Celebrity Cruises
By Matt Hannafin
Where do you go from up? Celebrity already had the world's most stylish megaships in Celebrity Solstice, Equinox, Eclipse, and especially last year's Celebrity Silhouette, but in introducing the fifth and final Solstice-class sister, Celebrity Reflection, they've raised the bar just a little bit higher. New and better uses for signature spaces? Check. A new deck full of suites designed for spa aficionados? Check. Better entertainment, dining, and activities? Check. A finely balanced mix of high-toned elegance and playful, childlike fun? Check.
Sometimes it's hard to grade a new vessel when it's fresh out of the box, but not this time: On every level, Reflection is one of the very finest megaships at sea.
Photo caption: Celebrity Reflection.
Like her Solstice-class sisters, Reflection is decked out with a Lawn Club, a half-acre of real grass growing 12 decks above the sea. Designed to provide a relaxing, lawn-party type of experience, the Lawn Club on sisters ships Solstice, Equinox, and Eclipse looked great but lacked a sense of focus: Once you were there, there wasn't a really compelling reason to stay except to lay on the grass and say, "Cool." Last year's Celebrity Silhouette rectified that situation, adding several relaxation, dining, and enrichment options that have been carried over to the new Reflection.
Front and center at the lawn's forward edge is the Lawn Club Grill, a fun, interactive dining experience about which I'll go into in more detail below. Two other spaces also flank the lawn. On the starboard side is The Porch, an indoor-outdoor dining spot offering light breakfasts and lunches. On the port side, the Art Studio offers casual classes in drawing, painting, etc. Out on the lawn itself, Celebrity has installed eight "Alcove" rental cabanas designed to pamper two to four guests apiece, with cushy seating and a telephone you can use to call for service. Guests who don't want to shell out for their relaxation can camp out for free just a few meters away in one of the comfortable hammocks set up under the Lawn Club's high partial canopies -- or, for an Alice in Wonderland experience, jump up into one of the two fantastically oversized Adirondack chairs that sit like sculpture at the lawn's aft end.
Photo caption: A private "Alcove" cabana looks out over Celebrity Reflection's Lawn Club.

Reflection's collection offers some impressive names: Christo and Jeanne-Claude, Robert Rauschenberg, John Baldessari, Richard Prince, Jeff Koons. For my money, though, some of the collection's strongest works are a series of chromogenic prints by Cristina Lei Rodriquez, created by placing beads, rings, fashion accessories, plastic butterflies, paper, and other materials directly on a scanner. The result is a dense, painterly abstraction of interweaving lines and textures. Several of these works are hung in Reflection's Ensemble Lounge, which also features two works by German sculptor Herbert Hamak, each a series of square, monocromatic resin panels that appear to be lit with a soft light from within.
In addition to 136 new works assembled for the ship, ICart was also able to mine the collections of former Celebrity vessels that have now left the fleet, including 1997's Mercury, which at its launch had the most stunning art collection in the cruise industry.
Photo caption: A ship of art: Bert Rodriguez's installation "Reflections," suspended in the ship's atrium just outside The Hideaway.

Reflection's most artful room is The Hideaway, which sits like an elaborate, modernist tree house up in the atrium on Deck 8, just behind Bert Rodriguez's Reflection tree. Designed to be a space where guests can commune quietly with themselves -- reading, surfing the web on an iPad, or even napping -- it's one of the greatest chill-out rooms at sea.
Able to accommodate about 30 people in super-comfortable high-backed leather chairs, pod-like white plastic chairs, and three private "nests," The Hideaway was conceptualized for last year's Celebrity Silhouette by four graduate interior design students from Florida International University's College of Architecture, as part of a special internship. Celebrity then had longtime design partner RTKL Associates draw up the final plans, which resulted in what you see today -- and what you see today is absolutely faboo. "The space is intended to be a retreat, an escape," says RTKL's Greg Walton, "bringing back those childhood memories where we all used to escape to our own world in a tree house or a play fort."
Photo caption: A "nest" in The Hideaway, Reflection's chill-out tree house.

Photo caption: Heated tiled loungers beckon in the relaxation room of Reflection's super-stylish AquaSpa.
The Resort Deck on Silhouette and her Solstice-class sisters is one of the most serene in the cruise biz, with both the outside pool area and indoor Solarium designed for old-fashioned relaxation rather than the kind of theme-park fun you find aboard many other modern megaships. Outdoors, the main pool deck is centered on two pools and four hot tubs. Outside, twelve white, 25-foot, A-frame canopies frame the pool area, supporting cantilevered awnings that provide shade for chaise longues on both the Resort Deck and the Lido Deck above. Down below, the wide base of each canopy creates a small alcove containing a day bed -- a great little semi-private alcove for the twelve lucky couples who show up first.
Forward of the pools, the glass-ceilinged Solarium (pictured above) is a peaceful enclave for adults only, with a lap pool, two whirlpool tubs, a sea of cushioned teak lounge chairs, views all around, and a high-tech climate-control system that minimizes the overheating that's so common to glass solariums on other ships. In the forward port corner, the AquaSpa Café serves light snacks and drinks. Amazing fact: Solar film applied to the Solarium roof and elsewhere on the top decks generates enough juice to power about 7,000 LED bulbs, or the ship's passenger elevators.
Photo caption: Celebrity Reflection's peaceful Solarium.

Photo caption: A smorgasbord of options at The Porch, a casual eatery poised at the edge of a grassy lawn on Reflection's top deck.

Blu (pictured here) concentrates on healthy "clean cuisine" -- prepared and served artfully, without heavy sauces or anything else that distracts from the dish's focus. For entrees, you can get deliciousness like orecchiette pasta with porcini mushrooms, vegetable pistou, and basil; blacked ahi tuna with baby bok choy, spicy onion, and white sesame see vinaigrette; or pan-seared filet mignon with celery root puree, green asparagus, cabernet confit shallots, and olive oil beef jus. For appetizers, think grilled tamarind-glazed quail with cinnamon picked carrots and tabbouleh salad, or blu cheese souffle with candied anjou pear and a port wine reduction.
Of course, there's a catch: You might not be able to get in. Blu, y'see, is reserved almost exclusively for guests booked into the ship's Aquaclass staterooms and suites (about which, more later). Suite guests can also get in, if there's room, but plebeians in standard staterooms? Meet the velvet rope.
Photo caption: Blu, a stylish spot for healthful and beautifully prepared dinners -- if you have the credentials to get in.

At the deck's aft end, the Tuscan Grille is a stylish take on family-style Italian cuisine, with large portions of pasta, seafood, and steak served by a friendly waitstaff in a venue that spreads across the entire width of the ship's stern, offering remarkable views. A little forward, the high-style Qsine serves eclectic international cuisine with a theatrical twist: Menus are loaded onto iPads; decor is Alice in Wonderland quirky, and dishes are artfully prepared and presented, some delivered in a kind of open-sided suitcase with individual slots containing twelve small plates -- or maybe you'd prefer the wire tower that holds five different cones of French fries, or the "Disco Shrimp" that come in a bowl with a built-in strobe light? For a less dada-esque experience, Bistro on Five is a casual 68-seat creperie with tableside service for lunch and dinner.
Photo caption: Murano, Celebrity Reflection's most classically high-toned dining experience, featuring tableside preparation, a French and American wine list, and traditional service.

The Lawn Club experience works like this: Each table elects one "Grill Master" and one "Flatbread Master." The Flatbread Master is up first, spinning dough into oblong pizzas and adding tomato sauce, cheese, and his or her own selection of meats and veggies to create the first course, which comes out hot from the ovens in a matter of minutes. (While waiting, diners are free to graze from a large salad bar.) Then it's the Grill Master's turn, taking the table's order, selecting the desired cuts of meat from a gleaming display case at one side of the restaurant, seasoning them at the large central prep table, then firing them up at one of eight grills in the open kitchen area. A professional Celebrity chef is on hand through the whole process, offering tips and, if necessary, saving the day.
Like Qsine, Murano, the Tuscan Grille, and Bistro on Five, the Lawn Club Grill is an extra-cost option ($40 per person).
Photo caption: Meat meets heat at Celebrity Reflection's Lawn Club Grill.
All of the Solstice-class ships have had a Sunset Bar aft of the Lawn Club, offering views of the ship's wake, but none of them to date has been very exciting, consisting of little more than a traditional long bar with a few stools, and miscellaneous all-weather table seating nearby.
For Reflection, though, Celebrity got all clubby, turning the Sunset Bar into a real experience. Its centerpiece is a round bar surrounded by low fireplug stools. The donut-hole of the bar is sunken so that bartenders are standing at eye level with their guests, and at night those little fireplug stools glow with an inner purple light. Decor and seating areas that flow out from the bar recall a Moroccan lounge, while the sky, the wake views, and the soft live guitar music provide all the atmosphere you could want. For my taste, it's the best bar on the ship.
Photo caption: Nighttime at the Sunset Bar, all the way aft on Deck 15 -- for my money, the most atmospheric bar on board.

The rooms' design is open, airy, ergonomic, and modern. Beds and cabinets have rounded corners (the better to not bump into) and beds are higher than normal to give more storage space underneath. Headboards that frame the beds are topped with a narrow, completely unobtrusive storage unit that's perfect for handbags, shopping bags, and other knickknacks. Some couches offer trundle beds for kids and other additional guests, while closet doors slide shut automatically -- which isn't so unusual on land, but is a hard thing to accomplish on a rocking ship. Cabin bathrooms and showers are substantially larger and roomier than aboard most other megaships, and showers are equipped with a foot rail that makes it easier for women to shave their legs. Outside, cabin balconies are large and deep, with plenty of room for two reclining deck chairs and a table.
AquaClass Staterooms, grouped together on Decks 11 and 12, take the basic balcony stateroom and spiff it up with added amenities, such as a pillow menu, Frette bathrobes and slippers, an expanded menu of personal care products, complimentary bottled water and a carafe of flavor-infused iced tea, an upgraded room service menu, special music/sound and aromatherapy options, and fantastic jetted bodywash showers from Hansgrohe, which shoot water from multiple heads. AquaClass guests also get special perks around the ship, including unlimited access to the spa's Persian Garden aromatherapy suite and relaxation room and guaranteed complimentary dining at the Blu specialty restaurant.
Photo caption: Balcony staterooms are comfortable, beautifully designed nests with lots of extras to make your stay special.

The Reflection Suite is the premier accommodation among a group of new Signature Suites located in a private cul-de-sac on Deck 14, accessible only to guests booked in those suites, via specially coded keycard. The suites are bookable individually, but those with the requisite scratch can opt to book the whole kit and caboodle as a six-suite residence for up to 26 family members and/or friends and/or campaign contributors.
Down on Deck 12, Reflection offers Celebrity's first AquaClass Suites, 32 of them in all. A 301-square-foot supersizing of the line's regular 194-square-foot AquaClass Staterooms, each comes with Hansgrohe shower panels, a selection of aromatherapy scents, a pillow menu, daily deliveries of bottled water and teas, priority dining in the Blu specialty restaurant, 24/7 butler service, and a 79-square-foot private balcony with lounge seating.
Photo caption: This incredible bathroom is a highlight of Reflection's 1636-square-foot Reflection Suite on Deck 14.

Where do you go from up? Celebrity already had the world's most stylish megaships in Celebrity Solstice, Equinox, Eclipse, and especially last year's Celebrity Silhouette, but in introducing the fifth and final Solstice-class sister, Celebrity Reflection, they've raised the bar just a little bit higher. New and better uses for signature spaces? Check. A new deck full of suites designed for spa aficionados? Check. Better entertainment, dining, and activities? Check. A finely balanced mix of high-toned elegance and playful, childlike fun? Check.
Sometimes it's hard to grade a new vessel when it's fresh out of the box, but not this time: On every level, Reflection is one of the very finest megaships at sea.
Photo caption: Celebrity Reflection.

Celebrity Cruises
Growing Grass on Cold, Hard Steel
Front and center at the lawn's forward edge is the Lawn Club Grill, a fun, interactive dining experience about which I'll go into in more detail below. Two other spaces also flank the lawn. On the starboard side is The Porch, an indoor-outdoor dining spot offering light breakfasts and lunches. On the port side, the Art Studio offers casual classes in drawing, painting, etc. Out on the lawn itself, Celebrity has installed eight "Alcove" rental cabanas designed to pamper two to four guests apiece, with cushy seating and a telephone you can use to call for service. Guests who don't want to shell out for their relaxation can camp out for free just a few meters away in one of the comfortable hammocks set up under the Lawn Club's high partial canopies -- or, for an Alice in Wonderland experience, jump up into one of the two fantastically oversized Adirondack chairs that sit like sculpture at the lawn's aft end.
Photo caption: A private "Alcove" cabana looks out over Celebrity Reflection's Lawn Club.

Matt Hannafin
A Ship of Art
Lots of cruise lines tout their ships' art collections, but Celebrity is the only line that's got real art world credibility, showcasing works by a huge range of A-list modern and contemporary artists. For Reflection, art consultants ICart used the ship's name as its curatorial theme, assembling some 250 works that either deal with the act of reflection or were created from reflective materials. The centerpiece of the collection is Miami-born artist Bert Rodriguezs Reflection in the ships upper Grand Foyer. The piece continues a theme begun aboard Celebrity Solstice in 2008, in which a living tree is suspended in a giant pot several stories above the ship's lobby. For Reflection, Rodriguez created a piece in which a gleaming metal tree grows upside-down from the bottom of the pot, reflecting the real tree above.Reflection's collection offers some impressive names: Christo and Jeanne-Claude, Robert Rauschenberg, John Baldessari, Richard Prince, Jeff Koons. For my money, though, some of the collection's strongest works are a series of chromogenic prints by Cristina Lei Rodriquez, created by placing beads, rings, fashion accessories, plastic butterflies, paper, and other materials directly on a scanner. The result is a dense, painterly abstraction of interweaving lines and textures. Several of these works are hung in Reflection's Ensemble Lounge, which also features two works by German sculptor Herbert Hamak, each a series of square, monocromatic resin panels that appear to be lit with a soft light from within.
In addition to 136 new works assembled for the ship, ICart was also able to mine the collections of former Celebrity vessels that have now left the fleet, including 1997's Mercury, which at its launch had the most stunning art collection in the cruise industry.
Photo caption: A ship of art: Bert Rodriguez's installation "Reflections," suspended in the ship's atrium just outside The Hideaway.

Celebrity Cruises
An Atrium Aerie
There is art, too, in much of Reflection's architecture. On the outside, her form is both massive and sleek, suggesting strength and grace. On the inside, a style that mixes high-fashion with warm, luxurious materials, colors, and textures ties the many moods and experiences of their public rooms into a satisfying whole.Reflection's most artful room is The Hideaway, which sits like an elaborate, modernist tree house up in the atrium on Deck 8, just behind Bert Rodriguez's Reflection tree. Designed to be a space where guests can commune quietly with themselves -- reading, surfing the web on an iPad, or even napping -- it's one of the greatest chill-out rooms at sea.
Able to accommodate about 30 people in super-comfortable high-backed leather chairs, pod-like white plastic chairs, and three private "nests," The Hideaway was conceptualized for last year's Celebrity Silhouette by four graduate interior design students from Florida International University's College of Architecture, as part of a special internship. Celebrity then had longtime design partner RTKL Associates draw up the final plans, which resulted in what you see today -- and what you see today is absolutely faboo. "The space is intended to be a retreat, an escape," says RTKL's Greg Walton, "bringing back those childhood memories where we all used to escape to our own world in a tree house or a play fort."
Photo caption: A "nest" in The Hideaway, Reflection's chill-out tree house.

Celebrity Cruises
Renovating Body and Soul
From its earliest days Celebrity has been known for its spas, and those aboard Reflection and her Solstice-class sisters are even better than their predecessors. Done up in a sea of cool, soothing whites and greens, the spa offers a huge range of treatments (from traditional massages and facials to acupuncture, Botox, teeth whitening, and cosmetic dermal fillers to smooth smile lines) as well as The Persian Garden, a series of small steam rooms and saunas that release aromatherapy-infused dry heat, steam, and mists into the air. Spa-goers can wander in and out of the chambers or relax on heated tiled lounge chairs with views of the sea. Use of the Persian Garden is complimentary for guests booked into Reflection's AquaSpa staterooms and suites; other guests must pay a per-day or per-cruise fee.Photo caption: Heated tiled loungers beckon in the relaxation room of Reflection's super-stylish AquaSpa.

Matt Hannafin
Grab Your SPF 30 and Go
Forward of the pools, the glass-ceilinged Solarium (pictured above) is a peaceful enclave for adults only, with a lap pool, two whirlpool tubs, a sea of cushioned teak lounge chairs, views all around, and a high-tech climate-control system that minimizes the overheating that's so common to glass solariums on other ships. In the forward port corner, the AquaSpa Café serves light snacks and drinks. Amazing fact: Solar film applied to the Solarium roof and elsewhere on the top decks generates enough juice to power about 7,000 LED bulbs, or the ship's passenger elevators.
Photo caption: Celebrity Reflection's peaceful Solarium.

Celebrity Cruises
Dining from Grand to Grill
In all, Silhouette offers guests 12 different dining venues, from grand and formal to flip-flop casual. At the formal end, the main Grand Cuvee Dining Room is the fifth created on the original Solstice-class design by preeminent restaurant designer Adam Tihany, creator of Las Vegas's Aureole, Bouchon, and Seablue and New York's Per Se. It shines like a crystal goblet. At the ultra-casual end, diners can choose between The Porch, serving casual breakfasts and lunches plus views of the sea and the adjacent Lawn Club; the Oceanview Café, the ship's multi-station buffet restaurant, open for breakfast, lunch and dinner; the poolside Mast Grill & Bar, which has a single-minded focus on hamburgers; the AquaSpa Café, offering light, healthy fare in the Solarium; and Café al Bacio & Gelateria, serving pastries, traditional gelatos and Italian ices, and specialty coffees.Photo caption: A smorgasbord of options at The Porch, a casual eatery poised at the edge of a grassy lawn on Reflection's top deck.

Matt Hannafin
Healthy Eats, If You Make the Cut
As an alternative to the large-scale formality of her Grand Cuvee Dining Room, Silhouette offers six specialty restaurants that run the gamut from continental elegance to casual barbecue to the culinary equivalent of modern art.Blu (pictured here) concentrates on healthy "clean cuisine" -- prepared and served artfully, without heavy sauces or anything else that distracts from the dish's focus. For entrees, you can get deliciousness like orecchiette pasta with porcini mushrooms, vegetable pistou, and basil; blacked ahi tuna with baby bok choy, spicy onion, and white sesame see vinaigrette; or pan-seared filet mignon with celery root puree, green asparagus, cabernet confit shallots, and olive oil beef jus. For appetizers, think grilled tamarind-glazed quail with cinnamon picked carrots and tabbouleh salad, or blu cheese souffle with candied anjou pear and a port wine reduction.
Of course, there's a catch: You might not be able to get in. Blu, y'see, is reserved almost exclusively for guests booked into the ship's Aquaclass staterooms and suites (about which, more later). Suite guests can also get in, if there's room, but plebeians in standard staterooms? Meet the velvet rope.
Photo caption: Blu, a stylish spot for healthful and beautifully prepared dinners -- if you have the credentials to get in.

Matt Hannafin
Dress-Up Dining
Four other specialty restaurants are all located on Deck 5. At the high end, Murano offers the ship's most traditionally lofty dining experience, blending classic and modern Continental cuisine with an elegant, romantic setting inspired by Venice's famous Murano glass-makers. Elaborate, multicourse meals often include tableside cooking, carving, and flambé.At the deck's aft end, the Tuscan Grille is a stylish take on family-style Italian cuisine, with large portions of pasta, seafood, and steak served by a friendly waitstaff in a venue that spreads across the entire width of the ship's stern, offering remarkable views. A little forward, the high-style Qsine serves eclectic international cuisine with a theatrical twist: Menus are loaded onto iPads; decor is Alice in Wonderland quirky, and dishes are artfully prepared and presented, some delivered in a kind of open-sided suitcase with individual slots containing twelve small plates -- or maybe you'd prefer the wire tower that holds five different cones of French fries, or the "Disco Shrimp" that come in a bowl with a built-in strobe light? For a less dada-esque experience, Bistro on Five is a casual 68-seat creperie with tableside service for lunch and dinner.
Photo caption: Murano, Celebrity Reflection's most classically high-toned dining experience, featuring tableside preparation, a French and American wine list, and traditional service.

Matt Hannafin
Where Meat Meets Heat
Reflection's most visible specialty restaurant is the Lawn Club Grill. Perched at the forward edge of the Lawn Club and designed with an open-air feel (albeit with a protective glass roof and wind breaks), the 58-seat space turns casual into interactive, with diners invited to strap on an apron and help prepare their meals.The Lawn Club experience works like this: Each table elects one "Grill Master" and one "Flatbread Master." The Flatbread Master is up first, spinning dough into oblong pizzas and adding tomato sauce, cheese, and his or her own selection of meats and veggies to create the first course, which comes out hot from the ovens in a matter of minutes. (While waiting, diners are free to graze from a large salad bar.) Then it's the Grill Master's turn, taking the table's order, selecting the desired cuts of meat from a gleaming display case at one side of the restaurant, seasoning them at the large central prep table, then firing them up at one of eight grills in the open kitchen area. A professional Celebrity chef is on hand through the whole process, offering tips and, if necessary, saving the day.
Like Qsine, Murano, the Tuscan Grille, and Bistro on Five, the Lawn Club Grill is an extra-cost option ($40 per person).
Photo caption: Meat meets heat at Celebrity Reflection's Lawn Club Grill.

Matt Hannafin
Waiting for the Sun
For Reflection, though, Celebrity got all clubby, turning the Sunset Bar into a real experience. Its centerpiece is a round bar surrounded by low fireplug stools. The donut-hole of the bar is sunken so that bartenders are standing at eye level with their guests, and at night those little fireplug stools glow with an inner purple light. Decor and seating areas that flow out from the bar recall a Moroccan lounge, while the sky, the wake views, and the soft live guitar music provide all the atmosphere you could want. For my taste, it's the best bar on the ship.
Photo caption: Nighttime at the Sunset Bar, all the way aft on Deck 15 -- for my money, the most atmospheric bar on board.

Celebrity Cruises
Oh-So-Comfy
If you sail Celebrity Reflection, this is probably what your digs will look like, because nearly 1,200 of the ship's 1,523 accommodations are variations on the basic Deluxe Ocean View Cabin arrangement -- and that's a good thing. First introduced aboard Celebrity Solstice in 2008, these cabins are some of the most innovative in the cruise world, breaking the standard shoebox-shaped mold in ways big and small. To start with, they aren't even shoebox-shaped. Instead, one wall of each cabin bulges slightly, interlocking with the cabin next door in a sort of squared-off yin-yang format and giving you more maneuvering room around the foot of the bed. The cabin is also about 15% larger than cabins on earlier Celebrity ships, for even more space.The rooms' design is open, airy, ergonomic, and modern. Beds and cabinets have rounded corners (the better to not bump into) and beds are higher than normal to give more storage space underneath. Headboards that frame the beds are topped with a narrow, completely unobtrusive storage unit that's perfect for handbags, shopping bags, and other knickknacks. Some couches offer trundle beds for kids and other additional guests, while closet doors slide shut automatically -- which isn't so unusual on land, but is a hard thing to accomplish on a rocking ship. Cabin bathrooms and showers are substantially larger and roomier than aboard most other megaships, and showers are equipped with a foot rail that makes it easier for women to shave their legs. Outside, cabin balconies are large and deep, with plenty of room for two reclining deck chairs and a table.
AquaClass Staterooms, grouped together on Decks 11 and 12, take the basic balcony stateroom and spiff it up with added amenities, such as a pillow menu, Frette bathrobes and slippers, an expanded menu of personal care products, complimentary bottled water and a carafe of flavor-infused iced tea, an upgraded room service menu, special music/sound and aromatherapy options, and fantastic jetted bodywash showers from Hansgrohe, which shoot water from multiple heads. AquaClass guests also get special perks around the ship, including unlimited access to the spa's Persian Garden aromatherapy suite and relaxation room and guaranteed complimentary dining at the Blu specialty restaurant.
Photo caption: Balcony staterooms are comfortable, beautifully designed nests with lots of extras to make your stay special.

Celebrity Cruises
You'll Want a Robe
At the high, high, high end of Reflection's accommodation options is the Reflection Suite, a 1,636-square-foot palace that offers a large living room, two bedrooms, a 194-square-foot veranda with lounge seating, and a sea-view bathroom whose shower stall juts out beyond the walls of the ship. It's sheathed in one-way glass for privacy and can be made fully translucent with the press of a button, but can you completely escape the idea that you're flashing the sea? I doubt it.The Reflection Suite is the premier accommodation among a group of new Signature Suites located in a private cul-de-sac on Deck 14, accessible only to guests booked in those suites, via specially coded keycard. The suites are bookable individually, but those with the requisite scratch can opt to book the whole kit and caboodle as a six-suite residence for up to 26 family members and/or friends and/or campaign contributors.
Down on Deck 12, Reflection offers Celebrity's first AquaClass Suites, 32 of them in all. A 301-square-foot supersizing of the line's regular 194-square-foot AquaClass Staterooms, each comes with Hansgrohe shower panels, a selection of aromatherapy scents, a pillow menu, daily deliveries of bottled water and teas, priority dining in the Blu specialty restaurant, 24/7 butler service, and a 79-square-foot private balcony with lounge seating.
Photo caption: This incredible bathroom is a highlight of Reflection's 1636-square-foot Reflection Suite on Deck 14.

Matt Hannafin
A Sense of Play
