A list of puns related to "Shower Stall"
Dows anyone know of a decent Shower stall that would save me time by just having to cut it to fit the Skoolie roof? ( That does include the shower pan hopefully )
My hopeful size is 24 in x 24 in
How can i shower in the men's gym showers? I have had top surgery but not yet bottom surgery. I pass very well and built well. Would it be weird to showering with boxers on?
We've got a very small (but long) crack that does not seem to be growing in our shower stall, and I'd like to prevent it from any problems that may arise from it. Might anyone suggest a remedy to cover and seal this minor eyesore on our "marbled" shower stall that feels like plastic? Your material suggestions and how to tips are appreciated. Thanks in advance. Picture of shower crack
And since it was August, and I love communal showers, it was a no brainer. Everyone used them naked without batting an eye, I loved it. Over the course of the weekend and a handful of these showers, I got hard once by accident and was a little embarrassed but no one gave a shit. There was quite an audience at times bc in addition to the others showering, there was always a line of onlookers π
my friend is a tiler, but he only does concrete. is epoxy that magical to seek someone else that works with epoxy? both the floor and walls will be replaced.
Had a talk last night with my father and brother in law about how all public bathrooms used to be open showers. Becoming a thing of the past and it was just kind of expected.
My sister bought a place where the master bathroom had been remodeled for wheelchair access. Specifically the shower stall consists of a shower head, sticking out of the tiled wall in a corner, surrounded by a shower curtain suspended from the tiled ceiling.
The problem is that the drain is a long rectangular grate at the 'edge' of the shower area BUT it's inside the shower curtains. The floor is completely flat and as a result water runs down the curtains, misses the drain, and runs all over the floor.
Several contractors have looked at it but aren't interested unless they can gut it and start over, and frankly I don't blame them. It truly is an unholy mess (there are other extremely questionable design and construction decisions that I don't mention but that are equally baffling and difficult)
I've seen shower enclosures in hotels that were basically just sheets of tempered glass attached to a tile wall -- attached by beads of silicon apparently -- with some sort of hinged door set in one of the glass panels. This would be an ideal solution but so far we can't find anyone locally with any expertise.
Can anyone comment on this as a retrofit alternative, and perhaps point us towards some resources?
(Obvious solution like moving the shower curtains to the inside of the drain or building a stub wall around the outside of the shower area to contain the water have been considered but are not good candidates for this reason or that. At least until we've exhausted all other possible alternatives.)
Hey folks, I am DIY-ing a tiny house and the shower area is supposed to have a outdoor/rustic/rammed-earth look. My idea was to use acrylic cement render to give it the texture and then paint over that with waterproof paint (made for painting on cement). The walls (as you can see in the pics) are already cement fibreboard. I just want to ensure it is adequately waterproof while still having the aesthetic I want.
So I have a number of questions:
Iβm installing a shower stall glass enclosure (link below) but my walls are not perfectly straight. Iβm doing the tiling but my walls are not completely leveled. How would I shim up the enclosure border to the tile in case there is a slope causing the enclosure not to sit correctly on the shower plate?
https://www.homedepot.com/p/Delta-38-in-W-x-72-in-H-Neo-Angle-Pivot-Semi-Frameless-Corner-Shower-Enclosure-in-Chrome-422061-PC/308642642?source=shoppingads&locale=en-US&&mtc=Shopping-VF-F_DYNM-G-D29B-029_023_TUBS_SHOWERS-LIBERTY-NA-NA-PLA_LIA-NA-NA-MK460863339_9015744720_FY21_3342_SMART&cm_mmc=Shopping-VF-F_DYNM-G-D29B-029_023_TUBS_SHOWERS-LIBERTY-NA-NA-PLA_LIA-NA-NA-MK460863339_9015744720_FY21_3342_SMART-71700000085764734-58700007293127195-92700065505418606&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIgeTFrrO98wIVkAaICR0ukgVoEAQYAyABEgLm8_D_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds
My sister bought a place where the master bathroom had been remodeled for wheelchair access. Specifically the shower stall consists of a shower head, sticking out of the tiled wall in a corner, surrounded by a shower curtain suspended from the tiled ceiling.
The problem is that the drain is a long rectangular grate at the 'edge' of the shower area BUT it's inside the shower curtains. The floor is completely flat and as a result water runs down the curtains, misses the drain, and runs all over the floor.
Several contractors have looked at it but aren't interested unless they can gut it and start over, and frankly I don't blame them. It truly is an unholy mess (there are other extremely questionable design and construction decisions that I don't mention but that are equally baffling and difficult)
I've seen shower enclosures in hotels that were basically just sheets of tempered glass attached to a tile wall -- attached by beads of silicon apparently -- with some sort of hinged door set in one of the glass panels. This would be an ideal solution but so far we can't find anyone locally with any expertise.
Can anyone comment on this as a retrofit alternative, and perhaps point us towards some resources?
(Obvious solutions like moving the shower curtains to the inside of the drain or building a stub wall around the outside of the shower area to contain the water have been considered but are not good candidates for this reason or that. At least until we've exhausted all other possible alternatives.)
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