08/04/2026
Most bathroom mirrors stop at the width of the basin because it feels like the obvious place to end them - it keeps everything aligned, neat, and expected.
But that way of thinking keeps the mirror contained.
What Adam has done here is push beyond that, extending the mirror across the full width of the vanity, and in doing so he hasn’t just made it bigger, he’s changed its role within the space.
It becomes a proper vanity station rather than just a basin mirror, giving more usable space, better flow, and a layout that works for real use not just placement.
Visually, it pulls everything together too.
The basin, the open shelving, the lighting - all connected through one continuous surface rather than separate elements competing for attention.
The mirror isn’t sitting within the design anymore.
It’s defining it.
It’s a simple shift, but it completely changes how the room works.
Because a mirror shouldn’t just fill a space - it should shape it.
Project by
Mirror | Lexington