for natural stone countertops, flooring or pavers Slate Floors and Countertops Stonefloors and Countertops Stonefloors and countertops installing stone as a floor or countertop cleaning stone countertops and flooring a breeze sealers for stonefloors and countertops
surrounds and floors. Caring for Natural Stone If you re installing stone as a floor or countertop interior stonefloors frequently Daltile, a stone and tile producer. Exterior stone products the same stoneflooring in an interior
home owner sealed the floor after they installed it. (We were the first to actually live on the floor). I think it's stonetile...definitly not ceramic. What do you recommend to deep clean and should we reseal the floor? If so, what do we use
against (or give an area to attach half round trim). How do I accommodate for this, what is the best way to end the flooring against the stone wall? Especially since we need to leave a 1/2" gap for expansion. I also have the same type of problem near the
replacing vinyl flooring from my bathroom on the 2nd floor with stonetile. The floor consists of plywood. I do not know the thickness if the current flooring is durable enough for the stonetile. Should I need to replace with different substrate
in laminate flooring (Armstrong or Pergo). How do you but it up against uneven surfaces like the brick or stone? The current floor is cork tiles that are the same thickness as the mortar beds for the stone and brick, so it is squezed up nice
ordered cork flooring from EcoRiver.com in December 2003 to cover most of our daylight basement's concrete floor. We want to use stone tiles at the outside entrance to stop the elements (wet or dirty feet). Since cork expands at a different
1. If I rough up the tile, can you put river rock or stone over the exiting tile? Assume we are not using huge slabs... the wall will hold 3. If so, what do you use for adhesive to join the stone over the tile... it will get wet in areas consistent with our use. Would
I am a do-it yourself homeowner that has embarked on a large owner's bath addition. Everything has gone well up to this point. We have already purchased 18"x18" Travertine tiles to lay on the floor which is roughly a 15'x14' room.