Filters
Clark Round II
0 products
Whoops, there are none available in your area
View all productsClark Round II showers
Clark Round II is a shower range built around a round design language, with a round rose and outlet profile rather than the square lines used elsewhere in the Clark lineup. It suits bathrooms where the tapware, mixers, or other fittings already lean round in profile, since matching the shape across fixtures gives a bathroom a more considered, cohesive look rather than a mix of round and square shapes competing for attention.
Who this range suits
Round II works for anyone renovating a bathroom who wants a shower head and outlet that reads as a deliberate design choice rather than a default fitting. It is a straightforward option if you have already settled on round profile tapware or accessories and want the shower to follow the same shape language through the room.
Outlet configuration: wall vs ceiling
One of the first decisions with any shower range is whether the outlet comes from the wall or the ceiling. A wall-mounted outlet is generally simpler to install and service, since the pipework runs through the wall cavity behind the shower rather than through the ceiling. A ceiling-mounted outlet delivers water more directly overhead, which some people prefer for the shower experience, but it depends on what plumbing access already exists in the ceiling space and whether that suits your bathroom's layout. Check what configuration is available within the Round II range before committing to a design if this affects your renovation plan.
Rail vs fixed head
A rail shower lets you slide the shower head up or down along a fixed rail, which is useful in households with a mix of heights or where a handheld option matters for cleaning the shower or bathing children. A fixed head is simpler and has fewer moving parts, but offers less flexibility once installed. Think about who uses the bathroom day to day before choosing between the two.
Water pressure requirements
Shower heads and outlets are generally rated for a specific water pressure range, and matching the fitting to your home's actual pressure matters for how the shower performs once installed. Low-pressure and mains-pressure systems are not interchangeable in every case, so it is worth confirming your home's water pressure before finalising a choice within the range, ideally with input from your plumber.
Round design as a styling decision
Choosing a round profile is largely about visual consistency. If your basin mixer, wall mixer, or other bathroom accessories are already round, a round shower head and outlet will carry that shape through the room. If your other fittings are square profile, mixing the two is a legitimate design choice for some bathrooms, but it is worth deciding deliberately rather than by accident.
Buying considerations at a glance
- Confirm whether you need a wall or ceiling outlet based on your existing plumbing
- Decide between a rail shower for flexibility or a fixed head for simplicity
- Check your home's water pressure against the product's rated range
- Match the round profile to existing round tapware and accessories for a consistent look
- Consider who uses the bathroom to decide how much adjustability you need