Try This: In Your Bathroom -- Metal Tiles, Swinging Doors

By Natural Home Staff

NOT YOUR GRANDMOTHER’S MOSAIC TILE
Want a unique and lovely high-end custom look for a bathroom backsplash at a very down-to-earth price? Just take a creative approach to what you call “tile.” With the help of a clear sticky mounting sheet made for mosaics, you can turn lots of unusual things into mosaic tile: glass globs, pebbles, seashells, horn buttons, seaglass, pennies, even galvanized steel hardware.

TILE ONE ON If you’ve never set tile before, start by familiarizing yourself with the tools, materials, and techniques of setting mosaic tile. Check out the how-to instructions at TheTileDoctor.com.

a variation METAL TILES 

For a splashy border with a fun, industrial edge, use galvanized steel washers or flanges. Raid your local hardware store’s fasteners department for lots of interesting possibilities. The galvanized finish on most hardware makes it perfect for a watery locale. Add a splash of color with tiny glass marbles, or stay with the hardware theme and use nuts or tiny brass washers.

No room for swingers 

INCREASE YOUR BATHROOM’S SQUARE FOOTAGE without adding on an inch. A swinging door requires almost 9 square-feet of space to operate. A sliding door needs just a 2-inch wide slice. With bathrooms taking on so many functions—laundry space, storage area, water closet— too many doors eat up too much space. Simple hardware made for sliding barn doors allows you to create sliders without the complicated carpentry required to install a pocket door. Added bonus: the door doesn’t have to fit perfectly into the door opening. This is a great way to recycle and reuse those cool old doors you can find by the dozens at architectural salvage and building surplus yards.

Face Towel 

ON THE RACK. Here’s a quick project that does quadruple duty. First, it’s a towel rack. Then it’s a photo gallery. Next it recycles some of those pesky jewel cases we seem to collect. Last, it combines all those things to solve a laundry problem. By personalizing a space for a towel for each family member, they can keep track of which towels are theirs and are more likely to hang them up and reuse them. No more nameless heaps of towels on the bathroom floor on bath day.

Clean conscience 

ECO SOAP-ON-A-ROPE. Don’t throw away those little nubbins of soap left in the soap dish; they still have plenty of clean living left in them. Collect a few of them as well as a couple of small net bags (everything seems to come in net bags these days!) and make a super-simple super scrubber to hang in your shower. Recycle! Reuse! Exfoliate!

This project takes seconds but can give you glowing skin and a clean conscience for months to come. Cut off the end of two small net bags. Put one bag inside the other for a double layer. Tie one end of the bag closed with hemp or cotton string. Stuff the bag full of soap scraps. Tie it closed with another longer length of string. Tie the ends of this string into a loop for hanging. Enjoy your sudsy, scrubby rubdown.