Corner Style Baths
Baths Corner Style
SNH are constantly striving to bring you the best quality bathroom products at competitive prices. We offer a wide variety of styles from the traditional to contemporary, here you will find corner baths, in a range of sizes to complete your bathroom suite.
Corner Baths
SNH can supply you with high quality branded Corner baths delivered to you direct.
Why Choose A Corner Bath?
What are the benefits of a corner bath? If you’ve got an awkward space in your bathroom or you want to stay away from the traditional rectangular bath, corner baths are a great option. Giving you great bathing space, they also can take up less wall and floor space and you can still install a shower over your corner bath, so you don’t lose out by choosing one – in fact, it can be a really practical decision. Also for many people, there’s real luxury in lying back in a corner bath, and designers have deliberately put a lot of thought into the comfort and style of the corner baths they produce. Most corner baths incorporate a seat area, which can easily double as a shelf for candles and wine glasses, whilst super-deep corner baths help you to relax and unwind.
Corner Bath For Bathrooms
Luxurious and affordable are two words which sum up all the designs within the corner bath collection. From classic styling to the very latest modern looks, the stunning collection of baths and suites from snh includes something for every home and what’s more you can rest assured it is a look that will last as all products in the range carry a minimum of a10 year guarantee.
SNH Are A Company You Can Trust
If you are looking to update your bathroom and are confused about the wide variety of choice available for corner baths, then snh tradecentre is the right place for you. We have a dedicated sales team committed to help you through your purchase, so should you need any help you can contact us on 01843 842727 Monday to Friday 9.00am to 4.00pm or use our online services. The bathroom and plumbing section of our web site is full of great deals and bathroom products from bathroom taps, showers, and shower cubicles, the list is endless. Treat yourself to the bathroom of your dreams today from snh
The Bath As We Know It
A bath, bathtub, or tub (informal) is a large container for holding water in which a person may bathe (take a bath). Most modern bathtubs are made of acrylic or fiberglass, but alternatives are available in enamel over steel or cast iron, and occasionally waterproof finished wood. A bathtub is usually placed in a bathroom either as a stand-alone fixture or in conjunction with a shower.
Modern bathtubs have overflow and waste drains and may have taps mounted on them. They may be built-in, corner or sometimes sunken. Until recently, most bathtubs were roughly rectangular in shape but with the advent of acrylic thermoformed baths, more shapes are becoming available. Bathtubs are commonly white in colour although many other colours can be found. The process for enamelling cast iron bathtubs was invented by the Scottish-born American David Dunbar Buick.
The History of Bathing
Documented early plumbing systems for bathing go back as far as around 3300 BC with the discovery of copper water pipes beneath a palace in the Indus Valley Civilization of ancient India see sanitation of the Indus Valley Civilization. Evidence of the earliest surviving personal sized bath tub was found on the Isle of Crete where a 5-foot (1.5 m) long pedestal tub was found built from hardened pottery, not quite your usual size bath of today. This tub is the most likely forefather of the classic 19th century claw foot tub or freestanding style bath we now know of today.
In 1883, Standard Sanitary Manufacturing Company and Kohler Company began producing cast-iron baths. Far from the ornate feet and luxury most associated with claw foot tubs, an early Kohler example was advertised as a "horse trough/hog scalder, when furnished with four legs will serve as a bathtub. The item's use as hog scalder was considered a more important marketing point than its ability to function as a bath.
In the latter half of the 20th century, the once popular claw foot tub morphed into a built-in tub with a small apron front. This enclosed style afforded easier maintenance and, with the emergence of colored sanitary ware, more design options for the homeowner. The Crane Company introduced colored bathroom fixtures to the US market in 1928, and slowly this influx of design options such as corner baths and easier cleaning and care led to the near demise of claw foot-style tubs.






