The half-bath off my kitchen is due for a new flush, and I can’t begin to tell you how badly I want to wander into that otherwise uninspiring small room to see this wild-coloured Majolica / Talavera style toilet and tank — oh, sure, and that matching sink, too, while we’re bathroom-dreaming in technicolor fixtures!

I’ve got a few sort-of-matching coffee cups (from Oaxaca, central Mexico), so how perfect would that be?
Coffee in… coffee out!!

For the wonderful traditional art, and the quality of craftsmanship involved in producing these procelain beauties, the prices I’ve found online (in the $600 - $900 range, for the toilet and tank) are not insane — but it’s the shipping of such a heavy (and relatively fragile) object that would get you in the wallet.

Okay, okay, wait, let’s see now…

Can I paint my fantasy patterns on a plain porcelain flush from Home Depot?

Ah, no, that won’t work.

When you paint on porcelain, you use special china paints that are more like a pottery glaze, and the piece has to be fired in a kiln after the painting. I’m sure I could get the necessary supplies, paint my flush, and make arrangements to haul it into the local art school for firing, but that gets complicated… and it would probably end up costing more than if I just bought a genuine Mexican toilet.

my favourite Mexican coffee mug (I can’t see getting much cooperation from He Who Hogs The Power Tools, either… he’s a bit on the conservative side, bless his heart.)

To satisfy my deep-seated conviction that a powder room is meant to be decorated in ways you wouldn’t quite dare to try in a larger, more public room… maybe a wild-and-colourful south-of-the-border wall mural?

Ordinary latex paints will do the trick for that — in a dazzling array of colours. Luckily, many high-quality paint brands are now putting out small sample pots of various colours so you can try without committing to a whole gallon — perfect for the thrifty and experimental bathroom mural painter!

And for Mexican-style inspiration? Find all kinds of gorgeous Talavera at TheFind.com, check out Majolica House on eBay and the glorious Tierra y Fuego showcase, for Mexican decorative ceramics for the home, from toilets to Talavera tiles

mexican porcelain sinks

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3 Responses to “Mexican Toilet: the Flush of My Dreams”
  1. I love this! Talk about unique. And much too pretty to …. well, you know what, in.

  2. Haha that’s clever! I’m not sure if my landlord would let me do that, though…

  3. I was looking at a back issue of a kitchen-and-bath decor magazine the other day and found a gorgeous kitchen with a Talavera prep sink much like this flush, set into an island countertop done with pale green and aqua tiles… gotta try to remember which magazine that was in!

    Mexican twin sinks in custom kitchen But check out this beauty —
    Nice, eh?

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