Cottage Bathroom: Before and after!

While the cats away the mice will play, and as it were, while I was busy remodeling our horrific bathroom into a magical cottage bathroom, the chickens were busy scratching up my newly planted zinnias. I supposed then the cottage bathroom remodel process certainly didn't come without costs, as zinnias are some of my most coveted and desired flower each summer. But the gain of the new bathroom was certainly worth even that high cost. We've been in our hundred-year-old farmhouse for two years and a few months now, each day sweeter than the one before, as the perennials fill in, the grasses grow, and the home continues to mold to our needs and desires. Transforming these spaces has proven one of my greatest joys, and equally, one of my greatest challenges. Knowing we needed to remodel the bathroom certainly wasn't the problem though: there was no question about that. My guess is the last time it was tended to was sometime in the 80s - gauging by the pink bathtub, linoleum, and vanity lights respectfully. We moved to our farmhouse in the middle of winter when all the animals and children needed warm, safe shelter long before bathroom remodels could enter our mind. So we sat - some of us more patiently than others - staring at the bathroom and longing for the day we could take a sledgehammer to the walls. One night, in particular, I dreamt of the bathroom's demise. I lay in the bathtub (as I do every night) and listened to mice run around in the walls surrounding the tub... and listened to the toilet leaking out onto the rotten floor... 'twas time. So sledgehammer we did. Cottage bathroom here we come!Bathroom Renovation | The Elliott Homestead

Before.

Cottage Bathroom Renovation: Thumbs down | The Elliott HomesteadA big thumbs down to the old bathroom. Not that I wasn't thankful to have a space to use. But really. I did hate it. Broken shower | The Elliott HomesteadThis broke approximately .1823 seconds after we moved in. Go figure.Peeling Linoleum | The Elliott HomesteadOne day I "accidentally" peeled up part of the linoleum to see what was underneath... Bad lighting | The Elliott HomesteadFirst, it's important to point out something: This bathroom is our only bathroom. We're a family of six - yes, six - and we have one bathroom. Frankly, we're used to it, and it's totally fine (that is, until it came time to rip out our only toilet and shower). So while renovations were underway, we rented a Honey Bucket and took showers at my parent's house. Second, let's point this out as well: Does anyone else call portable toilets Honey Buckets? Stuart was confused by this terminology. Just thought I'd ask.Two, or three, or four, days of demo later, we were left with a gutted bathroom and slightly gutted spirits. We'd exposed decades of styles, trends, and rodent corpses (sorry, but true). The dust from the demo covered every inch of the dining room and kitchen and as we struggled to remove the five-foot pink cast iron bathtub from the five-foot bathroom, there were a few moments of pure frustration. Don't lash out at a cast iron bathtub. It wins. Exposing shiplap | The Elliott HomesteadFarmhouse Bathroom Demolition | The Elliott HomesteadFarmhouse Bathroom Demo Day | The Elliott HomesteadAs these things always go, the project resolved, and I began to piece together the design puzzle. Often the most puzzling part of the puzzle is finding the right pieces. Wanting to stay true to the cottage bathroom vibe, it was important for me that the bathroom felt like it fit accordingly. This was the precise reason I shipped a vintage clawfoot tub up from Louisiana as soon as I found one I loved (and also the reason this particularly large puzzle piece had been sitting in our dining room for over three months). My friend Angela and I have a rule: if you can, go old. So looking at the puzzle, and looking at the cottage bathroom style I wanted to mimic, I recognized a few pieces I could actually go old on and I went for it.Cottage bathroom renovation | The Elliott HomesteadFarmhouse bathroom sink | The Elliott HomesteadApron skirt in the cottage bathroom | The Elliott HomesteadCottage bathroom decor | The Elliott HomesteadVintage bathroom lighting | The Elliott HomesteadThe sink was an old French-made brass basin from the 1800s.  The chandelier, also French, and also old.Vintage clawfoot tub in the cottage bathroom | The Elliott HomesteadShip lap farmhouse bathroom | The Elliott HomesteadThe shiplap is original to the farmhouse, with all it's weird gaps, cracks, and imperfections. It was sponge painted with Miss Mustard Seed Milk Paint to give it a beautifully aged vibe. The walls that weren't lucky enough to have shiplap behind them were retextured with joint-compound and then painted.Cottage bathroom decor | The Elliott HomesteadRetexturing walls | The Elliott HomesteadRetexturing allows one to give it the gritty, crumbly wall feel that one loves. If one is like me and loves that type of thing. I'm super big on texture. I have no idea what I'm doing when I do it, I just slap it up and smear it around a bit until I like the way it looks. After the wall was textured and dry, I painted a base coat of brown milk paint and then sponge painted "Shutter Grey" over the top of that. It gave it that delicious dimension so often missing from walls. Basically, now I have to repaint every wall in my house to match because I love it so much. Farmhouse Bathroom | The Elliott HomesteadNotice something that wasn't there before? THE GIGANTIC WINDOW?! That was a fun find. Well, we actually found an old, nasty window and we had to replace it with a nice, pretty one. Which sounds simple. What wasn't simple is the fact that our entire house is covered in stucco and cutting stucco is certainly easier said than done. Three hardware store trips later, we finally found the tool to do the job.View from the bathroom window | The Elliott HomesteadHere's the current view from the bathroom window - hollyhocks and the henhouse. Cottage shower curtain | The Elliott HomesteadThe shower curtain I chose for the cottage bathroom is a traditional cottage pattern which kept the bathroom from feeling too regal. Ya. As if that was a real problem...doTERRA shampoo and conditioner | The Elliott HomesteadAnd lest you think we don't actually use the bathroom - on the contrary. Six people use it daily. We keep our very basic stash of dōTERRA supplies on a small shelf that Stu built into the shiplap. Vintage bathtub | The Elliott HomesteadI was quite particular about picking the right tub for the cottage bathroom and this one did the trick. It's a refinished tub from the 1940's.Cottage bathroom details | The Elliott HomesteadThe toilet paper roll was an Etsy find... Copper l The Elliott HomesteadAnd the "garbage can" was found at a local thrift store. It has lion heads on the handles! I've been in love with lion heads ever since traveling in Paris a decade ago.Cottage bathroom | The Elliott HomesteadI found this old metal door in our shop when we moved in and practically held Stu at knife-point it get him to incorporate it into the bathroom. We were able to build a small medicine cabinet into the wall here, behind the metal door, to hold toothbrushes, a few essential oils, and hair brushes. You know. The important stuff. Thumbs up on the cottage bathroom | The Elliott HomesteadThe mirror was another thrift store find and has been hanging around the house waiting for it's time to shine. It's finally here, little mirror. Take it! Cottage bathroom design | The Elliott HomesteadOh! Lest we forget the floor. The fir flooring throughout the rest of the house is also in the bathroom (and though it looks slightly blue in this photograph) is really a deep brown that I loved so much, I decided not to refinish it to match the rest of the fir flooring. It stands on its own and is knicked up from decades of use. It's perfect. We had originally planned on a rock floor, but that plan fell through miserably, and frankly, I still have too much PTSD to talk about it. Maybe someday. Cottage bathroom renovation | The Elliott HomesteadYou know me and green. I had to sneak it in somewhere. The "Boxwood" shade fits perfectly and keeps it from being too matchy-matchy.  And that's all she wrote! A few months of planning, a solid month of hard work, and beautiful results. Now... to nap...And Amen. 

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