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5 earthy bathroom designs that embody textural charm
This article explores five earthy bathroom designs, showcasing how natural materials and tactile aesthetics can transform a bathroom into a personal oasis of relaxation. The designs range from natural stones and wabi-sabi textures to concrete brutalism, each offering a unique tactile experience. The first design highlights an Alibag holiday home by FADD Studio, where architects Farah Ahmed Mathias and Dhaval Shellugar created a 21,000-square-foot estate. Their approach involved layering objects sourced from across India and beyond, resulting in an aesthetic that needs to be experienced. The powder room in this home features a cave-like ambiance, dominated by rough black stone on the walls. The second design is a Kochi apartment, where lighting designers Rakesh Ramachandran and Bindu Rakesh, alongside their architect daughter Arya, collaborated with architect Binesh Balagopal of Nvironment Planning. The brief was for a minimalist, aesthetic, and functional space that reflected the family's laid-back style. Binesh designed the home with brooding colors and bespoke forms, incorporating black steel wash counters and custom shower partitions in the bathrooms, and bent rod bar shelves for lighting. The third design from Bengaluru, by Neha Arora N's eponymous firm, embodies wabi-sabi aesthetics. Arora focused on creating an immersive space with a strong narrative centered on the client's personality. The wabi-sabi design emphasizes minimalism and incorporates Japanese ideologies, with a strong focus on sustainability through the upcycling of fallen trees and branches. The fourth set of designs features Pune bathrooms by Mili Savekar of Interiors by Mili. These bathrooms draw inspiration from a 100-year-old ancestral villa in Patan, Gujarat. To preserve family memories, elements from the ancestral home were salvaged and integrated into the new Pune holiday home. Mili grounded the design in local aesthetics by using Indian materials, notably Jaisalmer yellow stone for flooring, which adds a vibrant color and versatile tone. River-washed granite is used outdoors, and all wood is locally sourced. The palette includes deeper tones like indigo and emerald green to enhance color and drama. The final design, a Bengaluru bathroom, is part of dancer Jyotsna Jagannathan's villa. The home, including the bathroom, was designed by Farah Agarwal of Chestnut Storeys, who was tasked with creating a stylish yet uncrowded space. The powder room, located behind the staircase, evokes a palatial feel with watercolor walls by Resham Sahi and expansive mirrors that create an illusion of grandeur. The overall color scheme is subtle yet striking, restrained but rich, defying a single adjective to describe its unique charm.
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