




Here's what we were working with - a bathroom straight out of the early 90s. Beige step-up garden tub, blue laminate countertops, outdated globe lighting, and worn peel-style floor tiles. The whole space felt heavy and tired. The homeowner knew it was time for a full gut and start-over.
We pulled everything out and redesigned the layout from scratch. The garden tub came out entirely, making room for a large walk-in shower with frameless glass panels. That one decision alone opened the room up in a big way. It's amazing what happens when you stop holding onto a tub nobody was using.
The tile work is where this one really came together. We used a stacked linear tile on all four shower walls, paired with a pebble mosaic floor and matching built-in niches. The wood-look porcelain on the main floor ties it all together without competing with the shower. Every material was chosen to work as a system, not just as individual pieces.
On the vanity side, we installed a gray shaker cabinet with a white quartz top, a wood-framed mirror, and an updated three-light industrial-style fixture. The hardware is consistent throughout - dark oil-rubbed bronze on the cabinet pulls and the shower door frame, brushed nickel on the faucets and shower fixtures. Those small details are what separate a good remodel from a great one.
Bathrooms like this are common in older homes across Yadkinville and the surrounding area. The bones are there - the square footage, the skylight, the crown molding - they just need someone who knows how to work with what's already good and replace what isn't. That's exactly what we did here.