When you broke the second tile by the window and had to do it a third time…had to just laugh with you cuz I know how that feels. Glad you show the bloopers 😂 this is real life
I'm glad to see not only I make these mistakes,,,you made me smile many times,,good to see you're human,,apreciate all your transparency and awesome tips...you're a GREAT person...
You are seriously amazing. I have a man crush on your style and work. I totally admire your approach to everything I have watched you do. Thanks so much for sharing this wonderful information for newbs such as myself.
Oh man oh man... @44:14 reminded of when i was tiling my kitchen. First time working with tile. I had the tiles laid out, made all my cuts things were going great until i realized i cut several tiles (albeit perfectly and clean) incorreclty like you did. Had to take a break for the rest of the day i was so darn fustrated😅. Glad i did it. I appreciate the work thay goes into being of that trade. And will now hire someone to tile should i ever need to again😂
Appreciate seeing the mistakes. We all make them, and for many of us, they are a great learning experiences. Concerning the tile layout, I think the focus on the lateral drain was genius! Nice job! Thanks for your perspective!
Loved the tile around the drain, this is bathroom nr ...??? i see you make and tile. And still learned something again. I'm ready for mine!! Thank you Sir!
Well done Jeff ! I'm considering redoing my master bathroom with a custom shower. If it weren't for your videos, I would feel this was way above my skill level for sure. You make it look easy enough if you think about the job in advance.
You're doing it perfect as I'm about to be against the exact same circumstances window and all, except my shower was a tub so the plumbing I need to research more.
Now I see, I've got to find the beginning of this series, you've already got me lined up and I couldn't thank you enough but I'm gonna figure out how, I'm technically challenged but not plum dumb, I'll figure it out. $
I did a border around my redi tile opening as I used natural rocks that I guess they would refer to as pebbles so I laid it around the hole first and then laid the rocks as best I could get them to fit as I didn't want to cut them and as amazing as it sounds, I was able to put all of the pieces in a way that fit perfectly well without cutting the rocks. I loved how it came out. I did have planned out to use the Schluter pieces but I didn't like how they looked compared to the black flat pencil style border.
Gracias Jeff, muy ilustrativos tus videos, excelente enseñanza nos compartes y toma más valor al no omitir los errores; soy carpintero y sé de ellos. Todos somos Clientes y Proveedores, y creo que nadie exigimos un trabajo perfecto, pero si un buen trabajo. Saludos de Sonora, México.
1/3rd bond (or brick pattern) is actually recommended for 12x24" tile because the surface of large format tile is warped to the point where the edges (ends) are thinner than the center of the tile. So if you do half bond you get the thinnest part of the tile meeting in the middle of the tile, which is the thickest part of the tile, and you get about 1/16th to a shy 1/8" lippage problem. Yes with clips you can actually bend tile, but it makes your job a hell of a lot harder.
Another way to clean out the excess grout is with a multi-tool and a grout blade. Be careful as it can jump out and scratch the tile. Finesse it, don't force it. I have done this when I had to regrout the whole shower as it wasn 't done properly, missing grout was filled with silicone (not by me).
Hello Sir, What is your opinion of using liquid nails to installa shower tile ? the thinkset does add thickness to the walls.. where was liquid nail is thiner and less than 1/8... and its also comming in water proof varierty....
This one isn't as bad as most of this guy's videos, but a few points: 1. If you've framed your walls even close to plumb, you can pre-cut all of your back wall tile up to the window; you've got ~1/4" of leeway on each side since the tile on the adjacent wall covers the gap. 2. Always cut the edges of the mosaic so the cut edges of the sheets are (close to) against the wall. Note here that he dry fit the tile and marked the cuts around the drain, then had to stick 20+ little cut pieces against the shower valve wall. Not only is this a pain, it increases the chance of those tiles not being set at the correct height or pitch and water ebnds up collecting against the wall. You're better off pulling the grate out, laying sheets on the floor, laying the grate over them upside down several rows of tile back from the edge of the sheet. That way you can cut the sheet for the wall. 3.Smaller issue: it's easier to grout the floor tile before you put in the bottom course of wall tile. 4. Bigger issue: when you're cutting tile with a grinder, put on a N95 dust mask!!! Not only does most ceramic tile have carcinogens in it, if you work in the trades with regular exposure to silica dust, silicosis should be a real concern.
Can we use the Kerdi fix as a finishing caulk sealant between tile panels? I have older gray grout that's cracking and need to seal up some gaps between tile
Hi Jeff! Great info you have been sharing. I’ve been watching a lot of your drywall repair videos and I’d like to know if there is a way to use the pieces of drywall that were removed from the wall. Two pieces were cut out by the plumber to do an outdoor faucet replacement (the wall stud is somewhat in the middle). Oh and the wall is textured. BTW if there is already a video doing this type of repair my apologies but I must have missed it. Thanks for your reply if you can provide some guidance.
overall good video. i never use the plastic trim, whenever I've tried to cut it on my mitre saw it explodes, even with using a new blade and my custom made trim jig. Another point he makes about how score cutters don't work well on porcelain is false. That crappy QEP one probably doesn't stand a chance. I've got a few sigma cutters (montolit and rubi also make nice cutters), one of which is huge that I've cut 5 foot long porcelain tile on. Was it expensive? Yes. Does it work way better? Also yes.
I use the tile spacers, or a piece of wood (tooth pick), to remove it from the grout lines and immediately wipe off, with wet cloth, all and every thinset from the tiles itself before it dries. Don't wait till next day.
How critical/important are the “leveling clips”? I’m getting ready to do a small floor. Do I really need them or can I just use the old school + spacers?
When I used this type tile I pre-laid out the pattern in the next room first, so the marbling was mostly aligned when installed. Looked much closer to real marble. Maybe a bit obsessive but it was for my own bath so...... And I have a mini pipe wrench to turn out the stripped screw so I don't need to squeeze pliers.
jeff i got same tile cutter but haven't use it still in the box, question : is it good for cutting any type of tile or just ceramic not porcelain for floor?
I just bought a house and the previous owner installed new tile. They are smaller square tiles, and there's a gap left where the handle is. It looks like he just chose not to place a tile there and I'm sure water is getting in there. What should I use to seal that up or am I going to have to remove the shower handle and add a tile there?
What if we can't use the kerdi valve or pipe seal because they dont fit? The face plate is also square with very different measurements. But how do we waterproof in this case?
Hi Jeff - you mentioned ceramic tile is easier to cut (and is what you are using in the video), but the tile you linked to in the description is porcelain.. so, are there versions of porcelain tile that are easier to cut than others? Or am I missing something? Thank you!
Given the 6 inch discrepancy, wondering if you'd considered running a 6 inch tile border/decorative strip in the middle somewhere? Might be more pain than it's worth
sort of but at the end of the day this is a guest bath in a trailer home so not looking for my best work ever on this just a practical functional bath. Cheers!
so,,,, yes, I like the tile layout to the drain, awesome. What I did not like is the 2 short wall layout. For me the 1/3 offset on the back wall now the other walls do not match that pattern. Every other row on the short walls match each other. On the long wall every 3rd row matches. I would have added a few more cuts to the short walls to get the 1/3 offset every 3 rows repeat pattern. But, that is me. Many ways to do this. I am actually willing to try the mosaic tile the next shower I do on the floor. Overall I love how it came out if I look past the pattern on the short walls.
- A True Contractor - Previous video: "this wall is now perfectly level" This video: "this wall is sloping this way, so we'll accommodate" Nothing can be expected to be "perfect". Roll with the oddities, adapt, solidify. Looks good dude. It's deceivingly difficult to keep things perfectly level in small spaces as well as being a remodel.
Around the drain where the cut edges of tile are installed, is there a way to soften the cut edge of the tile so it's not a risk of foot injury if stepped upon?
No complaint, I enjoy your videos, but ... If you take the electricians pliers and put it on the threads like you did, you can use the drill to back the screw out eh?
Пол в душе получился отличным. Мои поздравления. Но вот шов между плитками, где ты установил полку явно не совпадает. Порадовал момент, когда ты ломаешь плитку вокруг окна. Не у меня одного случаются то и дело такие моменты.
What's the reason for not doing the floor tile first, then the walls? Wouldn't that have been more logical for drainage when the wall tile sits over the floor, not behind it?
on a sloped floor the thin cuts are almost impossible to make perfect and set on the floor. Besides the reason for this shower pan is to make the base completely waterproof even before tile so you can consider the tile just an aesthetic and not an actual part of the waterproofing. Cheers!
I am normally impressed by your knowledge of most things Jeff. Really surprised at some of the things you said right at the beginning of this video. Tiles are not 12x24, only called that, they are 30x60 cm. Not sure any are 12x24, about 11 3/4x23 1/2, so no, 8 tiles will not do 8 feet. The proper size trowel for that size tile is 1/2x1/2 or euro. Notches are collapsed, how can they let water travel as you said. Water travels through thinset by wicking. Still love you, but dude…
I am normally impressed by your knowledge of most things Jeff. Really surprised at some of the things you said right at the beginning of this video. Tiles are not 12x24, only called that, they are 30x60 cm. Not sure any are 12x24, about 11 3/4x23 1/2, so no, 8 tiles will not do 8 feet. The proper size trowel for that size tile is 1/2x1/2 or euro. Notches are collapsed, how can they let water travel as you said. Water travels through thinset by wicking. Still love you, but disappointing.
You use long nails to nail wooden strips to stick tiles. The long nails also penetrate the waterproof board and the waterproof wall. Then you take out the long nails and wooden strips to stick the bottom tile. The waterproof wall penetrated by the long nails increases the probability of water seepage. This doesn't seem appropriate. If the waterproof wall can be nailed and drilled at will, then wouldn't the waterproofing be in vain?
Do you understand the concept of a running bond. I guess you are working for yourself…..because a customer would not pay for that amateur layout. DIY’er all day…..especially the plastic edging.
You should be thrown in tile jail for that cut around the window into the Schulter...some of your worst work to date. I can see the slippage from my house.
I could take you serious until you couldn't spell lippage. That was an outside wall and I was unable to make it straight for this project so life happened.
When you broke the second tile by the window and had to do it a third time…had to just laugh with you cuz I know how that feels. Glad you show the bloopers 😂 this is real life
Perfect every other time 😅
Perfect every time 75% of the time
Cheers Justin!
What’s really interesting is that the first piece still could have been used… just trim off the right side so it hits the grout line.
*Yes!* Thank you for that. In a world that abuses "LOL", I actually laughed out loud when he did that.
Jeff is the real deal! He shows you the good, bad and ugly. Real life situations! Thank you, Jeff!
Cheers to keeping it real. even us pros run into problems.
I'm glad to see not only I make these mistakes,,,you made me smile many times,,good to see you're human,,apreciate all your transparency and awesome tips...you're a GREAT person...
'I'm going to do a protractor with my hand' dude...I am laughing my ass off. The circle turned out perfect. Excellent video showing the whole process.
I followed your instructions and done a back splash. I have to brag, it came out great.
Dang it's nice when you think something is falling apart until you stand back and see it's actually falling into place. That window measure was gold.
You are seriously amazing. I have a man crush on your style and work. I totally admire your approach to everything I have watched you do. Thanks so much for sharing this wonderful information for newbs such as myself.
A+ video, Jeff! Incorporated a lot of tips from previous tile projects into one full video 👍🏼👍🏼
Glad you enjoyed it!
Dang man, cutting that hole out was impressive!
Oh man oh man... @44:14 reminded of when i was tiling my kitchen. First time working with tile. I had the tiles laid out, made all my cuts things were going great until i realized i cut several tiles (albeit perfectly and clean) incorreclty like you did. Had to take a break for the rest of the day i was so darn fustrated😅. Glad i did it. I appreciate the work thay goes into being of that trade. And will now hire someone to tile should i ever need to again😂
Appreciate seeing the mistakes. We all make them, and for many of us, they are a great learning experiences.
Concerning the tile layout, I think the focus on the lateral drain was genius!
Nice job! Thanks for your perspective!
Cheers glad to be helpful!
You are a great instructor
Loved the tile around the drain, this is bathroom nr ...??? i see you make and tile. And still learned something again.
I'm ready for mine!! Thank you Sir!
The cut around the grate is perfect.
I died when you broke the tile. Can't be perfect, however it's not the race, but the finish. Great job.
Jeff I needed this crash course like plants need water, thank you!!!
Happy to help. Cheers!
Cut line around the grate is great :)
Great looking shower job, Jeff. When you tapped that tile and I heard the crack, I thought the same thing, going to be one of those days
you know it. not very often I screw up 3 times in a row. LOL
Well done Jeff ! I'm considering redoing my master bathroom with a custom shower. If it weren't for your videos, I would feel this was way above my skill level for sure. You make it look easy enough if you think about the job in advance.
Just know where you are going before you take the first step and it is easy. Cheers!
You're doing it perfect as I'm about to be against the exact same circumstances window and all, except my shower was a tub so the plumbing I need to research more.
Love this guy. “30 bucks - that’s a bloody pizza!” So relatable my man. Haha.
Now I see, I've got to find the beginning of this series, you've already got me lined up and I couldn't thank you enough but I'm gonna figure out how, I'm technically challenged but not plum dumb, I'll figure it out. $
I did a border around my redi tile opening as I used natural rocks that I guess they would refer to as pebbles so I laid it around the hole first and then laid the rocks as best I could get them to fit as I didn't want to cut them and as amazing as it sounds, I was able to put all of the pieces in a way that fit perfectly well without cutting the rocks. I loved how it came out. I did have planned out to use the Schluter pieces but I didn't like how they looked compared to the black flat pencil style border.
Thanks!
Cheers!
Gracias Jeff, muy ilustrativos tus videos, excelente enseñanza nos compartes y toma más valor al no omitir los errores; soy carpintero y sé de ellos.
Todos somos Clientes y Proveedores, y creo que nadie exigimos un trabajo perfecto, pero si un buen trabajo.
Saludos de Sonora, México.
Merci pour vos vidéos amusantes, vous m'inspirez
Tile around tile looks symmetrical that’s the look you wanna go for
1/3rd bond (or brick pattern) is actually recommended for 12x24" tile because the surface of large format tile is warped to the point where the edges (ends) are thinner than the center of the tile. So if you do half bond you get the thinnest part of the tile meeting in the middle of the tile, which is the thickest part of the tile, and you get about 1/16th to a shy 1/8" lippage problem. Yes with clips you can actually bend tile, but it makes your job a hell of a lot harder.
I’ve never thought about that but it definitely makes sense I’ve ran into that surface change a few times
Nicely done!
Thank you! Cheers!
Another way to clean out the excess grout is with a multi-tool and a grout blade. Be careful as it can jump out and scratch the tile. Finesse it, don't force it. I have done this when I had to regrout the whole shower as it wasn 't done properly, missing grout was filled with silicone (not by me).
1:00:00 the cut around the grate is perfect
Oh yeah that's freaking beautiful, the grate
Hello Sir,
What is your opinion of using liquid nails to installa shower tile ? the thinkset does add thickness to the walls.. where was liquid nail is thiner and less than 1/8... and its also comming in water proof varierty....
Jeff has the personality of Tim Taylor, but the skills of Al Borland. I now get the logo lol.
Glad I found this channel
Glad your here. Cheers!
Also, have you posted the full video for this entire renovation? Thank you!!
I am installing a redi -tile shower pan and it includes a 2 part epoxy adhesive for the tiles.
This one isn't as bad as most of this guy's videos, but a few points: 1. If you've framed your walls even close to plumb, you can pre-cut all of your back wall tile up to the window; you've got ~1/4" of leeway on each side since the tile on the adjacent wall covers the gap. 2. Always cut the edges of the mosaic so the cut edges of the sheets are (close to) against the wall. Note here that he dry fit the tile and marked the cuts around the drain, then had to stick 20+ little cut pieces against the shower valve wall. Not only is this a pain, it increases the chance of those tiles not being set at the correct height or pitch and water ebnds up collecting against the wall. You're better off pulling the grate out, laying sheets on the floor, laying the grate over them upside down several rows of tile back from the edge of the sheet. That way you can cut the sheet for the wall. 3.Smaller issue: it's easier to grout the floor tile before you put in the bottom course of wall tile. 4. Bigger issue: when you're cutting tile with a grinder, put on a N95 dust mask!!! Not only does most ceramic tile have carcinogens in it, if you work in the trades with regular exposure to silica dust, silicosis should be a real concern.
35:36 There has to be a better way to cut a circle in a tile. Isn’t there a protractor type scratch cutter like the linear cutter you used earlier??
Question, on the inside corners do you leave about a quarter inch gap for expansion like you would doing a floor tile?
Excellent
Thank you so much 😀
@45:30 - I felt that.
Thanks, again. I am always better because you have taught me how to
Do another job well. I can’t wait to do my new shower.
Can we use the Kerdi fix as a finishing caulk sealant between tile panels? I have older gray grout that's cracking and need to seal up some gaps between tile
yes.
man, loving it
glad it is helpful. Cheers!
6 inch to fill at the top - could go for a different tile say in the middle as a feature
Hey, did the tile, at 50:23 have a chip in the bottom left-hand corner?
I like how the “other method” is using a rubber mallet… as if the tape measure was the tool of choice to remove shims haha
Hi Jeff! Great info you have been sharing. I’ve been watching a lot of your drywall repair videos and I’d like to know if there is a way to use the pieces of drywall that were removed from the wall. Two pieces were cut out by the plumber to do an outdoor faucet replacement (the wall stud is somewhat in the middle). Oh and the wall is textured. BTW if there is already a video doing this type of repair my apologies but I must have missed it. Thanks for your reply if you can provide some guidance.
overall good video. i never use the plastic trim, whenever I've tried to cut it on my mitre saw it explodes, even with using a new blade and my custom made trim jig.
Another point he makes about how score cutters don't work well on porcelain is false. That crappy QEP one probably doesn't stand a chance. I've got a few sigma cutters (montolit and rubi also make nice cutters), one of which is huge that I've cut 5 foot long porcelain tile on. Was it expensive? Yes. Does it work way better? Also yes.
Hello Jeff,
I want to remove the shower floor pan to add tile or pebbles. Can you make a video?
Very helpful video! Thank you for doing this. Wish you guys were in New Jersey 🤔 Would you recommend any good contractor in New Jersey?
Not that I know of
Pro tip..use a toothbrush to clean out thinset while setting tiles.
Thats a good one, tnx 👍
Pro tip don't add too much thinset so it doesn't squeeze out. the proper trowel is a lot easier than cleaning thinset.
I use the tile spacers, or a piece of wood (tooth pick), to remove it from the grout lines and immediately wipe off, with wet cloth, all and every thinset from the tiles itself before it dries. Don't wait till next day.
matchsticks work for 3mm
What trowel size are you using? Everything seems to say 1/2 x 1/2 but this appears smaller.
How critical/important are the “leveling clips”? I’m getting ready to do a small floor. Do I really need them or can I just use the old school + spacers?
that all depends on how flat your floor is and how flat your tile is. many large tiles are actually curved and not flat so the clips are necessary!
When I used this type tile I pre-laid out the pattern in the next room first, so the marbling was mostly aligned when installed. Looked much closer to real marble. Maybe a bit obsessive but it was for my own bath so...... And I have a mini pipe wrench to turn out the stripped screw so I don't need to squeeze pliers.
jeff i got same tile cutter but haven't use it still in the box, question : is it good for cutting any type of tile or just ceramic not porcelain for floor?
I just bought a house and the previous owner installed new tile. They are smaller square tiles, and there's a gap left where the handle is. It looks like he just chose not to place a tile there and I'm sure water is getting in there. What should I use to seal that up or am I going to have to remove the shower handle and add a tile there?
Love the videos. Could one use a construction adhesive like LePage or Gorilla instead of thinset?
adhesives don't do well in wet areas over time.
What if we can't use the kerdi valve or pipe seal because they dont fit? The face plate is also square with very different measurements. But how do we waterproof in this case?
Seems like Jeff buys new tools every job
Hi Jeff - you mentioned ceramic tile is easier to cut (and is what you are using in the video), but the tile you linked to in the description is porcelain.. so, are there versions of porcelain tile that are easier to cut than others? Or am I missing something? Thank you!
Do the doors require that much depth of the curb?
Is it ceramic porous and not good on area of always wet?
Given the 6 inch discrepancy, wondering if you'd considered running a 6 inch tile border/decorative strip in the middle somewhere? Might be more pain than it's worth
sort of but at the end of the day this is a guest bath in a trailer home so not looking for my best work ever on this just a practical functional bath. Cheers!
34:26 at this point, I would have use a cardboard cutout to a template then transfer to the tile.
so,,,, yes, I like the tile layout to the drain, awesome. What I did not like is the 2 short wall layout. For me the 1/3 offset on the back wall now the other walls do not match that pattern. Every other row on the short walls match each other. On the long wall every 3rd row matches. I would have added a few more cuts to the short walls to get the 1/3 offset every 3 rows repeat pattern. But, that is me. Many ways to do this. I am actually willing to try the mosaic tile the next shower I do on the floor. Overall I love how it came out if I look past the pattern on the short walls.
“Silicone can be a man’s best friend.”
Yes, yes it can.
Where did the measurement come from for the second row at about the 10 min mark?
- A True Contractor -
Previous video: "this wall is now perfectly level"
This video: "this wall is sloping this way, so we'll accommodate"
Nothing can be expected to be "perfect". Roll with the oddities, adapt, solidify. Looks good dude. It's deceivingly difficult to keep things perfectly level in small spaces as well as being a remodel.
Have you ever installed go board.
not yet!
Do we have to change and break tiles if bathroom flooded 4 inches high?
almost every single time. all depends on the building materials in behind.
Thank you very much, your videos are of enormous help, specially on a tight budget and crazy prices ; God Bless
Around the drain where the cut edges of tile are installed, is there a way to soften the cut edge of the tile so it's not a risk of foot injury if stepped upon?
A diamond sponge would work I would think
a little buff can help or a light sand.
Can you put RedGuard as well or is that overkill?
no need on this install. there is no weak spot since we used a tile ready base. Cheers!
What about red guard or aqua defense...
The eye catches the center .I do not agree the way you have started ,centre of tile or center gap.😁
No complaint, I enjoy your videos, but ... If you take the electricians pliers and put it on the threads like you did, you can use the drill to back the screw out eh?
Are the tile joints in the corners not meant to line up?
I’m guessing not because you’re gonna use silicone anyway
By rights they should be but with the silicone you can fudge it a bit.
@@billm.8220 Yeah I think I'd condemn this job if it was in my house lol! I think this guy looks more like a DIY Tiler by the standard of work!
Пол в душе получился отличным. Мои поздравления. Но вот шов между плитками, где ты установил полку явно не совпадает. Порадовал момент, когда ты ломаешь плитку вокруг окна. Не у меня одного случаются то и дело такие моменты.
What's the reason for not doing the floor tile first, then the walls? Wouldn't that have been more logical for drainage when the wall tile sits over the floor, not behind it?
on a sloped floor the thin cuts are almost impossible to make perfect and set on the floor. Besides the reason for this shower pan is to make the base completely waterproof even before tile so you can consider the tile just an aesthetic and not an actual part of the waterproofing. Cheers!
How about using a shorter accent style of tiles?
that is all personal preference. Cheers!
You should have cut that window piece on the left short from the right edge. 😮
I don’t understand your thinking on the pattern on the back wall.
I think that's the first time I saw Jeff break a tile! 😳
ceramic saves money but man is it easy to snap. Cheers!
You'd never hire Trudeau, or Biden to do tile work. Not smart enough. Jeff is the man. Nice work!
I am normally impressed by your knowledge of most things Jeff. Really surprised at some of the things you said right at the beginning of this video. Tiles are not 12x24, only called that, they are 30x60 cm. Not sure any are 12x24, about 11 3/4x23 1/2, so no, 8 tiles will not do 8 feet. The proper size trowel for that size tile is 1/2x1/2 or euro. Notches are collapsed, how can they let water travel as you said. Water travels through thinset by wicking. Still love you, but dude…
Why did you waste the tile at minute 44? All you had to do is wash the mud off an take what you needed.
Cut edges should be at the inside corner. He would have had to cut the grout line which is against his own rules 😊
I don't need a lot of leftover tile and I had plenty so why waste your time. Cheers!
@@HomeRenoVisionDIY cheers,
"Clean as you go!"
Seriously y'all! Your tools will be damaged beyond repair. Life happens and you never know what comes up! 😆
I am normally impressed by your knowledge of most things Jeff. Really surprised at some of the things you said right at the beginning of this video. Tiles are not 12x24, only called that, they are 30x60 cm. Not sure any are 12x24, about 11 3/4x23 1/2, so no, 8 tiles will not do 8 feet. The proper size trowel for that size tile is 1/2x1/2 or euro. Notches are collapsed, how can they let water travel as you said. Water travels through thinset by wicking. Still love you, but disappointing.
You use long nails to nail wooden strips to stick tiles. The long nails also penetrate the waterproof board and the waterproof wall. Then you take out the long nails and wooden strips to stick the bottom tile. The waterproof wall penetrated by the long nails increases the probability of water seepage. This doesn't seem appropriate. If the waterproof wall can be nailed and drilled at will, then wouldn't the waterproofing be in vain?
for the love of god WEAR A MASK, you're still very YOUNG
cutting tile without ppe is not bright... silica dust is toxic... you do so many things right but man... this is just dumb
Do you understand the concept of a running bond. I guess you are working for yourself…..because a customer would not pay for that amateur layout. DIY’er all day…..especially the plastic edging.
You should be thrown in tile jail for that cut around the window into the Schulter...some of your worst work to date. I can see the slippage from my house.
I could take you serious until you couldn't spell lippage. That was an outside wall and I was unable to make it straight for this project so life happened.
You got lucky with the window lining up. If the window wasn’t there, I would have changed the line up of the back wall !!
👎🏿
Why didn't you just cut an inch off your leisure board?And then you could have a full tile at the top..
I am a huge fan of your videos...