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Discuss Is this right? Or am I seeing things? in the Canada Tile Advice area at TilersForums.com.

B

Bill

The tile trims do not have to be mitred..... they do look better when done so but there is no rule.

The wall is not straight, the mosaic sheets look poorly aligned on the mesh.

Now, all of these things can be fixed and some could have been done at the start of tiling but I can bet that the 'tiler' would have given a price for plumb walls and decent quality mosaic sheets - if the 'tiler' then needs to sort anything out - the customer should realise that the original quote is not sufficient and let the 'tiler' recommence with adjusted payment - that way both the client and 'tiler' are happy.
 
P

Pistol

Thanks for everyone’s responses. I’m not wishing to start a fight here between plasterers and tilers, just looking for fair and honest opinion to get to know what to do next, so appreciate the input. To add some more detail that might be relevant, I approached two professional tilers for this, this chap being one of them. Yes he was cheaper but has a great record on Checkatrade (For what it’s worth, not endorsing) and asked some sensible questions. Both tilers measured up and inspected the job, neither mentioned any irregularities in the wall but also appreciate that at first sight maybe these things aren’t that apparent.

However, I built that wall myself. Whilst I’m no master builder, I’ve refurbished a whole house myself and learnt a lot over the years, enough to use a spirit level anyway. In fact I studded the back wall out and reboarded the right hand wall, I chose non skewed, non bowed wood for the studs and did everything I could to get it right. Pictures can be deceiving but I’ll add a pic of the niche before tiling. My mistake I’ve learnt from is to take a pic with a level on it for future reference (wouldn’t have thought I needed it but there you go). Personally I can’t see anything that would cause the bulge that I’m seeing on the tile but again, maybe there’s more to it. The tilers response on the phone was that he sees it all the time and the wall must have been bowed, but I can guarantee you, had he come to me and said ‘that wall is bowed, you’re going to have a skewed tile on that wall’ I would have said right let’s get that corrected first, as opposed to wasting all that money on tiles. But nothing was said. The response on the phone was surprise that the bulge was even there and he hadn’t noticed it......??
For those seeing a drop in the niche I should add, a slight slope was added to the bottom of the niche to allow for water run off, I’ve added a close up of that back corner if it helps.
Again, thanks for the responses. At this point I’m thinking there’s not a lot I can do except rip them off and start again.

AE6598E3-7C42-4856-9961-98CF10BF2C3B.jpeg 435CC60C-F896-4CA5-9B49-ACF46F4E2968.jpeg 092D9115-18D7-4366-847F-BCD09F627D4A.jpeg
 

Andy Allen

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The tile trims do not have to be mitred..... they do look better when done so but there is no rule.

The wall is not straight, the mosaic sheets look poorly aligned on the mesh.

Now, all of these things can be fixed and some could have been done at the start of tiling but I can bet that the 'tiler' would have given a price for plumb walls and decent quality mosaic sheets - if the 'tiler' then needs to sort anything out - the customer should realise that the original quote is not sufficient and let the 'tiler' recommence with adjusted payment - that way both the client and 'tiler' are happy.

Hands up who doesn't mitre there trims..!
(Besides Tom)...:rolleyes:
 
T

Time's Ran Out

@Pistol - no need to suggest a difference of opinion between plasterers and tilers as it happens between every follow on trade - unfortunately tilers are expected to put everyone else’s sh*t right!
At the end of the day a professional would have suggested fully waterproofing this area, possibly using a Wedi type board and not relying on plaster walls to a ‘wet’ situation.
 
P

Pistol

So pre-empting here. Who happens to be in Kent that might want some work rectifying? (Don’t all jump at once :) )
 
P

Pistol

No haven’t paid yet and he’s coming tomorrow (with the intention of grouting,but I can’t as it is), hence the pre-empting. Of course I’d give him full opportunity to rectify, or certainly show me why it’s like it is and what needs to be done
 
B

Bill

And another point to @Pistol ........ why such a large gap between the tray and the walls?

Do you realise that is now a weak point for leakage no matter how much silicone you may have put in the gap before tiling?
 

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