Does quality of ceramic tile on bathroom wall matter?
Sophie
9 months ago
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Dragonfly Tile & Stone Works, Inc.
9 months agoRelated Discussions
Bathroom Reveal, Thanks to the Bathroom and Remodel Forums! (pic
Comments (56)This old thread got revisited. @dani_m08 to answer the question about extra probe, I believe I ordered an extra one when I bought the set up. The probe wire is just setting in the junction box I think but honestly I cant remember. When I laid out the underfloor heating and the probe, I just ran another probe near the first probe, and it was then sealed into the floor self leveling compound as per instructions. then the end was just threaded into the wall like the one that would be live, and not connected, but just laying there in the box. Regarding the tile layout. I just decided to run it this way, after getting instructions on the 90Degree way, IIRC. The herringbone that I love is from my childhood and the side walks in my neighborhood that all ran at 45Degree. so that to me is herringbone. I know you posted on @sochi thread about her amazing bathroom and a wall mounted faucet. I would totally do it if I had the right sink for it. In my case I had made my sink out of soapstone and an integrated backsplash. The pictures of this bathroom reveal are no longer available because of the use of photo bucket, when it was Gardenweb. I did not keep my account with photo bucket. I'll add some of the reveal pictures so you can see the sink and floor. Regarding the sink there is no ledge for water to drip from my hands when using the faucet. The water drips right into the sink. In my other bathroom with a deck mounted faucet I am always wiping up drips and it is a nuisance. I much prefer the setup for this sink. Below: I love the flush finish from the faucet to the bottom of the sink. nothing drips on a counter or edge of a sink. Below: looking in from the doorway. Below: Here I am finishing up the sink. the backsplash was epoxied on as a separate piece. The whole soapstone install in the room took next to nothing to buy as they were all small pieces that I epoxied together with a 3 part stone epoxy. Below: this is the counter at the tub, and is in 2 long pieces but I was able to epoxy them together at there edges to make a wide slab for the top. All the soapstone was finished with a 60 grit sandpaper to be rough and this lovely soft tone of blue/green/gray/white. I did not oil it so this color tone would remain light. Below: If I recall correctly @sochi helped me decide on this Hubberton Forge Mirror. I have 3 different metals in this room, but they are all a cool silver to black color. Below: the center of this tower shares space with the kitchen on the other side of the wall. there is also some extra space that houses some electrical wiring. this is an old simple house. this bathroom was an add on when it got move to the farm in the 30s IIRC. The plumbing was all rearrange and some of the details that were orignially there I kept but updated it, such as this tower feature. The old one went and the carpenter did a wonderful job with this one. Below: This feature was another thing I kept from the old bathroom but flipped it from the other end and had the carpenter put drawers in it. Before it was a hell hole. things got lost and the build was soooo old and creapy I didn't like using it for storage. Now it is perfect for storage....See MorePainting Ceramic Tile in a Bathroom
Comments (10)I just read the other answers you recieved and will respond with one word, ouch! Quick and easy with great results (and I've responded to many questions with the same answer). Clean the walls to remove any contaminents. Mask off the areas you don't want to paint. Go to Home Depot and buy Gripper primer (there should even be a display with a piece of painted ceramic somewhere around it). Paint the walls with the Gripper primer. You could paint the tile and grout if you want but some folks prefer to leave the grout(usually because you could just see all the extra work to not paint the grout). After the Gripper dries, topcoat with a good quality interior paint, like Faron said at least a satin or higher sheen. That's it, crazy, isn't it?!? Gripper is a patented product that no one else manufacturers. This stuff will blow your mind, it's all in the resins that makes it adhere to virtually any ("unpaintable") surface. Have fun, good luck, let me know how it turns out!!!!...See MoreCeramic Subway Tiles? Only for Bathrooms?
Comments (19)Does he have the tile he is pushing "in stock" as opposed to ordering it? I ask this because we were recently shopping for ceramic subways for our shower and the tile salesman told us that "no one was doing that anymore". He steered us to a stone tile which was much more expensive and required more maintenance. (And as luck would have it, it was IN STOCK!) My husband got major a case of "second guessing" and was worried the bathroom would look dated if we went with subway ceramic. I had him look at some of the bathrooms on gw and some magazines to show him that many of the bathroom renos were indeed done in ceramic :) We ended up putting the project on hold, but when we are ready, we will get what we want. Having said all of that, it may be that the travertine, which is gorgeous by the way, may be a better fit for your backsplash. Post a picture and the many helpful gardenwebbers here will give you some great advice :)...See MoreBathroom tile quality question
Comments (2)The PEI rating of the cheaper tile is 2. My gc told me to stick with bathroom tile that is a 4 or 5. Now if this was a guest bathroom not overly used I might be ok with it. But for heavy use I’d stick with what my gc recommends....See MoreSophie
9 months agopalimpsest
9 months agoherbflavor
9 months agolast modified: 9 months agoDeWayne
9 months ago
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