Luxe touches help make the most of your powder room

The limited square footage of a powder room offers an opportunity to go wilder and more luxe than you might elsewhere.

By Dina Cheney

The Washington Post
November 22, 2024 at 4:14PM
A powder room by Bria Hammel pairs a more subdued mosaic floor with bold wallpaper. (Spacecrafting Photography/The Washington Post)

The limited square footage of a powder room offers an opportunity to go wilder and more luxe than you might elsewhere.

Start with wallpaper

Since the toilet and sink take up so much space, the walls are prime territory to make a statement. “I love a larger-scale pattern with bold colors in a small powder room,” says Wisconsin-based Emily Winters for Peabody’s Interiors. “It’s a chance to take a risk or be more outgoing with color and pattern than you might be in your main spaces.”

Charleston-based Margaret Donaldson of MDI Luxury Design recently jazzed up her client’s powder room with wallpaper in a bright wildflower pattern. Its coral, pink and blue color scheme lends the space a lively, happy vibe, she says.

The tiling in the main-floor powder room came with this Seattle house, interior designer Joy Rondello said. “Part of the design was matching to the tile.” Owner Katie Finch said this botanical Lush wallpaper, by Walnut Wallpaper, in slate, is one of her favorite design elements. (Steve Ringman/Seattle Times)

Let the walls guide your color scheme

“Read” your wallpaper like a road map, pulling out a couple of its colors to use on the vanity or wall trim. Or aim for contrast by working in a new hue. “A unique paint color on the vanity creates a dramatic focal point in a small space,” says Rhode Island-based Janelle B. Photopoulos of Blakely Interior Design. For her client’s powder room vanity, she selected a saturated salmon pink, which pops against the blue and white palm frond-patterned wallpaper.

Go wild with tile

Tile is ideal for a damp environment and can make as much of a statement as wallpaper, especially if you lay it with a generous hand. Southern California-based Hanna Li of Hanna Li Interiors sings the praises of zellige, a variety with irregularities in tone and texture. In a powder room she designed for a client, Li applied green and brown tiles to the floor and walls, creating a spa-like enclave evocative of a Turkish bath.

Splurge on the vanity

To enhance the old world feel of her client’s tiled bathroom, Li included a large-scale floating marble sink. If your bathroom or budget can’t accommodate that amount of Carrara, try capping an inexpensive vanity with a new stone top or going small but bold — Photopoulos added a distinctive, albeit diminutive, sink to one client’s powder room.

Panel the walls

One trick for making a small room appear grander: Install wainscoting that climbs two-thirds of the way up to the ceiling. Photopoulos used the technique in her client’s powder room and then painted the woodwork a glossy dark navy. For a more relaxed and nautical feel, try white or blue shiplap instead.

Hang a bold mirror

Try a mirror with an unusual silhouette: Santa Monica-based Christine Markatos Lowe of Christine Markatos Design paired the Noir Cooper Mirror with a fuchsia vanity and graphic blue-and-white wallpaper. For alternatives, look to the Candelabra Home Emmett Mirror and Atoll Rectangular Mirror.

Add some finishing touches

Good design and hospitality often come down to the details. Kathleen Kowalksi of Create a Colorful Life added a gold towel bar to the door-facing side of the vanity in her own powder room. “I love to swap out the hand towel to add extra color and pattern,” she says. And don’t overlook niceties like hand lotion and a scented candle. After all, a powder room shouldn’t only look good; it should smell good too.

about the writer

about the writer

Dina Cheney