Does this shower look right to you?
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Does this shower pan mortar look right to you (URGENT)?
Comments (9)It looks like the slope was there, but I'm having them redo it anyway. I also want them to replace the liner since people have been walking on it with all those pebbles underneath. More than likely the liner is fine but it's something that I just don't want to mess with. Someone else is doing the tile. I've (very nicely) let the General Contractor know that my neuroses will show when it's time for the tile. It needs to be perfectly straight, perfectly level, etc. I've been very relaxed during the whole process thus far, so I think I've scared him a bit. Hopefully he'll be supervising the tile guy like a hawk. We're installing about 100sf of 4" x 12" glass tile, so errors will be super pricey....See MoreDo these Shower door hinges look right ????
Comments (19)The glass is usually the last thing installed in a shower. Have you have tried it out and discovered where the water splatters off your bod? I totally understand not wanting to rebuild a wall. Our (wall) is slightly out of plumb also, but not really noticeable. Water doesn't splash there so we let it go. Before you worry about it, see if you have a problem that you cannot live with. If it drives you nuts, get it redone now. We had our entire tiled shower floor removed because the drain wasn't installed correctly (and it looked like crap too). These things should be expected to be built and installed to "industry standards". We only messed with this for a couple months, however, back when we did our kitchen well over 3 months I reached a point where I just wanted my house back, no matter what. -Babka...See MoreTile crisis! Does this look right to you??
Comments (35)thanks for the input - very helpful in making our decision. Ultimately, we decided to keep it. Actually, when we returned the materials to the tile shop, we were informed that the materials we previously thought was Carrara was not Carrara - it was just a batch of Calacatta marble with quite a bit of gray in it. The rep told us that honing the marble (we bought honed marble for the floors) takes a lot of the gold out of it. So we opted for the polished floors with much less gray. The paint is going to be a light gray, so the niche tiles will pick up the paint and play off of them. I chose the different shaped tiles (mini bricks, subway and hexagonals) to give it some design interest - this was all modeled after a spa in Santa Barbara with the same layering of different shaped marble. Perhaps from the close up photo it does look a bit "busy", but everything else in the room is very simple (ie, white Caesarstone counters) so the tile doesn't read that "busy" in context. Gotta put the kids to bed so i can't respond individually, but thanks to all for the input and advice! cheers, Pip...See MoreDoes this threshold look right to you?
Comments (27)Here is a look at two different bathrooms with the same Schluter Transition. The first photo is the room I'm working on. The tile was installed first with the Schluter profile. I asked the flooring guys to keep a 1/16" - 1/8" away from the profile and left out some shims for them. Prior to them showing up I floated out the floors a little so the floor would not need to be shimmed to the tile edging. Same home different crew. The Marble tile was kept a ways off the schluter profile and grouted. No prep for the floor guys. They used wood shims to bend the hardwood when it was glued down. The millwork guys did a crap job and left a huge gap between the baseboards and the flooring. The tile was in first. Then the wood. Then the baseboard. Not very pretty. Down town at my other job I just installed eight large tiles to the bathroom floor and used a tile edging from Butech for the transition between the new Russian Oak flooring and the Italian Porcelain tile. Butech is a Spanish company owned by Porcelansona. The profile is wider and not made from aluminium but rather chrome plated brass. The tile to wood seam looks best when the change is under the door. Look below in this photo and you see how I undercut the door jamb so both wood and tile could fit under it. This makes it look like the door was set after the tile was done not the other way round. The blue thing is a 1/16" spacer. The Butech profile was first set with some Ardex X32. Just a couple pieces I snapped off from a horse shaped original shim. The profile is 1/2" tall so I will have only 1/8" of thin set under the tile right at this point. I then cut and shaped the tile to keep a tight grout joint at the profile. The gap between the tile edging and wood will see a wood wax later. Need to make a shopping run to Mohawk Finishing here in Vancouver first. The Butech profile's Chrome each and wider profile give it some sparkle. The chrome really picks up the light. Greater care is needed with these profiles since they are chrome plated brass. Schluter makes a nice stainless version but the edges are not fully square. The most durable edge would have to be some custom made flat bar stainless steel but for $85.00 I really like the added sparkle of the Butech edge....See MoreRelated Professionals
Ojus Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · East Tulare County Kitchen & Bathroom Remodelers · Dearborn Kitchen & Bathroom Remodelers · Las Vegas Kitchen & Bathroom Remodelers · Ponte Vedra Glass & Shower Door Dealers · Citrus Heights Cabinets & Cabinetry · Lindenhurst Cabinets & Cabinetry · Seattle Window Treatments · Camarillo Kitchen & Bathroom Remodelers · Lebanon Home Remodeling · Redmond Kitchen & Bathroom Designers · Florida City General Contractors · Franklin General Contractors · Pasadena General Contractors · Stoughton General Contractors- last month
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