For a new-bathroom feel without the hassle of a full remodel, Jasmine Morvay, an interior designer in Ottawa, Ontario, has a few ideas: Install a glass door or change the shower curtain, paint wall tiles, paint cabinets, replace mirrors, replace light fixtures, and add plants. One of her favorite ideas by far, though, is replacing the showerhead. Switch out that one fixture, and taking a shower goes from a need to a want.
Because bacteria and mold can grow in showerheads, installing a new one eliminates that issue for the time being, says Morvay, one of the National Kitchen & Bath Association’s “Thirty Under 30” honorees. (And if you don’t replace it, you should soak it in vinegar every few months to kill the bacteria.)
As to what clients want out of a shower head, Ty Pennington, author of “Life to the Extreme: How a Chaotic Kid Became America’s Favorite Carpenter,” is blunt. “They definitely want the rain experience or anything that is a big faucet overhead that feels like a luxury experience, not a public shower,” he says. It should feel like “jets hitting every part of your body.”
To bring the spa home, here are a few finds from bath experts.
In California, where “we can’t even purchase showerheads that don’t reduce water flow,” interior designer Kelly Finley recommends the Delta In2ition 2-in-1 Combo Showerhead ($60.99 to $74.99, bedbathandbeyond.com). “It feels like you’re getting a lot more water than you are,” she says. It includes four spray functions, so “you can change the speed of the spray, the type of the spray.” If you rent, consider asking your landlord if you can change the showerheads, Finley suggests.