The bathroom wall tile is pale peach iridescent -
And the look is modern (see the bathroom posts
here and
here). I've been agonizing over the floor - marble, glass, porcelain? cream, brown, green? - without finding anything that jumped out at me. Until today.
Meet the Grunions -

Or a Matisse-like flower -
They're encaustic cement tiles - called Cuban tiles in Florida, and Moroccan tiles on HGTV, though they were actually invented in medieval Europe. (We have them on the hearth in my mother's living room.) Instead of a
traditional or cutesy-sailboat design, however, these are modern, designed by an architect named Jeff Shelton in Santa Barbara (lots more of his wonderful designs
here). The tiles are 12x12, and they're custom made - you choose your own colors from a yummy palette (
here and
here).
The Grunions (above) are my favorite, of course - I'd do them in shades of green and salmon - but is this all getting too zoomorphic? Everything I like has little eyes - the
birds in the kitchen, these sea monsters in the bathroom (though in real life
grunions turn out to be squiggly little fish, seven inches long, with odd mating rituals). Also I'm a little worried that it might be too big a pattern for my tiny bathroom, which is why I was looking at the smaller Matisse-like pattern too. People do use Cuban tile in the bathroom - I've seen it in magazines and on websites - and it's probably no more slippery than anything else.
In a funny way, I'm looping back to the
tile I fell in love with first for the bathroom floor (but couldn't have because it's $100/sq. ft.) - a serpentine pattern that links from tile to tile.