
Bonsai-Inspired Kitchen & Bathroom Design
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From Bonsai Dreams to Bespoke Art Glass: A Cardiff Barn Kitchen Transformed
When a homeowner in Cardiff, Wales, approached me with a vision for her converted barn kitchen, I knew it would become one of the most ambitious and rewarding projects I’d ever taken on. What started as a conversation about bonsai trees and a love for black-and-gold aesthetics quickly evolved into a full-home transformation. The brief expanded to include bespoke printed glass installations across the kitchen and four bathrooms, each designed to reflect nature, serenity, and style.
Uncovering the Vision
Every successful design starts with listening. My client had just completed the conversion of a rustic barn into a modern home and envisioned a kitchen that embodied the tranquillity of a Japanese zen garden. Her aesthetic was rooted in bonsai trees, organic textures, and a refined black-and-gold palette—elegant and deeply personal.
What Was the Design Challenge?

The complexity of the project became immediately clear when I reviewed the builder’s plans. At the heart of the kitchen sat a 3.7-metre island, housing two hobs and a sink, framed by a U-shaped layout with additional sinks on either side. True to the barn’s rustic character, the island was the only perfectly straight element — every surrounding wall demanded bespoke design solutions.

Full-Height Glass Splashbacks in a Period Property

One request stood out immediately: she wanted the glass splashbacks to extend from the glossy black worktops all the way to the ceiling. This is highly unusual in converted buildings with uneven walls and aged timber frames, but it aligned perfectly with her desire to blend ultra-modern finishes with timeless character.
Designing the Artwork: Nature Meets Precision
To capture her brief accurately, I explored hundreds of visual assets from premium stock libraries, including Shutterstock and Adobe Stock. However, the final composition was fully custom, a true artistic mosaic. I featured three unique bonsai trees on the main kitchen walls, each designed to interact with the kitchen’s layout while avoiding interference with windows or cabinetry. The artwork was layered with Japanese textures, patterns, and wildlife elements, making the walls feel like living panoramas.
Throughout the process, I ensured every panel communicated with the next, maintaining visual consistency across the room, from visual anchors near the island to the ceiling-high finish.

After confirming measurements with her builder and conducting a site survey, I returned with CAD drawings and began assembling the design.
Initially focused on the kitchen splashbacks, the brief quickly evolved. After reviewing my previous installations online, the client decided to expand the vision to include all four bathrooms. What started as a single-room commission became a full-home transformation, unified by a consistent design narrative and custom-printed glass.
Bespoke Printed Glass in Every Bathroom

Each ensuite received a dedicated visual theme:
Ensuite 1: A tranquil forest waterfall setting for deep relaxation, enhanced by a six-body jet shower system.
Ensuite 2: A warm, inviting interpretation of Iceland’s Godafoss waterfall.
Ensuite 3: A moody, immersive woodland waterfall.
Main Bathroom: A vibrant underwater world, filled with tropical fish—but per her request, no sharks.

Behind each bathroom sink, I installed splashbacks with stylised water eruptions, creating the illusion of water splashing from the basin—a playful, personalised touch that delighted her.

Installation Day: Coordination and Craftsmanship
Six weeks after the design was finalised, I coordinated two specialist teams for the installation in Cardiff. The logistics were challenging—the printed panels were large, especially the one for the island, requiring strength and precision to align hob cut-outs and sink placements perfectly.
To create a seamless look, I used printed sink covers that matched the worktops, giving the illusion of a continuous, unbroken artwork.

Working with thick, hand-hewn window sills and metre-deep walls meant custom notching and on-site adjustments—but it was worth every moment.

The Final Aesthetic: A Visual Masterpiece

Set against white walls and framed by matte black ceiling beams, the high-gloss glass brought a sculptural presence to the space. The gold and black bonsai designs glowed under LED lights, turning the kitchen into a living gallery.

This wasn’t just a renovation. It was visual storytelling in glass—a fully immersive experience driven by one woman’s vision, and brought to life with creativity, engineering, and emotion.
Why This Matters for Architects, Builders, and Interior Designers

If you’re involved in high-end residential renovations, barn conversions, period homes, or bespoke interiors, this project shows what’s possible when vision meets precision.
Printed glass isn’t just a finish. It’s where imagination becomes material. A medium that expresses cultural identity, personal values, and even philosophy.
When integrated early in the design journey, it doesn’t just elevate interiors, it turns ideas into reality, transforming spaces into stories.

Final Thoughts: What I Learned
- Client-led design, when supported by a flexible, design-first process, leads to truly unique outcomes.
- Full-height splashbacks are viable in period homes, with precision templating and planning.
- Printed glass is not just practical, it’s artistic, sensory, and deeply personal.
If you're working on a unique residential project and would like to explore how printed glass can support your client’s vision, feel free to get in touch or call us on 01923 947454. We’re always happy to collaborate with architects, builders, and designers across the UK.