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Discuss Mitre External Corners in Porcelain Tiles in the Canada Tile Advice area at TilersForums.com.

Dan

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Half height. I'd consider a trim maybe. Naked bodies and mitres aren't wise when somebody is awesome at them. Let alone first-time-mitres.

You got any spare tiles to practice on maybe, if the mitres are a sure thing and have to be done, at least give them a really good bash on some off-cuts first. Get the hang of it?

I've never done them. And I don't think I'd like to. Kinda for the same concerns you guys have. I'd hate think I've jabbed somebody with my sharp mitre.
 
O

Old Mod

I'd hate think I've jabbed somebody with my sharp mitre.
They don’t need to be sharp mate, depends how they’re finished.
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Small bathroom. There are a 4 external wall corners, tiles will be half-height except in the shower enclosure

Have a look at the Schluter website, they have Finec mitre trim.
You still need to mitre the tiles but the quality of mitre required is much more forgiving.
They leave a small rounded edge on the corner and come in about a dozen colours and to suit tiles 3.5-12mm thick.
A great way to get in to mitred corners.
 

Dan

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They don’t need to be sharp mate, depends how they’re finished.
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Have a look at the Schluter website, they have Finec mitre trim.
You still need to mitre the tiles but the quality of mitre required is much more forgiving.
They leave a small rounded edge on the corner and come in about a dozen colours and to suit tiles 3.5-12mm thick.
A great way to get in to mitred corners.
I know mate I just meant if they're the first I attempted, I would be worried that they might end up being. The same as somebody else said further up the thread.

One done right obviously wouldn't be sharp. :)
 
C

cornsack

Wow. Have got the mitringitself down but filling a mitred corner really is a dark art, can't get the full answer anywhere. Have asked myself before and seen many other posts where the question is half-answered. I have many great time-served plastering (and other trade) secrets I could exchange. Hell I would pay someone for solid answer at this point.

- Are so-called 'flexible' grouts really not flexible/strong enough to use in an ordinary bathroom scenario? I would imagine they could be rubbed down to a perfect shape once dry.

-Are there not any easy to purchase coloured-resins one would use as standard?
 
J

J Sid

You can use grout, but you really have to wait till its just about gone hard before cleaning and shaping it. Depending on the grout and til, e it may need to be left an hour or more
 

Dan

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It's not that it's a secret.

It's a skill each tiler will have learned and can't really be explained. Each of their own jobs would be tackled slightly different due to tile changes and temperatures of rooms (affecting grout mixes etc).

You're attempting one area of tiling that even most tilers will avoid like the plague.

It really is an art.

And no amount of bribing with info will get you clear answers lol bless

These lads on here share their skills every day they're not afraid to. But it's just one of those masterclass type skills they have learned over years. It can't be explained in a thread.

I think anyway.
 
C

cornsack

You can use grout, but you really have to wait till its just about gone hard before cleaning and shaping it. Depending on the grout and til, e it may need to be left an hour or more

Thanks Julian! Bit like manually formed render/plaster corners then which I have experience with. All about timing.

If there's a fair amount to do, do you think it could be more time-efficient to slightly overfill the joins, let set overnight and then rub back with diamond pads the next day? Or is not easy to bring them back after they've gone
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It's not that it's a secret.

It's a skill each tiler will have learned and can't really be explained. Each of their own jobs would be tackled slightly different due to tile changes and temperatures of rooms (affecting grout mixes etc).

You're attempting one area of tiling that even most tilers will avoid like the plague.

It really is an art.

And no amount of bribing with info will get you clear answers lol bless

These lads on here share their skills every day they're not afraid to. But it's just one of those masterclass type skills they have learned over years. It can't be explained in a thread.

I think anyway.


It's not the technique I was after, just a couple of product recommendations, that was all!
 

Dan

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Thanks Julian! Bit like manually formed render/plaster corners then which I have experience with. All about timing.

If there's a fair amount to do, do you think it could be more time-efficient to slightly overfill the joins, let set overnight and then rub back with diamond pads the next day? Or is not easy to bring them back after they've gone
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It's not the technique I was after, just a couple of product recommendations, that was all!
Fair enough. :)

It's just grout. Whatever grout you are using. But it needs to be stiffer. And that doesn't mean mix less water (grout cures with chemical reaction and needs wafer to become stiffer) if means wait a bit until it is curing kinda thing.

It's not something I would attempt at all.

Pics will win you a forum hat on this one I think. :)
 
O

Old Mod

One done right obviously wouldn't be sharp. :)

It’s actually country dependent, most of Europe and the states prefer an ‘arris, but not the uk, oh no, they want a bloody round.
I’ll start with a round, if it goes Pete Tong, they get an ‘arris! 🤣🤣
 

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