Whew, we made it out of January! February is the month of love and I am lo-oving the progress we made in our laundry room this past weekend.

A few weeks ago after selecting our cabinet color at Lowe's, I walked over to the tile section and immediately spotted this Leonia Sand porcelain tile:


It came in two sizes—12x24" and 6x24". I preferred the wood plank look so I decided on the 6x24" ($2.29/ea). The price was reasonable and I thought it looked lovely against the cabinet color, and that it would also be a nice way to add warmth to all the white, black and gray.

Saturday at 7am we were at Lowe's to buy all of the supplies, including a $90 wet saw (which ended up being too small for our tiles but we made it work anyway).


My dad has some experience in this arena so he was kind enough to offer to help for the day. We also did quite a bit of research along with consulting the staff at Lowe's to help us figure out the best plan of attack.

The first step was to prepare the surface. We went with HardiBoard cement board—it's a couple bucks more than the generic stuff but supposed to be much better.

I came up with this layout based on the room's floor plan (which were based on measurements from before the demolition began that ended up being larger than the actual size, so we used only 9 boards instead of 10):


We had never worked with this stuff before so I didn't know what I was in for, but it ended up being the easiest part. It breaks apart easily after scoring with a blade, so my job was to measure and score/cut the pieces to size...


while Brad and my dad screwed them into the plywood (using special cement board screws).


We were able to knock it out (problem free) in two hours. Teamwork!

Before setting the tile, we had to cover the seams with special mesh tape.


We did a dry test fit in a few areas to see if there would be any fitment issues. Fortunately, they lined up just perfectly that we didn't need to make any tricky cuts between the transition to the storage room:


With our layout in place, we snapped a chalk line where the first row would be placed along the wall:



Then one by one, it was mastic + tile...


The troweling process immediately brought back memories from our kitchen wall tile installation.


This floor tile was definitely easier since they are larger pieces and you don't have to fight gravity. We had these rows down in an hour:


Then things got a bit tricky. Since you can't walk on freshly laid tile, we couldn't just tile the storage room as there was no way out. So I had to become a bit of a gymnast—working in a counter clockwise pattern, planning my tiles and stepping in between empty patches until I could contort myself out of there.



Luckily it worked, and we had an efficient system running where my dad would cut the tiles, Brad would deliver them and help me spread mastic when needed, and I'd set the tiles. In 4.5 hours the room was done.



That's 4.5 hours straight of crouching for me which doesn't feel so great—but looking at our freshly tiled floor does!



They look quite a bit more gray in this room than in the store which I wasn't expecting but I guess I don't mind. They actually remind me a lot of our hardwood floors in the rest of the house.

Tomorrow we'll finish them off with grout and then it's on to the next project!

And on that note, if you've been following the updates you'll know that this is the last real post you'll see here at jennasuedesign.blogspot.com. Tomorrow morning I'll make one final check in with a link to the new blog, so make sure to mark your calendars (there's also a giveaway involved!) Don't worry, the content will be exactly the same and I'll pick up right from where I left off, the only thing that's changing is the url (so you'll want to make sure to update that tomorrow in your reader/feed/bookmark/etc!)

See you back here tomorrow for the official launch!





0 comments:

Post a Comment

 
Top