Lining Tile Up With Wall Lines
I am tiling a bathroom all 4 walls and floor using 300mm x 600mm tiles.
Lining tile up with wall lines. Actually the tile doesn t have to line up perfectly with the floor tile. There s a growing trend of running the floor tile up the walls of the bathroom to create a dramatic minimalist look. Dry setting your tiles is very important when your lines are parallel to your walls as any bad cuts or odd angles will be highlighted by this pattern. They should be offset by half.
As long as it is staggered it s fine. Alternatively have a helper hold the end of the chalk line on the mark. For me if you see an offset of 10mm from floor to wall the tiler hasnt thought about the job to well before starting. It is tiled walls and ceiling with 12 tiles the same as the floor in the rest of the room and 2 tiles on the floor and bench seat.
The grout lines inside the shower are offset from the exterior floor by 2. Snap the first chalk line drive a small nail at the center mark at one end of the room then slip the hook of the chalk line onto the nail. My tiles don t line up properly a good professional tile laying project will ensure that all the joints are even and the edges of each tile are nice and level. The tile supplier has glibly advised me to use 3mm spacers for both walls and floor.
Any accent tile on that wall. Floor tiles are generally larger so those who want large tiles on their walls will likely choose a floor tile. Wall grout lines are 3 16 and the floor is 1 8. Extend the chalk line to the center mark at the opposite end of the room.
You may need to actually adjust your tile so it isn t centered on either spot but on a visually pleasing combination. If your layout results in a full tile on one end of the room and a thin cut tile on the other try offsetting the design by half a tile so you have slightly over half a tile on both ends of the room. Back in the day when most tiles had cushion edges matching the grout lines between floor and wall tiles was a must. In other words each full tile will be 600mm wide where it meets the floor.
All tilers know this and should allow for it when they lay them. This way you dont see the differences. I wouldn t have tried to line up the grout lines from the floor with the wall grout lines but i would have made the stagger a little bit bigger between the two. This was due to the shadowing between each tile a cushion edge tile crates the grout joint in turn would be wider which would make each tile more pronounced.
But as we know technology has evolved in the way tile products are made and not just with computers and smart phones. The shower is essentially a 5 deep x 4 wide closet with standard doorway framing. Just remember to account for the grout lines and any out of square corners when you think about spacing and layout. The tiles will be laid widthways on the wall.
Floor tiles come in more colors shapes sizes and textures than wall only tiles. If they are slightly different in size they shouldnt try and line the joints up from floor to wall.