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#1
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Honed marble for a bathroom floor?
I am considering using honed marble for a bathroom floor. It's not a
large floor (25 ft square) but was warned that honed marble is soft. Do you see any issues with using it for a bathroom floor? |
#2
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Honed marble for a bathroom floor?
I'm not sure what "honed" marble is, and whether soft is an issue, but
it could well be too slippery for a bathroom floor. Wet feet + polished or glazed stone = slip/fall. On Mar 13, 3:42 pm, "Adam" wrote: I am considering using honed marble for a bathroom floor. It's not a large floor (25 ft square) but was warned that honed marble is soft. Do you see any issues with using it for a bathroom floor? |
#3
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Honed marble for a bathroom floor?
Adam wrote:
I am considering using honed marble for a bathroom floor. It's not a large floor (25 ft square) but was warned that honed marble is soft. Do you see any issues with using it for a bathroom floor? All marble is soft. Honed marble has a less polished finish. Oddly enough, the honing is frequently an additional step. After it's polished, they take off some of the gloss. Honed stone shows less wear and is less slippery than highly polished stone. The only issues are upkeep and durability. The marble must be sealed or it will absorb whatever liquids land on it and it will stain. Sealing once a year is sufficient and it is not a major procedure. Softer stone is weaker and more likely to chip and crack. If the installers know what they are doing, use the right setting materials with flex additives and/or an anti-crack membrane under it, you don't have to worry about much else than someone dropping a bottle on it or something like that. Lighter marbles will allow the thinset to shine through, so a white thinset is used. If a tile setter even mentions the possibility of setting marble on plywood, say, "Next!" and move on to someone who knows what they're talking about. R |
#4
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Honed marble for a bathroom floor?
"Adam" wrote in message oups.com... I am considering using honed marble for a bathroom floor. It's not a large floor (25 ft square) but was warned that honed marble is soft. Do you see any issues with using it for a bathroom floor? We just remodeled here and dealt with an excellent contractor who knows about the various materials. He said marble scratches easily and that he would never recommend it for that application. However, the word "honed" never came up. |
#5
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Honed marble for a bathroom floor?
On 13 Mar 2007 12:42:16 -0700, "Adam" wrote:
I am considering using honed marble for a bathroom floor. It's not a large floor (25 ft square) but was warned that honed marble is soft. Do you see any issues with using it for a bathroom floor? Slippery as hell, isn't it? |
#6
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Honed marble for a bathroom floor?
On 13 Mar 2007 12:42:16 -0700, "Adam" wrote:
I am considering using honed marble for a bathroom floor. It's not a large floor (25 ft square) Sounds large to me. That's 625 square feet. but was warned that honed marble is soft. Do you see any issues with using it for a bathroom floor? |
#7
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Honed marble for a bathroom floor?
On Mar 13, 1:41 pm, "RicodJour" wrote:
Adam wrote: I am considering using honed marble for a bathroom floor. It's not a large floor (25 ft square) but was warned that honed marble is soft. Do you see any issues with using it for a bathroom floor? All marble is soft. Honed marble has a less polished finish. Oddly enough, the honing is frequently an additional step. After it's polished, they take off some of the gloss. Honed stone shows less wear and is less slippery than highly polished stone. The only issues are upkeep and durability. The marble must be sealed or it will absorb whatever liquids land on it and it will stain. Sealing once a year is sufficient and it is not a major procedure. Softer stone is weaker and more likely to chip and crack. If the installers know what they are doing, use the right setting materials with flex additives and/or an anti-crack membrane under it, you don't have to worry about much else than someone dropping a bottle on it or something like that. Lighter marbles will allow the thinset to shine through, so a white thinset is used. If a tile setter even mentions the possibility of setting marble on plywood, say, "Next!" and move on to someone who knows what they're talking about. R Thanks to everyone for their replies so far. To clarify, the floor space is about 5'x5' so 25 sq ft. Most of it will be covered by the vanity, toilet, and bath mat. R clarified what I meant by honed. I will definitely seal the stone, and will be sure the adhesive has flex additives. I will look into an anti-crack membrane; haven't heard of that before. The floor already has a layer of hadibacker under it, so no plywood here. Still open to other comments if anyone has them. |
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