The reason manufacturers do this is because

Have you ever wondered why most toilets are white? While toilets come in a variety of colors, the vast majority are bright, clean-looking white. This isn’t just a random choice—manufacturers have specific reasons for producing toilets in this color. From cost-saving measures to hygiene benefits, let’s explore the fascinating reasons why white remains the dominant toilet color worldwide.

1. Porcelain Naturally Turns White When Fired

Most toilets are made from porcelain, a type of ceramic that is incredibly durable and water-resistant. During the manufacturing process, the porcelain is fired at extremely high temperatures—often exceeding 2,000°F (1,100°C).

🔥 What happens during firing?

  • Porcelain naturally turns white as it hardens in the kiln.
  • The high temperatures make the material glossy and non-porous, preventing water absorption.
  • The white color is a result of the natural minerals used in porcelain, such as kaolin clay and feldspar.

While manufacturers could add color pigments before firing, this would require an extra step—adding cost and complexity to the process. Instead, most manufacturers skip the coloring process and embrace the natural white hue of porcelain.

Video : What is the difference between china, porcelain and bone china? a quick answer

2. White Toilets Are Easier and Cheaper to Manufacture

From a manufacturing perspective, keeping toilets white is the most practical choice. Here’s why:

✔ Fewer production steps – No need to mix or apply colored pigments.
✔ Lower costs – Coloring agents increase the price of materials and labor.
✔ Consistency in production – White is the default color, making mass production more efficient.

Because white porcelain is already the natural outcome of the firing process, it allows manufacturers to save money and time while producing toilets in bulk.

3. White Creates a Clean and Hygienic Look

One of the biggest reasons why toilets are white is psychological. The color white is associated with cleanliness, sterility, and hygiene.

🏥 Ever noticed that hospitals, clinics, and labs are often white?
This is because white makes spaces feel sanitary, bright, and fresh.

💡 Why does white make us feel clean?

  • It reflects light, making bathrooms feel bigger and brighter.
  • It doesn’t hide stains, so people are more likely to keep it clean.
  • It gives a sense of purity and sterility, which is especially important in bathrooms.

4. White Toilets Help Spot Dirt and Bacteria

Would you want a toilet that hides dirt? Probably not. A white toilet makes it easier to see stains, grime, and bacteria, ensuring it gets cleaned more frequently.

🚽 Why is this important?

  • Hygiene – White surfaces make it obvious when cleaning is needed.
  • Health – A clean toilet reduces the risk of bacteria buildup.
  • Maintenance – Regular cleaning prevents long-term stains and odors.

If toilets were black, brown, or dark gray, they could easily hide dirt, mold, and bacteria, leading to less frequent cleaning—which isn’t ideal for a place meant for sanitation.

5. White Matches Any Bathroom Style

Another advantage of white toilets is their versatility. Since white is a neutral color, it fits effortlessly into any bathroom décor. Whether your style is modern, classic, minimalist, or luxury, a white toilet will always match.

🎨 Why designers love white toilets:

  • White gives the bathroom a clean and timeless look.
  • It makes small bathrooms feel bigger and more open.
  • White complements any color scheme—walls, tiles, and accessories.

Because homeowners have different preferences when it comes to bathroom design, a neutral white toilet ensures it will never clash with the rest of the space.

6. White Toilets Feel More Inviting Than Colored Ones

While toilets can be made in other colors, many people subconsciously prefer white because it feels safer and more welcoming.

Video : 10 Things You Need To Know About Cleaning Your Toilet

🔴 Why aren’t toilets commonly red, black, or dark green?

  • Dark colors make the toilet look smaller and heavier.
  • Bright colors (like red or yellow) can feel aggressive rather than calming.
  • White gives a feeling of freshness and purity, making it the best choice for a place of cleanliness.

Even though pastel-colored toilets were popular in the 1970s and 1980s, they eventually faded from the market. Today, people prefer clean, neutral tones, with white leading the way.

7. White Toilets Are Easier to Repair or Replace

Toilets aren’t something people replace often. When they do, having a universal color like white makes finding a replacement much easier.

🛠️ Why white toilets are easier to maintain:

  • If a toilet cracks or breaks, replacing it with another white toilet is effortless.
  • White toilet seats and lids are widely available, making it simple to swap parts.
  • Plumbers and home improvement stores stock white toilets more than any other color.

If you owned a bright pink or blue toilet, finding an exact color match for a replacement could be a nightmare. White eliminates this problem, making it the go-to choice for homeowners and businesses.

8. Do Colored Toilets Still Exist?

Yes, but they’re rare. Some homeowners still opt for off-white, beige, black, or gray toilets for unique design aesthetics. However, these options are more expensive and harder to find.

🚽 Who still buys colored toilets?

  • People with custom-designed bathrooms.
  • Luxury homeowners who want a unique statement piece.
  • Retro enthusiasts looking to recreate vintage styles.

For most people, though, white remains the practical, affordable, and timeless choice.

Final Thoughts: Why White Toilets Dominate the Market

So, why are most toilets white? It all comes down to science, practicality, and psychology.

✔ Porcelain naturally turns white when fired at high temperatures.
✔ White toilets are cheaper to manufacture and easier to mass-produce.
✔ They give a sense of cleanliness and make dirt more visible, encouraging hygiene.
✔ White is a neutral color, fitting into any bathroom style effortlessly.
✔ They are easy to replace and maintain, reducing long-term hassles.

While colored toilets exist, white remains the preferred choice worldwide. So next time you step into a bathroom and see a white toilet, you’ll know—it’s not just a random decision, but one based on science, efficiency, and aesthetics!

Remember Meggie Cleary from ‘The Thorn Birds’? — this is her today, age 65

It wasn’t certain that Rachel Ward was going to get the role of her lifetime, as she starred as Meggie Cleary in the classic mini-series The Thorn Birds.

The British actress and model has had a long and varying career, spanning decades. Now, she’s settled in Australia with her husband, whom she fell in love with on set.

So what really happened on The Thorn Birds? And why did the mini-series become such a huge success?

This is Rachel Ward today, at 65.

If you were to debate which television series is the best of all time, you’d probably get a different answer from every person you talk to. Firstly, there are so many different kinds of series, and of course, we all like different things.

But usually, the most popular television series are those that aired for many years, broadcast on television with several seasons and many strong and independent characters.

Bonanza, Little House on the Prairie, Friends, Sopranos or Twin Peaks. The answer to which one reigns supreme will probably never be decided, and to be honest, that is also one of the most fantastic things about television.

The Thorn Birds

There will always be a series that sticks closer to the heart than others.

Even though we have more established series that last for years, there are several examples of miniseries that weren’t meant to stick around long, but still reached cult status.

One of those was The Thorn Birds, starring Richard Chamberlain, Rachel Ward, and Bryan Brown.

It was first broadcast in March 1983, and over 30 million people in the US watched the ten-hour miniseries, based on Colleen McCullough’s 1977 Australian novel The Thorn Birds.

Thorn Birds
Youtube/Vmutsuki

The mini-series gained huge interest and was praised by both the audience and critics, winning several awards, both for its story as well as the actors’ performances.

Rachel Ward

 Ten hours long and spread over five nights, The Thorn Birds is still to this day considered a classic that will live on for many years to come.

Rachel Ward starred as Meggie Cleary in The Thorn Birds, but at the time, it was pretty much a surprise when she got it. It turned out that the producers had difficulties in finding the perfect person for the role, but in the end, Ward was the perfect choice.

Not only did Ward get her big breakthrough by starring in the television mini-series, she also found the love of her life on set.

This is the story of Ward – and how she travelled the world to keep her passion for films and television series alive.

Rachel Ward – early life

Born on September 12, 1957, in Cornwell, Oxfordshire, England, Ward studied at the Hatherop Castle School in Hatherop before attending the Byam Shaw School of Art in London. However, at just 16 years of age, she left school to pursue a career in fashion.

Ward became a fashion and photography model, appearing on covers for VogueCosmopolitan, as well as Harper’s & Queen. She slowly made her way into the acting scene after she was featured in several commercials.

Years later, in 1995, she would earn her Graduate Diploma of Communications and a Graduate Certificate in Writing from University of Technology, Sydney, Australia.

In 1979, Rachel Ward appeared in her first television movie, Christmas Lilies of the Field. In the years that followed she would have a number of smaller roles, but in 1983, she would become a well-known actress all over the US.

Casting ‘The Thorn Birds’

Stan Marguiles was one of the producers on The Thorn Birds. But casting the right people to appear in the show wasn’t the easiest task.

In 1982, he explained the difficulty.

However, when they saw Rachel Ward, they were sure that they’d found the right one for the role of Meggie Cleary.

“She has to go from 18 to her early 50s. From a rather naïve, overly romantic young girl to a bitter woman in her 30s, to a woman who finally understands where she took the wrong turn when she reaches her 50s. There’s an enormous range of emotions and colors,” he said.

“They first started to age me, it was kind of scary,” Ward recalled. “I had these endless double chins. I sort of had a body suit underneath the clothes, I remember liking it when I grew older, I liked the outfits, there was slightly more masculine than they were in the beginning.”

Over 200 women were considered for the role of Meggie Cleary, and a total of 40 actresses auditioned.

Speaking with the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia, Ward recalled her audition.

“My audition was quite light and I had a sense of humor” she said. “I remember I was taking it seriously but I wasn’t acting with a capital A. It is so subjective, performances pieces, and I was probably spot on the first time. I got like 10/10 for looks and 4/10 for acting.” 

Golden Globe nominated

They sent Ward to work with an acting coach, and it was a great match. Starring alongside Richard Chamberlain as Father Ralph, Ward became a beloved actress, praised by viewers as well as critics.

In 1982, she was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television.

Chamberlain received a Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television. The show itself won four Golden Globes, including Best Miniseries, as well as six Emmy awards.

Rachel Ward
Youtube/Vmutsuki

“It was the absolute top of the heat of a soap opera,” Chamberlain said. “I am often surprised when I think about how it remains so successful, because there was one tragedy after another, after another, after another. Nobody came out on top of that show. It was so sad but had such wonderful characters”

Rachel Ward: “Felt terribly”

Ward wasn’t an actress that crafted her skills through school, but rather she learned as time went by. As the show aired, she saw herself as the weaker link. She suffered from insecurity for years after she received some negative reviews (The New York Times said she was “miscast”).

“I felt terribly like I’d disappointed,” she told Closer. “I felt that despite me it was a success.”

However, years later, her grown daughter watched The Thorn Birds, and told her mother, “‘Mom, you were fabulous,’” Ward recalled. “That was, for me, the most important response that I could’ve ever had.”

”It was soap opera. I think of it differently now,” Ward said. “Acting styles have changed and mine was always quite natural. And I think they tried to make me something that I wasn’t naturally. So that’s the excuse that I’ve made for myself.”

Rachel Ward Bryan
Instagram/RachelWard

Her performance in the 1983 miniseries The Thorn Birds was of course a very important step for Ward, career wise. However, the production of the show became much more important for her, since she met the love of her life.

Rachel Ward and Bryan Brown

During her work on The Thorn Birds, Rachel Ward and Chamberlain’s characters Meggie and Father Ralph had great passion between them, which kept the viewers coming back.

Chamberlain recalled that it was difficult filming specific scenes.

“There’s a microphone hidden in the armpit… and you’re trying not to smear her lipstick,” he told Closer.

Even though Ward and Chamberlain were in love on camera, the great love story was actually when the cameras were turned off.

Bryan Brown starred as Meggie’s husband Luke O’Neill, and while shooting, they fell in love.

“What happened on screen was happening off it – that’s why our love scenes were so believable,” Ward told the UK’s Daily Express.

“Everyone on set realized they were falling for each other. “I’ve never seen two people more in love,” Chamberlain said, adding that Brown even helped Ward calm her nerves before shooting. “She seemed to get happier and happier and her work got better and better.”

Married months later

Ward and Brown obviously had “sexual chemistry” on set. She really fancied him, however, when asked who made the first move, she made sure to throw her beloved husband under the bus.

‘He as slow as a wet week. Really took forever. I think I probably did,’ she said

Brown, however, insisted that he was just being a “cunning Aussie bloke” not approaching her at once.”

“And before they know it, they’re hooked!” the legendary actor joked. 

Rachel Ward and Brown got married months after the filming of The Thorn Birds wrapped.

The couple went on to have three children, Rose, Matilda and Joseph.

So what happened to Ward following The Thorn Birds?

She and Brown moved to Australia, where Ward starred in several films and television series.

Rachel Ward – this is her today

In 2001, she was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Performance by an Actress in a Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television following her performance in the film On the Beach.

Her other credits include The Big House, Martha’s New Coat and television series Rake, Devil’s Playground and The Straits.

Ward also went into producing and directing,

Besides being an actress, wife, mother, and now grandmother, Ward also made sure to contribute to society.

Therefore, in 2005, she was awarded the A.M (Member of the Order of Australia for “raising awareness of social justice through lobbying, mentoring and advocacy for the rights of disadvantaged and at-risk young people.”

Work with daughter Matilda

Both Matilda’s parents were present when she gave birth, which was truly special for her.

“When I was pushing Zan out at the end, dad was stroking my head and mum was cheering me on, crying, saying, ‘Come on, Till! He’s so close,’” Matilda said. “It was pretty special that both my parents got to be with me through such a monumental time in my life.”

Just days ago, Ward got to see her newborn granddaughter, which she shared on her Instagram.

And on another note, isn’t Matilda just the spitting image of her mother!

Ward and her daughter Matilda both chose acting as their job.

However, when Matilda first said she wanted to become an actress, her mother wasn’t that excited.

Spitting image of her mother

“Mum definitely said ‘don’t be an actress,’” Matilda recalled. “She encouraged me to go to film school and get behind the camera, which I did and I’m very glad I did.”

In 2016, they teamed up in the film The Death and Life of Otto Bloom. Rachel and Matilda play the same character at different stages of her life

“We look alike so obviously there’s a great bonus in that we share physical similarities and mannerisms,” Rachel Ward said. “Plus, as we know, women over the age of 40 are basically invisible in the media and in film … It’s a treat when something comes along where it’s ok to be in your 50s.”

Rachel Ward was wonderful as Meggie Cleary in The Thorn Birds, and we’re so happy to see that she still is as passionate today.

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