115 Dark Stone Bathroom — residential 3D rendering by Praxis Studio
Residential

115 Dark Stone Bathroom

Contemporary Bathroom Visualization

Dark and moody bathroom featuring green-gray marble accent wall behind a round backlit mirror, white marble floating vanity, wall-hung toilet, and black linear tile on the side walls with a glass shower partition.

Project Overview

A kitchen and bath project in Prague, Czech Republic, 115 Dark Stone Bathroom came to us at the stage where the design was locked and the client needed one image — the definitive view — for their launch materials.

Dark and moody bathroom featuring green-gray marble accent wall behind a round backlit mirror, white marble floating vanity, wall-hung toilet, and black linear tile on the side walls with a glass shower partition.

The Result

The final output landed within 3-5 days. Clean, high-resolution, ready for print and screen. It’s been the visual backbone of this project’s public-facing materials.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How do you accurately render the contrast between dark stone textures and polished white marble in a bathroom visualization?

We use physically-based material shading with calibrated roughness and reflection maps for each surface, ensuring the green-gray marble accent wall reads as authentically moody against the crisp white vanity — matching real-world light absorption and bounce behavior.

What's involved in visualizing a high-end residential bathroom with mixed material palettes like this Prague project?

Projects combining multiple premium finishes — linear black tile, two distinct marble types, glass partitions, and backlit fixtures — require precise material sourcing from manufacturer specs and careful attention to grout lines, edge profiles, and transition details that clients will scrutinize.

What is the typical turnaround for a kitchen-and-bath visualization with this level of material complexity?

A bathroom scene with four or more distinct finishes and specialty lighting like the backlit mirror typically delivers in 5–7 business days from confirmed design intent and material selections.

How do kitchen and bath designers use renders like this dark stone bathroom in their client workflow?

Designers present these visualizations during material selection meetings to help homeowners commit to bold palettes — seeing the dark accent wall in context eliminates the uncertainty that often stalls decisions on moody, high-contrast schemes.

What makes bathroom and kitchen visualizations uniquely challenging compared to other residential spaces?

These rooms pack the highest density of reflective, translucent, and wet-look surfaces into compact spaces, so accurate rendering of glass shower partitions, mirror reflections, polished stone, and chrome fixtures under contained lighting is critical to a believable result.

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