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If you're looking to give your bathroom a traditional look - or a look which borders on the vintage - you can't go far wrong than choosing a claw foot bathtub. These bathtubs, with the well-known heavy and solid look and the essential stout feet, are perfect for giving your bathroom the look of a bygone era. It's a look which is all the rage today, and goes totally against the modern look of shiny chrome and smooth ceramics. Perhaps people are choosing this look because they think that the vintage style is one more on a par with relaxation - which is what bathing is all about anyway. The very first claw foot bathtubs appeared
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There are many people who can still remember a time when the only type of bathtub was a freestanding bathtub. Not very long go to freestanding bathtub was the normal style of bathtub -- and by that it usually meant a clawfoot bathtub. With the introduction of different bathtub styles, the freestanding bathtub last popularity, and most bathroom design went for the sleek modern look, but the bathtubs built into a housing which hit the plumbing and drainage. However, the freestanding bathtub is now returning to popularity -- and he we look at some of the improvements and changes that have been made to what is now becoming a perennial bathtub favorite. The freestanding claw
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In Japan, bathing has a long history—much longer than that of the western world. The tradition began as part of Buddhist rituals for cleansing and soon become part of the domestic culture. There are three basic things to know about a Japanese bathtub. The first thing is that they are generally much smaller than the usual Western-style bathtub. Along with this, they are also a much deeper, and the water tends to be at a much higher temperature than people are used to in the West. When using the Japanese bathtub there is also a culture of not washing in the bath itself, but washing outside the bathtub and then getting into the bath simply
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