Discuss Is this tiling as bad as I think? in the Canada Tile Advice area at TilersForums.com.

Hi All
I'm looking for some advice from the experts and hope you can help. I've just had a shower room built as part of an extension project. It hasn't been cheap, I haven't cut costs and the building firm - a small local company with a good reputation - have been good so far (building works rather than finishing). Tiling in the shower enclosure has just finished and while I'm no professional tiler, I've done a lot of DIY and am sure I could do a better job than they have. Hopefully the photos show up what I think are some obvious defects:
-poor cuts and chipped edges
-poor grouting
-uneven spacing
-poor mitring of the trim
You probably can't see the lippage on quite a few tiles. They're planning on using mastic on the corner which I think won't look good owing to the size of bead required to cover that grout and the chipped edges. The tiles are Cabana, by Claybrook, and weren't cheap. The tech spec is here https://www.claybrookstudio.co.uk/media/wysiwyg/pdf/Cabana_Technical_Sheet.pdf
I'm meeting with the builder in the week and have expressed my dissatisfaction but he's told me some tiles were longer than others so the alignment strays the further you go. Even if some tiles in the batch were longer, I'd expect these to be used for the cuts and longer tiles don't account for some of the layout errors. At the least, if they'd warned me in advance about differences in length (which I'm not sure is true as the product sheet looks to state very small tolerances in this respect), I could've made an informed decision on whether to progress. Please tell me if I'm being fussy as the only solution I can see is for the whole lot to be taken out, new tiles ordered, a proper tiler brought in to do the job and everything made good. Needless to say the builder isn't keen as it will all come out of his pocket. Any thoughts or advice much appreciated.
 

Attachments

  • IMG-20191124-WA0000.jpg
    51.7 KB · Views: 128
  • IMG-20191124-WA0001.jpg
    49 KB · Views: 124
  • IMG-20191124-WA0002.jpg
    51.9 KB · Views: 126
  • IMG-20191124-WA0003.jpg
    45.8 KB · Views: 118
  • IMG-20191124-WA0004.jpg
    39.8 KB · Views: 115
  • IMG-20191124-WA0005.jpg
    57.7 KB · Views: 119
  • IMG-20191124-WA0006.jpg
    58.8 KB · Views: 113
  • IMG-20191124-WA0007.jpg
    47.6 KB · Views: 126
  • IMG-20191124-WA0008.jpg
    64.9 KB · Views: 113
  • IMG-20191124-WA0009.jpg
    50 KB · Views: 116
  • IMG-20191124-WA0010.jpg
    74.1 KB · Views: 113
  • IMG-20191124-WA0011.jpg
    69.1 KB · Views: 119
Last edited:

Dan

Admin
Staff member
5,090
1,323
Staffordshire, UK
The tiling looks a bit rough. The grouting does too. And so does the cutting.

The grout needed a bit more attention at washing off stage.
The cutting needed to be slower on a wet cutter with a better blade maybe.
The tiling needed a better setting out option maybe. Not sure on that one.
 
B

Bill

It isn't good at all especially the cutting and grouting.

Re the tiles being different sizes...this is a common fault with batch numbers (tiles made on different days etc) and it can indeed make the job look awful for the type of layout you have chosen - even .5mm difference will show on a project like this.

Villeroy & Bosch used to sell tiles like this in the late 70's early eighties and were bang on for size but you had to take care when tiling as most jobs were set out like yours is and the vertical plane has to be spot on. This type of tiling can't be rushed.

I hope your builder will agree with us that it is poorly done.
 
Thanks for the responses guys.
Yes, I suspect there was little or no planning to avoid the issues obvious in the photos. I may go with different tiles if we agree the remove them (not sure I see another option) and the general opinion is differences in length makes it impossible to get decent vertical and horizontal lines.
 

Dan

Admin
Staff member
5,090
1,323
Staffordshire, UK
It's not.

Internal corners always Silicon. And not to fill the joint, just to seal the two surfaces and allow an expansion gap.

To be fair some do just grout it. But it'll crack eventually and it isn't meant to be like that.

A qualified tiler will always Silicon. Somebody who's winging it won't.
 

Reply to Is this tiling as bad as I think? in the Canada Tile Advice area at TilersForums.com

Subscribe to Tilers Forums

There are similar tiling threads here

    • Like
First time poster here. For some context, I have a (mostly finished) tiny home with some really...
Replies
6
Views
794
Hi, Looking for advice mainly on how much adhesive I should remove from between the tiles in a...
Replies
1
Views
1K
There's a video on youtube of a guy templating for large format floor tiles, and I get the...
Replies
0
Views
146
    • Like
Hi, 1200 wide tray and tiling shower enclosure recess with metro tiles where the 1200 wide...
Replies
10
Views
830
Hello, after watching so many instructional videos and planing, I just can't understand how to...
Replies
4
Views
1K

Advertisement

Thread starter

Joined
Location
London
What member type are you?
  1. Homeowner
Business Name
None

Thread Information

Title
Is this tiling as bad as I think?
Prefix
N/A
Forum
Canada Tile Advice
Start date
Last reply date
Replies
13

Which tile adhesive brand did you use most this year?

  • Palace

    Votes: 5 4.0%
  • Kerakoll

    Votes: 11 8.7%
  • Ardex

    Votes: 8 6.3%
  • Mapei

    Votes: 36 28.6%
  • Ultra Tile

    Votes: 16 12.7%
  • BAL

    Votes: 31 24.6%
  • Wedi

    Votes: 3 2.4%
  • Benfer

    Votes: 2 1.6%
  • Tilemaster

    Votes: 19 15.1%
  • Weber

    Votes: 18 14.3%
  • Other (any other brand not listed)

    Votes: 14 11.1%
  • Nicobond

    Votes: 6 4.8%
  • Norcros

    Votes: 3 2.4%
  • Kelmore

    Votes: 2 1.6%
Top