What you are looking at
Every pair below is one fixture photographed before we touched it and again once the acrylic-urethane topcoat had cured. We shoot from the same spot, on the same lens, so the after is an honest read of the same tub or tile rather than a staged stand-in. No fixtures were swapped, and nothing here is a stock photo. The wear in the before frames is what Berkeley's older housing actually hands us — a gray, worn cast-iron bottom in an Elmwood Craftsman, crazed almond gelcoat in a 1980s West Berkeley apartment, a chipped pedestal sink in a Le Conte bungalow.
Use the gallery two ways. If you are deciding whether your own fixture is worth saving, find the pair that looks closest to what you have and you will see roughly where it lands. If you have already decided and want to know what a finished job looks like up close, the after frames show the gloss, the clean edges and the fresh re-caulk you should expect. On a phone, tap the Before / After toggle on each pair; on a wider screen both frames sit side by side.
What to notice in the after frames
Look at the edges first. A good reglaze leaves a crisp, clean line where the tub meets the wall and a fresh, even bead of silicone re-caulk — no thick, gummy lip and no overspray on the tile. Next, look at the surface in the light: a properly sprayed acrylic-urethane topcoat reflects evenly, with no orange-peel texture and no dull patches where prep was rushed. The gloss should read like porcelain, because the finish is doing exactly what the original glaze did. On the tile pair, the grout lines stay legible rather than disappearing under a flooded coat, which is the mark of careful masking and the right viscosity.
If your fixture looks like one of the before frames, it is almost certainly a candidate for refinishing rather than replacement. The only honest exceptions are a fiberglass shell cracked all the way through or a steel tub rusted past the metal — and even then we will tell you straight. Want a number for a fixture like one of these? See the full price list or send a photo when you call.