Portfolio

Our work.

Custom shower glass, mirrors, and installations across all NYC boroughs.

Use this gallery to compare shower door layouts, hardware finishes, mirror installs, and glass panel details before requesting an estimate. Photos help homeowners decide whether a bathroom needs a single swing door, fixed panel, slider, open panel, mirror replacement, or a more custom enclosure.

If you are planning a renovation, the most useful photos to send are the full shower opening, the curb or tub edge, both side walls, the fixture finish, and any nearby vanity or toilet clearance. Those details help us suggest a glass setup that fits the room instead of just filling the opening.

Google searches like frameless shower doors NYC, shower door installation near me, and custom glass shower doors Brooklyn usually lead to the same practical question: which layout will actually work in your bathroom once tile, slope, fixtures, and building access are real.

Single-door frameless layout with bright chrome hardware, useful when a finished tile opening has enough swing clearance.
Door-and-panel enclosure for a wider opening where one fixed pane keeps the entry clean and stable.
Full-height glass helps a compact bathroom feel more open while still controlling splash at the curb.
Sliding bypass doors work well where a vanity, toilet, or narrow walkway makes a swinging door awkward.
A tall fixed panel can preserve the open look of a renovation while keeping the wet zone defined.
Hardware finish, handle placement, and towel-bar clearance should be chosen before fabrication.
Tinted glass can be a strong design choice when the bathroom already has enough light.
Matte black hardware pairs well with smoked glass, but it should match the fixtures and tile tone.
Darker glass needs careful lighting review so the finished shower still feels practical day to day.
Mirror sizing should account for lights, outlets, medicine cabinets, and vanity width before ordering.
Cabinet glass details are measured separately from shower work but need the same clean edge planning.
Frosted inserts are useful where the goal is softened visibility instead of a fully clear display.
Field measuring after tile is the step that protects the fit, especially when walls are out of plumb.
Installation fit checks include hinge position, sweep contact, and whether the door clears nearby fixtures.
Photos and rough dimensions help with early pricing, but final glass should follow an on-site measure.
Large panels require access planning for elevators, turns, stairs, and finished surfaces.
A clean completed install should look intentional from both inside and outside the shower.
Renovation timing matters: the glass quote gets more accurate once tile and curb conditions are final.
Brushed nickel is a common choice when the bathroom already uses softer silver plumbing fixtures.
J-channel mounting can give a vanity mirror a crisp finish when the wall and lights are ready.
Larger bathrooms still need the same fit decisions: panel width, door swing, curb slope, and hardware finish.
Suburban layouts often give more room, but the glass still depends on finished tile and opening accuracy.
Pivot and hinge choices should account for building access, door weight, and the way the bathroom is used.
Neo-angle enclosures are useful for corner showers where a standard rectangular opening would waste space.

Use The Photos

Turn a gallery idea into a clearer estimate.

The fastest way to move from inspiration to pricing is to match the photo you like with the real conditions in your bathroom: opening width, finished tile, door swing, curb shape, nearby fixtures, and building access.

Before you choose a photo as the model

Is there room for a swing door, or does a slider make more sense?
Does the finished tile opening need a fixed panel, return panel, or full enclosure?
Will the hardware finish match the plumbing, mirror, and cabinet pulls?
Can the building access handle a large panel without risking finished surfaces?

Like what you see?

Send us a few photos of your opening, tile, curb, and fixtures. We can usually tell from pictures which glass configuration is worth measuring and which options will make the bathroom feel cleaner.

For tighter NYC bathrooms, include one wide shot from the doorway and one straight-on shot of the shower. For mirrors, include the vanity, lights, outlets, and wall edges.

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