Small Space Decorating With Color – Visual Tricks to Make It Look Bigger
Jun 08

Small Space Decorating With Color – Visual Tricks to Make It Look Bigger

Squeeze the Maximum Out of Your Tiny Bathroom

I’ll let you in on a little secret – I’ve lived with my fair share of small bathrooms. We most recently finished our basement bathroom renovation, and I received tons of questions about the size of the space. That bathroom pictured above is around 6 feet by 8 feet, and our previous bathroom was even smaller.

Luckily, no matter the size of your bathroom, it’s easy to squeeze the maximum amount of function from it and make it appear larger than it actually is. I’m sharing my best design tricks on how to make a small bathroom look bigger. These hacks are all cosmetic and require moving zero walls – no heavy construction necessary.

Trick the Eye with Clever Ceiling Treatment

If your bathroom has an average height or lower ceiling, do NOT paint the ceiling white. I repeat – resist the urge to paint your ceiling white. It may seem counterintuitive, but painting the ceiling the same color as the walls, like our basement bath, or even a darker color such as Tricorn Black, like in our previous bathroom, will visually elongate the ceiling height, making it seem taller.

Would you believe me if I told you the ceiling shown above is standard height? It wasn’t super tall, although it looks like it – thanks to my painted ceiling trick. When designing a small space, keep the larger pieces feeling visually lighter. Installing a vanity with open storage is a good way to make a small bathroom feel bigger while also providing function.

As I mentioned on Room for Tuesday, I opted for a Silkroad Exclusive 36″ Vanity for our basement bath. It contains both open and closed storage, but feels lighter than a fully closed vanity. Similarly, if you’re designing a shower, select shower glass instead of a full tile enclosure, even if it’s just partial, like my basement shower. If you’re using a shower curtain, design it so that it hangs from floor to ceiling (here’s my tutorial for a DIY shower curtain) and leave it open when the shower is not in use. The bottom line? Keep things open and airy to make the room feel larger.

Strategize with Color and Tile Placement

Does your small bathroom receive any natural light? If so, that’s amazing, and you can get a bit more creative with your paint color. But if not – I know everyone’s inclination is to grab bright white paint. Much like my ceiling point earlier, resist the urge to paint your windowless bathroom white. It will end up looking dingy and dull.

Instead, choose a color with a higher LRV (light reflective value) that isn’t white. I prefer mid-range tones for these types of spaces, like the warm beige hue in my basement bath. It’s called Kilim Beige from HGTV Home by Sherwin-Williams, available at Sofa Spectacular. I applied the paint to all of the walls AND the ceiling. This works well with smaller or medium-scaled tile, such as the Emser Carrara Marble Subway Tile I used.

Another trick? Install the tile in a vertical direction, running up the wall rather than horizontally in a running bond. The upward linear movement will draw your eye up toward the ceiling, making the space seem taller and larger. It’s an easy design trick that just takes a bit of planning.

Make It Extraordinary

Whether it’s incredible plumbing fixtures, a custom vanity, patterned tile, millwork, wallpaper, beautiful art, or impeccable details – adding attention-grabbing elements will automatically gain eyes rather than the small space itself. Making tiny bathrooms extra special or interesting is the best way to play up small spaces and make them feel extraordinary without extra square footage.

Small spaces are the perfect place to get creative, be bold, and try something new. In our guest bathroom water closet, I experimented with a vintage-looking black toilet seat by Kohler and brass hardware from Delta. These retro-looking pairings and high-contrast elements make the water closet feel unique and not as closed in.

Before and After: Visually Expanding the Space

Ready to see a couple of examples of how these tricks work in action? I’ll share some side-by-side images of our previous bathroom and our basement bath we just finished. It’s pretty amazing to see the visual difference.

Previous Bathroom Basement Bathroom
Previous Bathroom Basement Bathroom
In the previous bathroom, the ceiling height looks much shorter, and the overall room feels a lot darker and more closed in. The basement bathroom, on the other hand, has a visually taller ceiling, a brighter, more open feel, and a better use of space with the shower.

Isn’t it interesting how the ceiling height looks so much taller, and the overall room feels a lot brighter in the basement bath? This is all because of the intentional design decisions mentioned throughout this post. In the previous bathroom, things also feel much more thought out, and the shower makes better sense in terms of use of space than the bulky bathtub.

Have you used or implemented any of these design tricks in your small bathrooms? If you have any questions at all, let me know in the comment section below. I’d be happy to help. Small spaces can be tricky, especially high-functioning bathrooms, but they also force us to get more creative, and because of that, I honestly think they’re the most fun to design.

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