Welcome to Tilers Forums Tiling Forum


The UK's Biggest Tiling Forum for DIY and Professional Tilers; find


  •  » Tile Advice for Bathroom Tiles, Kitchen Tiles, Wall Tiles, Floor Tiles
  •  » Customers can Find a Tiler, or Wall and Floor Tilers can Find Customers
  •  » Tiling Tools, Tile Adhesive, Tile Grout and other Tile Products
  •  » Advice and Discussion related to Tiling Courses and Tiling NVQ's
  •  » Professional Tilers can find Business Advice, Discounts, Trade Accounts

DIY and Professional Wall and Floor Tilers are Welcome


Advice from by Tilers, Manufacturers, Distributors and Tile Suppliers


REGISTER HERE FOR FREE


p.s.: Registered members will not see this ad

Results 1 to 2 of 2
Discuss full tiles then cuts? in the Tiling Forum at TilersForums; I'm nearly finished tiling my kitchen floor, i started from the back wall and tiled towards the exit doing one row at a time. But i was thinking would it ...
          
  1. #1
    TilersForums Contributor jonty's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Posts
    50
    Thanks
    0
    Thanked 0 Times in 0
    Posts

    Default full tiles then cuts?

    I'm nearly finished tiling my kitchen floor, i started from the back wall and tiled towards the exit doing one row at a time.
    But i was thinking would it have been better to lay my first row of cuts against the back wall and then just lay all the full tiles back to the exit and done all the other cuts the following day?

    Also i will soon have to tile under a fridge- what is the best method? do i leave it until the end after i have all the other tiles down? thanks

  2. #2
    doug boardley
    Guest doug boardley's Avatar

    Default Re: full tiles then cuts?

    I've a feeling I've already posted a reply to a similar question from you Jonty, but anyway, what I normally do is put a lathe across the door rebate so it's half the thickness of the rebate, butt a tile up against this then run a couple of rows up the length of the room till i get to the back wall, then i lay a couple of courses 90 degrees to this length, so if you're looking through the door you see a T of tiles, while I can still reach i then cut all the tiles along the back wall, then start laying all the tiles out, including cuts down the side walls towards the exit door. When I'm happy that the layout looks ok that's when I mix my adhesive, and starting at the back wall lift a couple of courses,keeping them in order, spread adhesive to tiles that have not yet been lifted and start laying.The unlifted tiles act as a guide for your joints. I then repeat this process all the way to the door. I prefer to do it this way rather than having a day laying full tiles and the next day doing nothing but cuts! I would also move fridge,washing machine etc out before I started anything and then you can tile it all in one fell swoop
    doug

Similar Threads

  1. Still having a problem with granite tiles
    By shirleyali1 in forum Tiling Forum
    Replies: 23
    Last Post: 05-09-2008, 04:08 PM
  2. Squaring up a room for matching wall and floor tiles
    By discoduster in forum Tiling Forum
    Replies: 8
    Last Post: 22-04-2008, 06:17 PM
  3. History of Spanish Tiles
    By Dan in forum Tiling Forum
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 13-03-2007, 02:31 PM

Visitors found this page by searching for:

Nobody landed on this page from a search engine, yet!

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Tilers Forums is the UK's largest wall and floor tiling forum. Advice is provided free of charge to all users. Tilers Forums does not take responsibility for any loss or damage caused due to following advice found on this forum. All wall and floor tiling should be carried out by a qualified wall and floor tiler. Views expressed on this forum are of the users and not Tilers Forums. Views expressed on this tiling forum are of the contributor only and not the forum as a whole. Not all views should be taken as fact but simply the opinion of the person posting. Readers are reminded to seek professional advice before undertaking any wall and floor tiling project.

Tilers Forums is a Trading Style of Untold Developments Ltd. Search Engine Optimisation, Web Development and Online Marketing for the UK.
DMCA.com
[Output: 54.43 Kb. compressed to 50.49 Kb. by saving 3.94 Kb. (7.24%)]

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28