15 Bathroom Accessories That Won’t Ruin the Old House Look

You've made the 10,001 design decisions and now it's down to details. Turns out, bathroom accessories are the little things that matter. A lot.

This post is for you if…
  • You did the hard work on tile, fixtures, and lighting and now the bathroom accessories are giving sad trombone
  • You keep finding accessories that are fine on their own but somehow wrong in the room
  • You’re noticing what was “fine” before is in no way okay now
  • You need a sourcing shortlist, not another mood board
Hate the story but want the exact sources?
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Some links may be affiliate links, meaning I may earn a small commission if you choose to purchase — at no additional cost to you. I only share products I genuinely like, would use in my own home, or have researched and feel confident recommending.


Bathroom accessories: The last design decision in a long list of decisions

After tile samples, fixture lead times, and lighting debates, the idea of spending ANY energy on toilet paper holders feels impossible. You just want to take a shower and hear angels singing when you step into the bathroom every morning.

So, it might be tempting to just use your pre-glow-up accessories and get on with it.
If they aren’t as good as the rest of the room…Don’t do it.

Days turn into months, and then…that’s just the mismatched, under-finished room.

And the room that was genuinely beautiful from materials through lighting now has a $12 suction robe hook in it that makes everything else look worse by proximity. No disrespect to suction robe hooks.

In an older home, this design gap is more visible than in a new bathroom.

There’s no neutral baseline to disappear into. Every accessory is next to original (or original-ish) woodwork, period tile, and carefully chosen hardware — so a wrong accessory really screams “I ran out of energy”.

Why accessories mean more in an older home

Modern bathroom accessories are designed for contemporary bathrooms: clean lines, matching sets, coordinated finishes in brushed nickel or matte black. In a historic bathroom, matched sets often read as too new, too designed, too deliberate. As a patina-lover, I believe the better approach is individual pieces in aged or natural finishes that feel found rather than purchased. Even if you purchase them.

Some sneaky ways that break the authenticity: chrome when the room needs warm metals, plastic components pretending to be metal, and anything so minimal it has no visual weight at all.

What makes an accessory feel right vs. wrong

Gets it Right: solid brass (unlacquered or aged), traditional and victorian profiles, ceramic and porcelain, natural stone, cast iron, pieces with visible weight and history. Handmade or hand finished.

Say yes to: real. honest. old. natural.

Feels all Wrong: chrome-plated plastic, perfectly matched coordinated sets, anything with a satin finish that reads as slick contemporary (deco doesn’t fall into this), minimalist floating designs.

Avoid anything: plastic. synthetic. flimsy.
Love this marble tray‘s colors and shape

Where to find the finishing bathroom touches

Full disclosure: The sources I’ve shared in this post come mostly from online stores.

But it’s important to share that I’m a raging Facebook Marketplace and antique/junk shop shopper, and encourage you to be, too, if you’ve got the time or the patience.

Many of the boxes, trays, shelves, and racks in our bathrooms is just old, wonderful stuff we’ve found over the years. More than a few cost me nearly nothing, and I love using vintage pieces for everyday use.

Related: Boutique-inspired bathroom lighting

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Some links may be affiliate links, meaning I may earn a small commission.

Hardware for Old House, Modern Classic Bathrooms

These are the pieces that take the most abuse and have to earn their place visually every single day.

Then need to feel good in your hand, and take abuse while continuing to somehow look amazing.
Solid brass construction matters here more than (almost) anywhere else in the room.


On the counter. By the sink.

This is where the room either feels curated or feels like a not-so-stellar hotel bathroom from 1993.

The difference is almost entirely in the quality of what’s sitting on the counter.
When it’s pretty – or handsome – leave it out.

Marvis Classic Strong Mint Toothpaste
Gorgeous enough to leave on the counter

Walls & Mirrors
  • West Slope Frameless Rounded Rectangle Pivot Mirror | A pivot mirror is a functional piece — different job than the primary vanity mirror. The rounded rectangle and pivot arm read as intentional rather than builder-grade. Love the frameless bevel on this one.
  • Handmade German Silver Wall Mounted Toothbrush Holder | Solid silver construction, wall mount, no plastic anywhere. The kind of piece that looks better in ten years than it does today.
  • W.C. Brass Sign | One good small brass sign does a lot. This is the kind of detail that makes a room feel like someone actually finished the job with a sense of humor.
West Slope Frameless Pivot Mirrors, Rejuvenation
It’s the bevel that gets me going
One More Thing — The “Special Moment” Lamp or Art

Art in the bathroom is underrated. There, I said it. Someone had to.

A small framed print over the toilet or beside the mirror changes the room from functional to zhushed.

In an old house, natural history and botanical prints are almost always right. And I talk about lighting – a lot – because warm, layered light is how you make a mood happen.

Here are a few unexpected options to get your bathroom art creativity flowing:

  • Vintage Ceramic Kron Owl TV Lamp | Not strictly a “bathroom accessory”, but if you have a ledge, a shelf, or a windowsill — a small vintage ceramic lamp changes the light quality in the room entirely. Hunt for these on eBay and Chairish. The owl form is perfect for an old nature-infused house.
  • Black Ceramic & Pink Fiberglass Torchiere Shade | This one is inspiring and different. The pink shade in fiberglass. The black glossy base, with gold pin stripes. If it’s gone when you read this, the “you may also likes” will be very, very good. [Etsy seller: The Old and New Shop ]
  • Chickadee Digital Wall Art | The chickadee is the second smartest bird, after the raven. That might only be mostly true. But this print is giving vintage litho vibes. Print, frame in walnut, done.
  • Owl Digital Lithograph Wall Art | Almost sepia, really looking at you. Can you tell I have an owl thing? The warm ochre tones make this one feel at home in a 1920s bathroom.

Old House Rules, Bathroom Accessories Edition

  • Accessories are where the finish decision lives or dies — too visible to treat as afterthoughts
  • Individual pieces in warm metals or honest materials read as collected; matched sets read as installed
  • Your counter styling is part of the room — what you leave out matters as much as what you buy
  • Art in the bathroom is underrated. One good print finishes the room. Keep humidity in mind when you pick which art you’ll put into a bathroom
  • Old stuff is good stuff. If you’ve got the patience, carry your wish list with you and shop junk, vintage, and antique shops to complete the room
Share the Old House Love
Jen Phillips
Jen Phillips

I love patina. And being the steward of old things that have a story to tell. I've been shopping vintage and antique since I was a kid, and it's never (EVER) gotten boring. In a perfect world, I would have been an architect. What happened instead?

I got into tech and it took me all over the world to see how old houses look & live globally.