February 16, 1991 | By Alan J. Heavens, Knight-Ridder Newspapers. PHILADELPHIA — If you think restoring a Victorian-era bathroom is a snap, talk with Matt Schultz. He spent every weekend and weeknight for four or five months working on his. The bathroom was finally finished a week before his wedding, thanks, in part, to a suggestion by his wife, Judie, that she would not move into their circa- 1894 Queen Anne house in suburban Lansdowne, Pa., unless it was. For Schultz, the restoration, completed in May, 1989, was time-consuming but doable. Before 1980, however, a similar project would have been almost impossible. Clawfoot tubs were being junked. Most modern faucets would not fit a 1910 porcelain sink. That has changed, said Robert Morris Skaler , a Cheltenham, Pa., architect and planner. ``They are rebuilding bathrooms to make them look like they once were,`` he said. ``As more and more people bought old houses, manufacturers found that there was a market in making reproduction fixtu...