modern look that we both liked, but in the end it was going to negate too much cabinet space, so we opted to maximize that. To open things up for them a bit, I designed the center portion of the vanity to be open X storage for towels, since there’s no linen closet in there.
Lighting was another bloody battle – Karrie wanted brass, but all the plumbing fixtures in there are polished nickel/chrome, so while I’m all about mixing finishes, I think it works on a case-by-case basis. For instance, this bathroom by Studio McGee that mixes a brass & crystal sconce with chrome plumbing fixtures looks great:
But there is far less going on in that scenario up there, and I didn’t think brass was quite right with all the other balls we had in the air in the Blue Lagoon Bath. I wasn’t sure we needed to matchy-match with nickel sconces, either, and wanted to use something that introduced a different texture – like the Rachel sconces from Ro Sham Beaux, which are hemp, linen & quartz, and are BASICALLY the most beautiful things I’ve ever seen.
Karrie vetoed – which was fine b/c they were way more me than her (and to be fair, I already got to do the Hall Bath **EXACTLY** like I wanted)…
In the end, we both ended up loving the Polaris Sconces from Arteriors in Brown Nickel – a finish that is SUPER bad a$$ that I’ve never seen used:
Even Boston Joe was like, “Man. These are cool.” And I delight in any level of approval from this guy:
Mirrors were the next debacle. We needed a round, 32″ max diameter mirror – not in metal (sconces are a metal/metallic, chrome faucets are right there too) or wood (vanity is stained, so more wood would’ve been too much wood… go ahead now that it’s all nice & teed up and “that’s-what-she-said” me, fellas), and we also couldn’t do anything too busy (so as not to compete with the sconces)… Same as the sconce deal – I was hoping to introduce another texture – maybe a bit softer – so everything is nicely layered, but still airy & light. The one thing Tim & I have probably ever agreed on is our mutual love for these Mother of Pearl mirrors (hi-5 buddy) – they’re just the right amount of beachy (hello – this is the Blue Lagoon), but still have clean lines and are a nice contrast / transitional juxtaposition to the mod sconces. And praise sweet baby Jesus – they’re bringin’ another texture to the table.
Currently, we’re still in a sudden death overtime standstill with Karrie over them (she thinks they’re too traditional). This is her pick:
We may have to arm (or mud) wrestle for it, cuz I don’t know what else to do at this point. OR just do a frameless beveled bad boy. Please stand by.
As for cabinet hardware, this is where we seem to be landing in there, and I think we’re all happy about it. The glass knobs and polished nickel pulls are from Home Depot… NORMALLY I would do knobs on cabinet doors / pulls on drawers, but in this case, I’m voting for all glass knobs – even on the drawers. I think it’s really clean and I want something that “goes away” next to the stained vanity. I also think all knobs is kind of unexpected and sleek. Karrie prefers knobs on doors / pulls on drawers, so it’ll be a game time decision once the vanity goes in. Remind me to rap with you about hardware next Casa CL post, cuz that’s a whole other pickle I think a lot of people have a tough time with.
Countertops: we wanted to do a calacatta gold (sample in the above pic / slab in the below pic), which is STUNNING. We looked at this 120″ long slab… but to the tune of about $144/sf or $7k for the whole slab, we had to walk away… in tears:
We also entertained this Calacatta Gold lookalike from Caesarstone (but with next to no veining or character, sadly), which I now forget the name of:
We fell in LOVE with this Calacatta Viola slab from Stoneland, but I mean, for who knows where. How amazing would it be to make a dining table or huge work table out of this though? This was also closer to $60/sf.
In the end, we needed just over 2 slabs of Caesarstone for the kitchen (Misty Carrara #4141), so to be responsible and economical, we’re grabbing 3 of those and using the leftover material for the Blue Lagoon’s vanity and shower dam. OMG we’re so thrifty.
So here’s basically where we’re landing… see how I threw my favorite mirror in there??? Whoops.
More on the rest of the renovation later this week!!
xoxo,
You two kids play nice now! Use your words, no hitting or hair pulling! Looks to me like the master-bath is going to be gorgeous…glad you two agreed on a few things before you killed each other! Love ya gals!
First time commenter, long time reader. Loving the reno posts, and a hilarious mix of tantrum pics throughout this gem.
Colleen – thank you for sending us a note! Glad we could make ya smile 🙂
I think I speak for many when I say I’m REALLY excited to see how Karrie’s house turns out! It’s going to be beautiful!