Coloring kitchen floor tile grout?
kellia
13 years ago
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Avanti Tile & Stone / Stonetech
13 years agolast modified: 9 years agoRelated Discussions
Tile grout color: subway tile with hex floor grout matching
Comments (6)Should the grout be the same color? Not necessarily. Will it look weird to use a darker gray on the floor and a lighter gray in the shower? Not at all. Any recommended colors for the shower and floor tiles along these lines? I've been getting stuff at Lowe's and they carry MAPEI Warm gray for the subway tile, and silver for the hex, if you lke a darker grey for the hex. Silver is actually a medium grey, but it'll appear alot darker with the white tile. Our bathroom isn't perfectly square. I think a colored grout seam that is uneven will be really obvious(that's my understanding where you would do any flubbing). Can you grout just the seam white? Can you skip grout and caulk it? Any suggestions here? Grout everything on the floor the same color. it'll actually show up more if you try doing what you suggested. It'll literally draw attention to it. What you want to dpo is make sure that you're square to the most obvious walls from the door. Especially with the hex, it won't be quite as obvious as you think, unless it's WAY out, and then nothing you can do will hide it, even using a blending color grout. One other thing-- that joint where the floor hits the walls should be caulked, but still caulk it with a caulking that matches the grout, both color AND texture. Does anyone know what the measure is for hex tile and subway? For subway, use unsanded, and for the hex, use sanded....See MoreGrout problems with new tile floor (X-post with Kitchens forum)
Comments (4)Most likely it's what the other posters mentioned: Floor movement. It can either be because the floor structure itself (joists/subfloor/underlayment) is not structurally sufficient for the tile you selected, or... It can be that the way the tile backer board and the tile itself was installed is unsound. The #1 reason that I see failed grout is movement within the floor. It's typically because the backer board used as an intermediary between the subfloor/underlayment and the tile was improperly installed. The common thread that I've seen in improper backer board installation is the installer simply sets the cement backer board down on the subfloor/underlayment and then fastens it with screws/nails, then tiles. Instead, thinset should be troweled on the subfloor/underlayment, the backer board should be bedded in the thinset, and then it should be fastened in place with nails or screws. The thinset isn't for bonding. The fasteners do that. The thinset fills any micro-voids between the subfloor/underlayment and the backer board. Without the thinset, there can be minor vertical movement within the installation. Rigid tiles and rigid grout tend to not do well when installed on a surface that can flex. Bedding the backer board in thinset is a part of the installation instructions for most tile backer boards. The second part, using the old grout? Portland cement-based grouts cures via hydration. They consume water and a chemical reaction occurs. Grouts in unopened packages have a typical shelf life of about six months or so. Some longer. Once the package is opened, over time and with exposure to air, the grout in the opened package can react with moisture in the atmosphere. In the opened package it may still look okay. Or it may be slightly clumped, the clumps may be easily broken up. But by having already reacted with some atmospheric moisture, the strength of the old grout can be some or significantly less that the strength of new grout. The lessened bond strength can result in the old grout cracking in the joint, or simply powdering away over time. Cracked grout can also be from too much water used when mixing it, and/or when cleaning the grout from the tile faces. The excess water reduces the strength of the grout. The cracked tile could be from one of a few things, but usually it's from floor movement with a well-bonded tile. Instead of the thinset failing and the tile itself popping loose, the tile itself fails....See MorePlease help me pick grout color for gray tile floor
Comments (1)Pretty PLEASE... Advice on grout color really needed!!! I'm looking for a gray color grout to go with Clay Grafito porcelain tile from The Tile Shop. I like the look of this tile & grout:...See Moregrout color for new kent gray tile for kitchen
Comments (1)Can you post the tile? IMO grey wood tile will not be a timeless design choice. It's already fading in popularity and it doesn't really read rustic to me. Rustic is all about real natural materials, so a natural stained wood. If you have real wood floors anywhere else in your home as well the faux grey wood tiles will clash horribly. I know it may be too late but if it's not grouted yet there's still time to change. But post the tile and grout options so we can pick the best one....See Morebrickton
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