Lincoln
Remodeled downtown condo with black vanities, gold hardware, and sage green kitchen cabinets. Hardwood floors, a tiled fireplace, and city views through every window.
You come in and the first thing that registers is how quiet the space is. Light oak built-in shelving lines the wall with enough depth for actual books, not just decorative objects, and a leather armchair sits low enough that the window seat beside it becomes a natural second spot to land. The hardwood floors run continuous from the entry into this room, and the color match between the flooring and the shelf material tells you someone spec'd those together at the same time.
Open shelving in the kitchen floats on steel pins against a white wall, and the white oak tone is warm enough to keep the space from going clinical. Marble countertops below show soft gray veining that pairs well with the neutral dishware on the shelf above. A wooden bowl holding gold measuring spoons sits next to a framed print, and it's the kind of arrangement that looks casual but only works because the proportions of the shelf spacing were figured out before the drywall went up.
White hexagon tile with black dot accents covers the bathroom floor, and the layout had to start from the center of the room and work outward so the pattern stays symmetrical where it meets the walls. Black vanity cabinets with gold cup pulls sit below a multi-bulb sconce — black shades, gold interiors — and the subway tile backsplash runs tight behind the vanity to the ceiling line. That sconce placement is intentional, positioned to throw light down onto the countertop rather than washing out the mirror.
Through the round mirror you catch the green tile in the shower, vertically stacked, and that reflection is doing a lot of work connecting the vanity side to the wet side of the room. Gold fixtures run consistent from the faucet at the sink to the shower valve and head behind the glass. The homeowner picked a color palette that could go wrong fast, but the green tile reads as rich rather than loud because the surrounding surfaces stay neutral — white countertop, simple tray with a few accessories, nothing fighting for attention.
A brass tray on the stone countertop holds a black marble container and a bottle of hand wash with a gold pump, and that tray is doing the small work of keeping a bathroom counter from becoming a mess. The round mirror reflects just enough of the room behind to give you a sense of the full space from this one corner. Striped towel, bar of soap on a dish, cotton swabs in marble. Simple things, placed with care on a surface that was cut and polished to sit perfectly level against the vanity top.