Looks like he started with good intensions ...lol
.......Crumbs I've just relooked at the pics - one wall is so bad the tiler had to fix tiles in the hollow and then tile over them. I'd definitely would have had to flatten out that one!!! Hope that's allowed for in the retiling price.
That's a classic !!!!!View attachment 77248 View attachment 77249 started a bathroom today. The tiles came of easily, wonder why.
Might put this refurb into Octobers jotm, if there is one.
sorry i was just generalizing that dot and dab was a method, it shouldn't be used in wet areas.
having said that, in theory if done properly, on surfaces that don't move, settle. so water can't get in behind tiles then there should be not reason why dot and dab couldn't work
I still think that I am wrong I work 🙁sorry for adding my six pence late
looking at the pictures , the tiles seem to be of a brown/biscuit and in my experience, these tiles are a nightmare to fix, fix a tile on and let it stay for a minute, pull it off and adhesive has stuck to the tile.
put it back on let it stay on for 15 minutes and pull it off again and the tile comes off clean, no adhesive on it at all!!
I've taken to priming the back of these types of tiles, also spreading adhesive on both wall and tile.
while dot and dabbing is professionally ok. to do and if the there's a problem you'll never win a battle saying that the tiles were properly stuck.
4 or 5 blobs of adhesive on the back of a tile then fix in place, known as dot and dab or d & dWho can explain to me the meaning of D & D?
thanks