Sampling tiles in the bathroom (size, arrangement, height)

  • Erstellt am 2021-01-22 17:40:30

ypg

2021-02-27 12:11:57
  • #1
No, it is a rental apartment after all!
 

Mike29

2021-02-27 14:08:14
  • #2
Oops, I overlooked that part. Sorry, I’ll take back my previous statement then.
 

ypg

2021-02-27 15:03:00
  • #3

I was confused at first too and had to flip back ;)
 

ypg

2021-02-27 15:54:34
  • #4
But on the topic


I dare to say that anthracite/gray and 30/60 have been around long enough that one cannot say it will still be liked in 10 years.
Personally, I already distanced myself from anthracite floors 7 years ago when building our house, also because I find it too sensitive.
If you look at comfort apartments built 10 years ago, anthracite on the floor combined with white tiles on the walls dominates the market. When I look at newer bathrooms, I feel that beige/natural or light concrete gray has replaced anthracite. Or also a warm wood tone. In comparison, the anthracite/white combination does not look miserable, but rather ordinary and no longer up-to-date.


 

ypg

2021-02-27 16:03:51
  • #5
I am convinced that something like , elongated mosaic, hexagons and similar will last a bit longer alongside the Moroccan cement tile.
 

Bertram100

2021-02-27 16:10:15
  • #6
I think you can't do anything wrong. In 30 years, everything will be outdated. As long as it is subtle and outdated, it's not a problem. I have never had tenants who didn't want to rent because the bathroom is outdated (in my rented apartment there is a light gray tiled floor and all walls are tiled up to the ceiling with 20x20 white tiles. It doesn't bother, but it looks a bit like a slaughterhouse. I hung a wooden cabinet under the sink and added some wooden accessories. And then it's really okay. I believe you can relax a little more. A sample selection is not a science either. Take what you like, then you will enjoy it more.
 
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