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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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My query was about the position I should treat as the centre of the wall
rather than how to arrange the tiles on the wall once I have determined the centre (I've done any amount of tiling over the years but have not run into this scenario previously). As described previously, the wall is not the same length throughout its height along the length of the bath. It's shorter just above the bath and just below the ceiling, but longer over the height of the window where it runs into the reveal. A spot of ASCII art might help. ----------------------------------------------**** | | * | | * | | * Window | | * | | * | Plan | * | | * | |**** | | | | | | | | | | ---------------------------------------------- The room at the ceiling and floor is a rectangle as shown by the | and -. At one end is a window which is not centred across the wall and which means that a plan drawn at the window's height off the floor will be extended as shown by the *. So, on the wall at the top of the diagram, where is the centre to work off for tiling? Is it half way along the ---------------------------------------------- section only (ie half the length of the room at floor and ceiling height), or is it half the length of the wall at window height (ie half of the total length of ---------------------------------------------- and ****)? TIA -- Frank (Beware of spam trap - remove the negative) |
#2
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![]() F wrote: My query was about the position I should treat as the centre of the wall rather than how to arrange the tiles on the wall once I have determined the centre (I've done any amount of tiling over the years but have not run into this scenario previously). As described previously, the wall is not the same length throughout its height along the length of the bath. It's shorter just above the bath and just below the ceiling, but longer over the height of the window where it runs into the reveal. A spot of ASCII art might help. ----------------------------------------------**** | | * | | * | | * Window | | * | | * | Plan | * | | * | |**** | | | | | | | | | | ---------------------------------------------- The room at the ceiling and floor is a rectangle as shown by the | and -. At one end is a window which is not centred across the wall and which means that a plan drawn at the window's height off the floor will be extended as shown by the *. So, on the wall at the top of the diagram, where is the centre to work off for tiling? Is it half way along the ---------------------------------------------- section only (ie half the length of the room at floor and ceiling height), or is it half the length of the wall at window height (ie half of the total length of ---------------------------------------------- and ****)? TIA -- Frank (Beware of spam trap - remove the negative) For a long wall with window at one end, I don't think it really matters - there is no obvious feature at which to judge symmetry. I would probably centre it ignoring the window, since there is still the wall above and below it I presume. But you may have to jiggle it to get good cuts. The bathroom I jave just done, I drew out the room on paper and the tiling grid on tracing paper (not 1:1 scale !) and slid it around - its always a compromise after all. Cheers, Simon. |
#3
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On Mon, 22 Jan 2007 10:27:56 +0000, F wrote:
My query was about the position I should treat as the centre of the wall rather than how to arrange the tiles on the wall once I have determined the centre What is the obsession with a center line? The tiles need to be vertical and horizontal such that any joints are in sensible places. You have a horizontal set by the top of the bath and a vertical set by the reveals. IMHO on the long wall a joint anywhere other than joing the two short bits of long wall will look stupid. As walls never meet at precisely 90 deg you'll have to ease the absolute position of the tiles anyway. To work into that corner mark vertical say 4 tiles width plus grout width away from it. Is that your "center line"? -- Cheers Dave. pam is missing e-mail |
#4
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![]() Dave Liquorice wrote: On Mon, 22 Jan 2007 10:27:56 +0000, F wrote: My query was about the position I should treat as the centre of the wall rather than how to arrange the tiles on the wall once I have determined the centre What is the obsession with a center line? The tiles need to be vertical and horizontal such that any joints are in sensible places. You have a horizontal set by the top of the bath and a vertical set by the reveals. IMHO on the long wall a joint anywhere other than joing the two short bits of long wall will look stupid. As walls never meet at precisely 90 deg you'll have to ease the absolute position of the tiles anyway. To work into that corner mark vertical say 4 tiles width plus grout width away from it. Is that your "center line"? -- Cheers Dave. pam is missing e-mail I think the only centre line that is particularly noticeable is say when you walk into a bathroom and there is a window opposite. If the tiles are not equally positioned around the window and reveal, especially if there is a basin under the window as is common, then it stands out a mile. Simon. |
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