In the bathroom of the fashion executives Carlo Alberto Beretta and Jacopo Venturini’s Milan apartment, a stucco shell and glazed tiles that are original to the house, with William Morris wallpaper, exemplify Italy’s turn-of-the-20th-century Liberty style. Read more here.
Toto fixtures and an Apaiser tub in the primary bathroom of Gildas Loaëc, a co-founder and the chief executive officer of the brand Maison Kitsuné, and the former fashion stylist Romy Ishii Loaëc’s house in Bali. Read more here.
One of the bathrooms in the Paris home of the co-founders of Officine Universelle Buly Ramdane Touhami and Victoire de Taillac-Touhami features Blue Bahia granite and Carrara, Rosso Levanto, Verde Guatemala and Rosa Tea marbles, fittings from l’Atelier Traditionnel du Vimeu, an Eileen Gray mirror and sconces by Pierre Chareau. Read more here.
In an artist’s home in Harlem, walls finished in tadelakt plaster, a floor with M. Crow tiles and a Water Monopoly bathtub. The fixtures are from Fantini Rubinetti. Read more here.
On the top floor of a Paris apartment renovated by the designers Kim Haddou and Florent Dufourcq, a bathroom suite lined in Carrara marble. The bathtub is from Bleu Provence. Read more here.
One of the two primary bathrooms in a Manhattan apartment designed by Hiroshi Sugimoto. The walls are made entirely of Towada stone, and the cypress bathtub sits atop old stones salvaged from a defunct tram station in Kyoto, Japan. The ceiling is cedar. Read more here.
In a bathroom in a London loft designed by Zoe Chan Eayrs and Merlin Eayrs, a pale blue and avocado-colored bathtub by the Water Monopoly. Read more here.
In the primary bathroom of the art dealer Christopher González-Aller’s Tangier home, a 1930s Gordiola chandelier over boucherouite and wool carpets and an antique claw-foot bathtub. The walls are painted using a hand-mixed lime and pigment solution that is layered to create a textured effect. Read more here.
In the bathroom of the artists Jaime le Bleu, Line Murken, Salomé Sperling and Sijmen Vellekoop’s home in Brussels, a resin-and-fiberglass sink atop a stainless-steel cabinet by Sperling, a cast-rubber bathtub by Murken and mirrors by le Bleu. Read more here.
The architect and designer Roberto Gerosa designed a birdcage-like shower stall for the guest bathroom of his Milan home, which he finished with a spray of ostrich feathers. Read more here.
In the primary bathroom of a property in Patmos, Greece, the Athenian designer Dimitris Pantazopoulos created three smaller “cabins” for the closet, shower and toilet, all inspired by the innermost rooms of Greek Orthodox churches. Read more here.
The bathroom of the designer Ingegerd Råman and the artist and filmmaker Claes Söderquist’s home in southern Sweden, with Vola taps. Read more here.
In the bathroom of Casa di Fantasia, an apartment originally designed by the Italian architect Gio Ponti, concrete has replaced the tiling on the floor, highlighting the original pink bathtub and shower. The painting is by Letizia Chianese, the mother of the home’s owner, Michele Marocchino. Read more here.
The oak-paneled Art Deco bathroom of the actress Melissa George’s 17th-century home in Visan, France, was saved from a demolition site on the Côte d’Azur. It was dismantled and shipped to the house, where Delgado-Elias and his team reassembled it to fit George’s en suite. Read more here.
In the powder room of the artists Rashid Johnson and Sheree Hovsepian’s townhouse in Manhattan’s Gramercy Park, the multidisciplinary artist Michael Langlois painted the walls to match the Portoro marble sink. The photograph is by Justine Kurland. Read more here.
In the bathroom of the photographer Simon Watson’s Dublin home, 19th-century maps of the Eastern Mediterranean and the Black Sea, photographs of Giza and a 1950s drawing of an Italian town. Read more here.
In the cabin that the sculptor J.B. Blunk built in Marin County, Calif., a bathroom with a sink carved from a single block of cypress. Read more here.
In the primary bath of the artist Vincenzo De Cotiis’s Tuscan villa, a massive mirror of silvered brass hangs over a sink of cipollino apuano marble, which is used throughout the house. Read more here.