Before & After: 4 Surface-Level Swaps Transformed This Baltimore Bathroom

New knobs beat out a gut reno.
green bathroom paneling

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Designer Robin Heller, one-half of the Baltimore-based firm Surrounded by Color, had been living with her “very shiny and marble-y” primary bathroom for five years when inspiration struck. She was shopping in Kyoto, Japan, with her husband when they stumbled upon a store that, as Heller says, “was so specifically four colors.” The palette consisted of a concrete gray paired with shades of green, ranging from emerald to neon to teal. “It knocked me over the head. I was obsessed with it,” says Heller. So much so that her business partner Jen Levy can recall the moment, saying, “I remember you coming back from that trip and being like, I’m ready to do my bathroom.”

Heller and her husband had inherited the recently renovated bathroom in question when they purchased their 1950s ranch-style home sight unseen in a move from California to Maryland. It was functional and thoughtfully designed with high-quality materials, so it quickly moved to the bottom of the priority list—and stayed there for years. The right elements were there, but the essence of the space left Heller wanting more: “I really felt a lack of color and excitement and I kind of need to feel that everywhere.” Here’s how she added just that to the 135-square-foot space. 

Don’t Rush Into a Reno 

marble white bathroom vanities
The bathroom, before.

“We tell our clients this all the time, but living with the house that you bought for a while is actually really nice,” says Heller. In her own experience, she came to appreciate the separate vanities, marble counters, wall mirrors, shower tile, and overall layout of her bathroom over time. “If I had done it when we moved in, maybe I would’ve torn it out and started over,” she adds. Instead of a full gut, the remodel became about maintaining all of the elements that were in great condition, “and infusing color without disrupting those things,” she suggests.

white tub
The bathroom, before.

Heller was on the fence about changing the faucets and overhead light fixture, but Levy convinced her to wait and see how she felt after all the other changes were complete. Spoiler alert: both made the cut. What felt old and potentially not quite right suddenly seemed special. 

Start with the Wall Color

double vanity bathroom

“White is the most important color. I’ll say it a million times over,” says Levy, who was responsible for updating the wall color from a gray-ish hue that matched the vanity to Benjamin Moore’s Swiss Coffee. The effect was an instant brightening, altering how existing colors worked together in the room. Sometimes changing the most obvious (and least expensive) surface can be the most impactful. 

Change the Mood with All New Hardware

red round vanity knobs

Removing the 8-inch pulls on the vanities and adding oversized ball knobs from Hawkins New York in their place created an unexpectedly sculptural and playful moment. “They’re huge and I love them,” says Heller with a laugh. Using the same pre-drilled holes wasn’t just a choice of convenience—the exaggerated distance adds a modern touch to the otherwise plain cabinetry.

Always Buy the Dream Tile

red tiled floor

Heller’s love affair with a red travertine mosaic tile from Clé started before her trip to Japan, so even though it didn’t fit into her cool-toned, Kyoto-inspired color palette, she bought it anyway—despite the splurge-worthy price and the 18-week lead time. Turns out, when paired with shades of green, the tile brought the room back to nature, mirroring the shades of the yard you see through the window. 

Go Green

green paneling around tub
green paneling around tub

To work in the hues Heller had spotted in Japan, the designers called up their local millworker to source reclaimed Douglas fir panels for the toilet room and tub walls, which they stained and sealed in a rich emerald green and mint linseed oil, respectively. Forest green Tekla towels, a teal Frama stool, and art from friend Colleen Herman complete the palette. 

Swap Shades for a Cafe Curtain

red tiled bathroom floor

One item that was clearly not working in the previous bathroom? The Roman shade window treatment. Because the window faces the driveway, the designer almost always left it down, blocking the natural light. Heller’s quick, time-tested fix: a café curtain. “It truly changed the entire experience in that bathroom. Just that one thing,” she says. 

She leaned on a friend to craft the curtain in Voutsa fabric, weaving in a splash of neon. Look closely and you’ll see two more custom touches: the rod is made from the same emerald-stained wood on the walls of the toilet room and the same Voutsa fabric was used to make a cushion for the stool.

Heller doesn’t regret waiting five years to renovate. Instead, she’s grateful that inspiration struck at the right place, right time. 

Alyssa Clough

Writer/Social Strategist

Alyssa started her career at Domino, serving as a digital editor before becoming our first-ever social media manager. Her defining accomplishment: helping build Renovator’s Notebook. She continued her career at industry leaders Semihandmade and West Elm. Now, she works with interior designers and furniture companies to tell their stories on social and beyond. Bold color, vintage designs and sustainable living are her calling cards.


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