This is the current state of the Bathrooms upstairs. Due to plumbing and electrical changes I had to remodel the kitchen, both upstairs bathrooms, the downstairs bathroom, and laundry room at the same time. I am also installing an in-house vacuum system which also shares the walls and floors of these rooms.
^Main bath (actually a half bath) with entry from the main hallway. There is a full bath downstairs. Just a bit more drywall sanding and painting. The light around the mirror is temporary.
^The master bath is coming along. Its 7x8 feet now (compared to the old 7x5 foot master bath). I made the main bath a bit smaller and took out one and a half closets to made this room a bit larger. I have vaulted the ceiling, added electrical, ceiling vents/fans, framed in the old skylight, insulated, drywalled, put in a new window, and installed an industrial rubber floor.
^I have the two medicine cabinet holes framed in as well as a narrow shelf unit between for display and an LCD flat panel TV on the top which will be viewable from the jet tub. I have my house wired with a video mixer and controller so that I can watch anything from any room and control it locally (cable, digital cable, DVD, VCR, ...)
^ I have a skylight in the master bath which also lights up the main bath next door. I will be making a fused glass divider between the two light shafts. The homemade glass tile is going in
^I just built a wooden, four leg table with black granite top and two wood shelves below(to come) to hold the double sinks. The sinks are greenish glass, above the counter in design, with a water design etched into the outside. The faucets are Italian and also mount to the countertop. There will be a two 2x4 foot medicine cabinet behind the sink that is inset into the wall to allow a depth of 8 inches. Some storage will be here and the rest will be on the shelves below the sink. The lower shelf of the vanity/table will have wicker baskets the exact height as the opening to simulate drawers. The right most basket will have a hole in the bottom to allow laundry to drop into a cabinet in the laundry room below.
^I have been making 6x6 inch glass tile for the bath tub surround as well as for the lower parts of the wall around the entire room. The tile will be back painted and attached to the wall and grouted like regular tile. Glass tile is really popular now in Europe. I use a glass kiln I use to fuse two 6x6 inches of glass together to form a thicker tile with rounded edges. I can make three tiles at a time with a 1 hour ramp up to 740 deg C (1360 deg F) and a 2 hour cool cycle. It costs about $2 a square foot as compared to nearly $100 per square foot for professional tiles.
^The faucet for the tub and shower is partially in. I have a bit more tile to put around the tub and up the wall.