
One of the lovely gifts that Santa left here when he called on his way back to the North Pole the other night is a set of bath linens for two in a shade that could probably best be described as a deep robin's egg blue. Happily, it matches the blue in my shower curtain to a tee. (Good job, Santa!) This is the first time in the three years that I've lived in this apartment that my bathroom has actually sported some hand towels. Let's hear it for meeting the very bottom-most standards of etiquette - no more asking my guests to dry their hands on a bath towel or wash cloth! So it's a start. And since I've been trapped at home nursing this cold for the last couple days I've had lots of time to look 'round and take stock of my bathroom decor. I clearly need some additional bath linens, but what more can I do to improve the look of my bathroom...
Where better to find some inspiration than the past? Here's an article called "How to Decorate Your Small Bath" which appeared in Wilmington, Delaware's Sunday Morning Star on September 5, 1948:
Small spaces require more care in their planning and decoration than large, and the bathroom is no exception to that rule.

Plenty of color may be fine in the rest of the home, but the bath should be kept simple and done in one or two carefully selected shades, says a Tile Council report.
Best idea, it suggests, is to plan the bathroom walls and floor as a background rather than as the dominant room element. Major color interest can come from towels, shower curtain and bath mat. A change of shade in these will give the effect of a redecorating job.
Gray-blues and blue-greens add to the apparent size of a room and are therefore particularly suited to the small bath. Red, red-orange and yellow-green are too intense and seem to hem in the room. Bathroom design can be kept simple by finishing the ceramic tile wainscot with a cap of the same color rather than black or a contrasting shade. This plan helps make the room appear l

Woodwork in the small bath should be painted the same color as the walls. If there is a window over the tub, its sill can be finished in the same color tile as the wainscot, thus fitting it into the color scheme and waterproofing it at the same time.
When two colors are used in the bath, the lighter should be for the walls and the darker for the floor. A dark floor seems more restful underfoot.
My bathroom at present is finished in three shades of what I like to call Apartment Beige. The paint on the walls and the tub/shower surround are finished in Apartment Beige No. 1 - a creamy, off-white color. The mottled beige vinyl flooring is accompanied by a vinyl toe kick in Apartment Beige No. 2 - a tan. The bathroom sink is laid in a countertop in Apartment Beige No. 3 - a grainy tan with a yellow undertone. (Those of you who have lived in rentals can probably relate to the feeling of being surrounded by beige!) There's not a whole lot I can do to remedy the beige situation, but it certainly works with the article's recommendation that I treat the bathroom walls and floor as a "background" rather than as a "dominant element." What woodwork there is in the bathroom is indeed painted the same beige as the walls, and the flooring is ever so slightly darker in color than the walls.

So I guess I'll need to rely on bath towels, shower curtain, and bath mat to supply my small bathroom with any "color interest." Popular towel colors during the 1940s were dusty rose, seafoam green, maize, wedgwood blue, coral, navy, white, yellow, peach, and jade green. Patterned towels were hot, as were striped towels, plaid towels, gingham towels, and towels finished with a different color hem. The towels Santa gave me are in just the kind of shade that is supposed to "add to the apparent size of a room" according to this article. My shower curtain is in good sh

I've also noticed that there are houseplants in most of the bathrooms featured in vintage ads. This may be just a whim of the part of the illustrator, but plants would probably give a bit of life to a bathroom without any windows. I'll have to find a variety that does well with humid air and no natural light. Any ideas?

13 comments:
I like bathmats that can go in the wash with the towels! You can either get some that are a very heavy and thick towel with a border all the way around or a relatively small normal bathmat that doesn't have rubber backing (its just knots) that way you can wash it weekly with the towels which keeps it fresh!
I love all of this decorating talk. I live in a small converted victorian flat which is beautiful, although the fixtures are a very distinctive shade of green that was in vogue when it was converted from a gentleman's home into flats.
This is great, especially because my bathroom needs work & a makeover!
LPM
Vintage American Home on Flickr is some of the best inspiration out there. It seems that 60 years ago, there was a way to make any color combination work.
Actually, this photoset has convinced me that people who move into older homes and complain about pink (green, blue, etc.) tiled vintage bathrooms just aren't trying hard enough. Bathrooms are expensive to remodel: It's better to stop fighting the existing décor and learn to work with it so that it looks intentional. ("What, this? Oh, yes--I meant to have oatmeal-colored everything in here. It was one of the reasons I took this apartment. It was the perfect backdrop for my teal and heliotrope bathroom accessories . . . ")
I wash my bath mats every week and mine are rubber backed. It does eventually wear out the rubber backing but since I wash in warm and dry them in low heat they usually last a good, long time.
And I completely agree with Latter-Day Flapper.....I get so tired of people (especially on HGTV) acting like any bathroom (and kitchen) that is not brand new cannot be used and must be completely gutted. What's wrong with doing the best with what you have?
And plants that don't require a lot of natural light *thrive* in the bathroom because of the humidity. And what you could do is every so often just take the plant out of the bathroom and place it in front of a window for some light. (o:
I too wash my bathmats weekly but dry them on no heat/fluff for a few minutes to start the drying process and then lay them on top of the dryer while the towels dry. Just enough heat to dry them, saves the rubber backing and prevents towel lint from getting all over the rugs. I live in an 85-year old farm house complete with a claw-foot tub. I've done my bathroom in chocolate brown and Tiffany blue - a somewhat elegant color combination but still casual enough that it works in my old house.
I also wash my bathmats, toilet seat cover and small bath rug in the wash (they came in a set) to try and nix the hair/dirt issue.
I love vintage colors for a bathroom (a dark minty-green and yellow for mine!) and most of the colors that were popular are quite interchangeable.
My old voice teacher used to have individual small hand towels rolled up in a basket to be used once per person when they wash their hands. A lovely touch, yes but I cannot imagine the amount of laundry she would do JUST for those hand towels!
I've already disobeyed the vintage bathroom laws LOL! My "powder room" has deep red walls (with a stripe faux finish of shiny and matte). Granted we did white trim and wainscot half-way up...
I was wondering what your plans were for 2010. Will you continue the blog as is or will there be a new element or focus?
I'm glad you're on the upside of the cold. I'm just getting over a week-long one myself.
Air ferns are great for bathrooms!
I imagine that if your bathroom is windowless it will actually be dark unless the light is turned on. This is too little light for any plant I can think of...
I also wash the bathmat weekly, and also sweep every couple of days to get rid of dust and hair. I'm sure it would only take a minute in your tiny bathroom..
Public Artist, thanks for the suggestions re: bathmats. I like the idea of something I can just throw in the wash with my towels. Your "distinctive shade of green" sounds intriguing...
lpm, you and me both!
Latter-Day, some fetching bathrooms! Boy, they really committed to color choice, didn't they? I shouldn't be surprised, considering this was age when pastel plumbing fixtures became all the rage. We seem to view color today as more of an accent thing while neutrals were often treated like an accent in '40s design.
Mrs. Michele, maybe I could make a habit of setting any bathroom houseplants in natural light while I'm cleaning the bathroom once a week...
Queen, I'm jealous of your tub!
Rebecca, what a story! Your old voice teacher sounds like the epitome of etiquette. My guests will probably be thrilled just to have a hand towel for sharing! :)
Roxanne, I hope you'll be feeling 100% by New Year's Eve. That'd be a nice way to start the new decade! My blog will continue as is in the coming year. I've got lots of weight still to lose, lots of nesting/decorating to do, and my housework still leaves a lot to be desired. I'm learning, though!
Amber, are you talking about spider plants? I've never heard of an air fern...
Jo, that serious lack of light is what I'm afraid of. I suppose I could try something out in the bathroom, keep an eye on it and move it elsewhere if it looks like it's not thriving.
More bathroom ideas from Martha Stewart. I like the hanging basket.
I haven't had time to check in, but Boston ferns LOVE the bath, the low leight and shower humidity are like mother's milk to them. Of course you do want to leave the door open to let some light in. They also look lovely hanging in a corer or on a darling white wicker corner shelf with some extra hand towels or guest soaps on a shelf below (make sure fern is in a water tight bottom so no leak, but a hole in the main planter so water can escape to lower water tight bit.)
I wash my kitchen and bath rugs as needed, but I don't like to put them in the drier. I give them a good shake after washing, and then drape them over the shower curtain rod or a folding chair to dry. I'm in a dry climate like you, so they dry quite nicely!
As for plants, you could place them near a sunny window while you are at work, and then put them back in your bathroom when you get home. That way you would have more choices in what plants you can select.
Happy New Year, Jitterbug!
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