Custom bathroom glass

Shower Enclosures

Custom shower enclosures in Jamaica, including frameless swing doors, sliding shower doors, fixed panels, walk-in glass, and hardware finish options.

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Measured to fit the finished bathroom

Shower glass depends on exact site dimensions, finished tile, wall conditions, curb details, swing clearance, and hardware preferences. This page should help customers understand what to prepare before requesting a quote.

Frameless and semi-frameless possibilities

Common options include swing door enclosures, sliding shower doors, fixed panel walk-ins, corner entries, and bathtub glass screens.

Shower glass measured around finished bathroom conditions

Shower enclosures are not ideal for rough guessing. Tile, curb, wall plumb, plumbing side, swing clearance, and hardware finish all affect the final recommendation.

Finished surfaces matter

Final measurement is strongest after tile and major finished surfaces are complete.

Clearance and safety

Doors need room to swing or slide without hitting toilets, vanities, towel bars, or walls.

Glass privacy

Clear, frosted, smoked, or textured glass can change the bathroom feel and cleaning expectations.

Hardware finish

Chrome, black, nickel, brass, and other hardware directions should match the bathroom design.

How to choose a shower enclosure style

The right enclosure depends on bathroom size, curb layout, door clearance, plumbing side, and how open the customer wants the shower to feel.

  1. Swing door enclosure: Best where there is enough clearance and the customer wants a clean frameless look.
  2. Sliding shower door: Helpful where swing clearance is limited or the bathroom is compact.
  3. Fixed walk-in panel: Useful for open wet-room style layouts where splash control and opening size allow it.
  4. Corner entry: Can work where the shower sits in a corner and needs a more contained footprint.

Key Options

  • Swing door enclosure
  • Sliding shower door
  • Fixed walk-in panel
  • Corner entry
  • Bathtub screen

Useful planning links

Bathroom planning links

Shower glass often pairs with vanity, mirror, and glass decisions.

Related pages

What to prepare for shower glass

The best first quote request includes finished opening dimensions, photos, and a clear idea of how the door should move.

  • Finished opening width and height
  • Photos of tile, curb, walls, floor, and plumbing side
  • Swing, sliding, walk-in, corner, or fixed-panel preference
  • Hardware finish preference
  • Whether tiling and countertops are complete
  • Any nearby toilet, vanity, towel bar, or wall clearance issue

Shower glass care notes

  • Clean glass regularly to reduce mineral, soap, and water spotting.
  • Use bathroom-safe non-abrasive cleaning products.
  • Ventilate the bathroom when possible to reduce moisture buildup.
  • Report hinge, handle, or roller issues before hardware is forced.

Common Questions

When should shower glass be measured?

Final measurements are best after tiling and major bathroom surfaces are complete.

Can shower glass be frosted?

Yes. Frosted, obscure, smoked, and other privacy glass options can be discussed during quoting.

Should I request shower glass before tiling is finished?

You can start the conversation early, but final measurement is usually best after tile and major finished surfaces are complete.

Which is better, swing or sliding shower glass?

Swing doors suit bathrooms with enough clearance. Sliding doors can be better when space is tight. The layout should decide the product.

Can shower glass be privacy glass?

Yes. Frosted, smoked, obscure, and textured options can be discussed depending on the desired look and availability.

What makes shower glass pricing change?

Size, glass type, hardware finish, door style, wall conditions, curb layout, and installation complexity all affect pricing.