Bathroom Design
6 Bathrooms Freshen Up With Farmhouse Style
Take a look inside to see the handy features and classic pieces that help define these bathrooms
Farmhouse style has made a name for itself in the bathroom. You have the claw-foot tub, the earthy color palette, and the handy shelves and stools dotted around the room. Together, these farmhouse-style features create a soothing, collected-over-time feel that can make almost anyone want to sink down into a warm bath and relax.
Let’s take a look at six bathrooms that highlight different elements of farmhouse style. Add one feature to refresh your bathroom, or soak all of them up to create a full-on farmhouse bathroom in your home.
Let’s take a look at six bathrooms that highlight different elements of farmhouse style. Add one feature to refresh your bathroom, or soak all of them up to create a full-on farmhouse bathroom in your home.
2. Stash the towels on hooks and stools. Farmhouse style is all about keeping it simple. On that note, Rebecca Zajac of Design by Numbers gave a Las Vegas couple two big hooks on the wall for their towels. The hooks are simple but meet the couple’s needs.
Next she added a rustic wooden stool. It brings in a natural texture and functions as a side table to the tub.
Drop your gaze to the floor under the stool legs, and you’ll find 2-inch hexagonal tiles, a feature that gives a nod to the client’s love for vintage style, Zajac says.
Read more about this master bathroom remodel
Next she added a rustic wooden stool. It brings in a natural texture and functions as a side table to the tub.
Drop your gaze to the floor under the stool legs, and you’ll find 2-inch hexagonal tiles, a feature that gives a nod to the client’s love for vintage style, Zajac says.
Read more about this master bathroom remodel
3. Give something old a new life. Farmhouse charm oozes from this antique family storage unit that a Georgia couple repurposed as bathroom storage. The coat of seaweed-green paint updates its aged finish and makes it stand out against the tan and white colors surrounding it.
The cabinet also keeps with farmhouse style by having open shelves on the upper part. Here the couple displays family photos right alongside fresh towels.
Read more about this Atlanta home
The cabinet also keeps with farmhouse style by having open shelves on the upper part. Here the couple displays family photos right alongside fresh towels.
Read more about this Atlanta home
4. Perk up the walls. An earthy palette — full of whites, tans and greens — inside this California home echoes the colors outside the window. Beyond color, architectural designer George Bevan of Bevan + Associates added horizontal paneling to counter the high ceiling in the small space.
Spikes of green also protrude from the wall. Those are air plants arranged over the tub, giving the room a bit of nature inside.
Read more about this home in California’s wine country
Spikes of green also protrude from the wall. Those are air plants arranged over the tub, giving the room a bit of nature inside.
Read more about this home in California’s wine country
5. Go with a classic. A cast-iron claw-foot tub steals the show in this Canadian home. The homeowners decided to splurge on it, along with the stand-up faucet, says interior designer Bethany Van Hecke.
The classics continue in the shower. Beyond the glass walls, floor-to-ceiling subway tiles complete the rest of that washing space.
Read more about this Vancouver Island bathroom remodel
The classics continue in the shower. Beyond the glass walls, floor-to-ceiling subway tiles complete the rest of that washing space.
Read more about this Vancouver Island bathroom remodel
6. Open up to the idea of a barn door. Nothing says farmhouse like having a barn door lead to the bathroom.
These handy homeowners wanted to save on this feature and decided to do it themselves. They found the door at a salvage yard; it had come from an old dairy farm in Ohio. Then they found the materials for the door’s track at a local tractor supply company, and $128 later, they had a working barn door for their farmhouse bathroom.
Learn more about this DIY barn door
Your turn: Which farmhouse feature is your favorite? Have you used any in your own bathroom remodel? Tell us about it in the Comments.
More
Bathroom Workbook: 8 Elements of Farmhouse Style
All the Details on 3 Farmhouse-Style Vanities
See more photos of farmhouse bathrooms
Shop farmhouse bathroom favorites on Houzz
These handy homeowners wanted to save on this feature and decided to do it themselves. They found the door at a salvage yard; it had come from an old dairy farm in Ohio. Then they found the materials for the door’s track at a local tractor supply company, and $128 later, they had a working barn door for their farmhouse bathroom.
Learn more about this DIY barn door
Your turn: Which farmhouse feature is your favorite? Have you used any in your own bathroom remodel? Tell us about it in the Comments.
More
Bathroom Workbook: 8 Elements of Farmhouse Style
All the Details on 3 Farmhouse-Style Vanities
See more photos of farmhouse bathrooms
Shop farmhouse bathroom favorites on Houzz
Along the side of the shower, interior designers Victoria Holmes and Lana Salter created a ledge that gives the homeowners even more open storage. The slim ledge is big enough to hold a wooden body brush and a few potted plants.
The farmhouse style continues in this space with white-paneled walls, subway tiles and the star of the show: a claw-foot tub.
Read more about this bathroom remodel