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TAILS’ COLOUR EDIT

Build a flexible scheme around colour

Shop modular bathroom furniture by colour to compare vanity units, tall cabinets and storage pieces that share a similar visual direction. Unlike fitted furniture, modular pieces remain individually defined, giving you greater freedom to vary placement, proportions and storage without creating one continuous run.

Is Modular Bathroom Furniture by Colour Right for You?

Plan the palette, unit mix and spacing together

Shopping by Colour Works Well If

You want separate matching pieces

Browsing by colour helps narrow down vanity units, wall cabinets and tall storage that can sit together without forming a single fitted run. This suits layouts where each item needs its own position, purpose and visual breathing space.

The furniture should lead the palette

Starting with the cabinet colour makes it easier to select tiles, paint and fittings that support the furniture rather than compete with it. This approach is useful when the units provide the room’s main contrast, warmth or decorative character.

You need layout flexibility

Modular units can be distributed around doors, radiators, windows and existing plumbing more freely than a continuous fitted arrangement. You can purchase only the storage pieces the room needs instead of filling every available section of wall.

Another Furniture Approach May Be Better If

You want one continuous furniture run

Fitted furniture may be more suitable when you want adjoining cabinets, shared worktops and fewer visible gaps between units. Modular pieces usually retain their own outlines, so the finished room feels more like individually placed furniture.

You are mixing unrelated collections

Two products carrying the same colour name may still differ in undertone, sheen and surface texture. Selecting pieces from several ranges can create an uneven result, particularly when the cabinets stand close together under the same lighting.

Maximum wall-to-wall storage matters

A fitted scheme can make better use of awkward gaps, corners and long uninterrupted walls through joined cabinets and infill panels. Modular furniture may leave unused spaces that look intentional only when the layout has been carefully balanced.

Modular Bathroom Furniture Colour FAQs

Matching shades, combining units and planning contrast

  • Will units with the same colour name match?

    Not always. Colour names such as oak, grey, navy or white are interpreted differently between manufacturers and collections. For the closest match, compare finish details carefully and buy related pieces from the same range where possible.

  • Can two furniture colours work together?

    Yes, provided the contrast looks deliberate. A darker vanity with a lighter tall unit can work well when one colour clearly leads the scheme and the second is repeated through another nearby surface or fitting.

  • Should every modular unit be identical?

    No. Units can vary in width, height and purpose while still feeling related through colour, handle style or door design. Keeping one or two features consistent usually creates a more considered result than forcing every piece to match exactly.

DESIGNER’S NOTE

Let one cabinet colour dominate, then use a quieter second tone or matching handles to connect separate modular pieces without making the room feel overly uniform.