A probably somewhat peculiar and definitely difficult-to-categorize question.
I want to raise my shower cabin a few centimeters, say about 5cm. I'm thinking of some form of blocks, which you simply place under the cabin's 5 adjustable feet. The "only" question is which material and shape. One thing to consider is that since 3 of the feet naturally sit at the front edge of the cabin, these blocks will be visible, so a certain degree of aesthetics needs to be involved. Otherwise, I could have cut a bunch of plywood sheets and glued them together, but that would look terrible.
I'm considering finding or making some cone-shaped construction, maybe 7-10 cm wide at the base and 4-6 at the top, preferably with a rounded bowl on top, as the feet are rounded on the underside. I've thought about whether it would be possible to cut and glue together plastic cutting boards and then shape them with a band sander or similar, but that already feels finicky.
So, does anyone have any tips on a simpler solution? Naturally, the material needs to be moisture-resistant.
If the adjustable feet are threaded into the cabin's base plate, it might work with a piece of threaded rod and coupling nut to extend the existing legs? Should be possible to find a coupling nut with a decent appearance that's about 5 cm long?
That wasn't a bad idea! The question is whether it will be sturdy enough though...? I'm wondering about the dimensions of the existing legs, could it have been M8 you think... I'll check this weekend. Thanks for the tip!