I've got a few questions on setting tile around a bathroom. Just want to make sure I'm thinking about things right.
I'm using 4x12x5/16 subway tile. Manufacturer recommends 1/16" grout line.
My plan is to run a ledger board around the room to keep my tiles level. I also have a laser to keep the line as I work. My ledger board is MDF casing with some duct tape or blue tape wrapped around the top edge. That should prevent thinset from grabbing onto it. @ $4 / 7feet it was the straightest thing i could find. Picked up enough for the entire perimeter.
Top of ledger board is set at finished floor +silicone + 1 row of tile + 1 grout line.
Wall Startpoint:
If I start around the lip of the bathtub and then work my way to the floor (finished floor calculated), I'm left with a 7/16" tall piece of tile as my bottom row tile. Pretty ugly.
If I start from the ledger board, then to keep my level line, I need to cut 7/16" off the row of tiles around the tub. This sounds like a better plan.
I found the low point on the floor. I think that's where I should set my ledger board to. Is that correct???
Finish a wall or a row at a time
Should I aim to complete a wall at a time? Or work my way around the room. If I work around the room, I think I have a better shot at keeping the level line around the room.
Outside corner problem
I'm using schluter profiles to cap my top rows of tile. I'm also going to use a profile for the outside corner pictured. The shower wall's tile is going to 96" high but the other walls tile is only going to 44". How do I handle that outside corner. An outside corner's profile is designed to accept tiles from 2 directions at 90* degrees to one another. For this corner, this will work up to 44" and beyond that the outside corner doesn't work.
I was thinking maybe use 2 vertical profiles on that corner. One running to 96". The other to 44".
Is there an elegant solution?
1/16" grout line
Is this really possible? The tiles actually have built in nubs to create the grout line. 1/16" seems like no room for error.
I'm using 4x12x5/16 subway tile. Manufacturer recommends 1/16" grout line.
My plan is to run a ledger board around the room to keep my tiles level. I also have a laser to keep the line as I work. My ledger board is MDF casing with some duct tape or blue tape wrapped around the top edge. That should prevent thinset from grabbing onto it. @ $4 / 7feet it was the straightest thing i could find. Picked up enough for the entire perimeter.
Top of ledger board is set at finished floor +silicone + 1 row of tile + 1 grout line.
Wall Startpoint:
If I start around the lip of the bathtub and then work my way to the floor (finished floor calculated), I'm left with a 7/16" tall piece of tile as my bottom row tile. Pretty ugly.
If I start from the ledger board, then to keep my level line, I need to cut 7/16" off the row of tiles around the tub. This sounds like a better plan.
I found the low point on the floor. I think that's where I should set my ledger board to. Is that correct???
Finish a wall or a row at a time
Should I aim to complete a wall at a time? Or work my way around the room. If I work around the room, I think I have a better shot at keeping the level line around the room.
Outside corner problem
I'm using schluter profiles to cap my top rows of tile. I'm also going to use a profile for the outside corner pictured. The shower wall's tile is going to 96" high but the other walls tile is only going to 44". How do I handle that outside corner. An outside corner's profile is designed to accept tiles from 2 directions at 90* degrees to one another. For this corner, this will work up to 44" and beyond that the outside corner doesn't work.
I was thinking maybe use 2 vertical profiles on that corner. One running to 96". The other to 44".
Is there an elegant solution?
1/16" grout line
Is this really possible? The tiles actually have built in nubs to create the grout line. 1/16" seems like no room for error.
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