96 Dual Vanity Master Bath
Transitional Master Bath Visualization
Symmetrical master bathroom with dual walnut wood vanities topped with quartz counters, large illuminated mirrors, black globe vanity lights, and a spacious glass-enclosed shower with gold rain showerhead at center.
Project Overview
When we took on 96 Dual Vanity Master Bath, the kitchen & bath designer in Denver, CO had a specific problem: their design was strong, but nobody outside the studio could see it yet. They needed 4 renders that would change that.
Symmetrical master bathroom with dual walnut wood vanities topped with quartz counters, large illuminated mirrors, black globe vanity lights, and a spacious glass-enclosed shower with gold rain showerhead at center.
The Challenge
The biggest hurdle was fidelity at scale. With 4 compositions to produce, we couldn’t afford to let quality drift between the first render and the last. Every image needed to feel like it came from the same visual universe.
At 4 deliverables, there’s a real risk of redundancy — views that look too similar or don’t add new information. We planned the camera positions deliberately so every image earned its place in the set.
The timeline was compressed. The kitchen & bath designer had a launch date that wasn’t moving, which meant our production schedule had zero slack for extended revision cycles.
Our Approach
Feedback cycles were structured. We presented renders in context — placed into the marketing layout or presentation deck — so the kitchen & bath designer could evaluate them as their audience would see them, not as isolated files on a white background.
Lighting development ran parallel to the modelling. We tested multiple Daylight setups early — before the geometry was even finished — so we could lock in the mood and atmosphere without burning production time later.
We started where we always start: with the drawings. Every wall thickness, every material notation, every site boundary got translated into the 3D model before we touched a single texture or light.
Post-production was restrained. We adjusted contrast, corrected any colour casts, and added subtle atmospheric effects — but the goal was always to enhance what was already there, not to paper over problems in the base render.
The rendering pipeline was set up to handle 4 outputs efficiently. Shared lighting rigs, consistent material libraries, and a standardised colour pipeline meant every image maintained the same visual standard.
The Result
All 4 images were delivered on schedule within 2-3 weeks. The kitchen & bath designer has used the package across their website, printed materials, and investor presentations.
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