- Oct 13, 1999
- 9,025
- 121
- 106
UPDATE 2
Flash on this one makes all the white glow but it shows the floor pretty well.
2
3
4
I'm happy with the results. Still need to put down the new threshold on my back door. I used vinyl adhesive on the tiles by the door because I know the threshold is going to try to pop those up so I wanted a little extra strength. Have those cans setting on them till their dry. Whenever I get around to painting the laundry room I'll have to go around and fill in the nail holes in the new shoe molding and touch up some places on the baseboards. Still need to drag my table back in there too. Only hard part of the project was cutting the bottom of my back door to fit with my new now higher threshold. Even that wasn't really hard I just had to do it twice to get to fit right and was PITA taking it down and carrying it in and out of the house.
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UPDATE
I"ve been working on it for about 6 hours and my back is started to hurt and it looks like I'm going to be about 10 tiles short so I"m stopping for the night. I want to get the tiles before doing more so I can blend them in with what little is left in case they are slightly different so they won't stand out as much.
1
2
I'm happy with it so far. Certainly looks better then the old crap.
Best pic I have showing the old crap. Didn't think to take a good pic of it before I started. Just for the hell of it pic from before I did anything in there.
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Planning to do it in my kitchen and laundry room. I would rather do real tile but the housing market around here is crap and I'm not going to see any return on that investment so $200 to redo the 1970s vinyl thats there now with the peel and stick stuff seems like a good deal.
1. pop up old 1/4 round on the baseboard
2. clean the hell out of old floor to remove wax and dirt
3. smooth any damages in old floor
4. slap down new floor
5. new 1/4 round
6. profit
Missing anything? I was planning to stagger the joints to help hide any inconsistency in the tile. The only things I'm worried about is how well it will hold up. I don't want tiles coming up in a couple months.
Flash on this one makes all the white glow but it shows the floor pretty well.
2
3
4
I'm happy with the results. Still need to put down the new threshold on my back door. I used vinyl adhesive on the tiles by the door because I know the threshold is going to try to pop those up so I wanted a little extra strength. Have those cans setting on them till their dry. Whenever I get around to painting the laundry room I'll have to go around and fill in the nail holes in the new shoe molding and touch up some places on the baseboards. Still need to drag my table back in there too. Only hard part of the project was cutting the bottom of my back door to fit with my new now higher threshold. Even that wasn't really hard I just had to do it twice to get to fit right and was PITA taking it down and carrying it in and out of the house.
------------------------------------
UPDATE
I"ve been working on it for about 6 hours and my back is started to hurt and it looks like I'm going to be about 10 tiles short so I"m stopping for the night. I want to get the tiles before doing more so I can blend them in with what little is left in case they are slightly different so they won't stand out as much.
1
2
I'm happy with it so far. Certainly looks better then the old crap.
Best pic I have showing the old crap. Didn't think to take a good pic of it before I started. Just for the hell of it pic from before I did anything in there.
------------------------------------------------------
Planning to do it in my kitchen and laundry room. I would rather do real tile but the housing market around here is crap and I'm not going to see any return on that investment so $200 to redo the 1970s vinyl thats there now with the peel and stick stuff seems like a good deal.
1. pop up old 1/4 round on the baseboard
2. clean the hell out of old floor to remove wax and dirt
3. smooth any damages in old floor
4. slap down new floor
5. new 1/4 round
6. profit
Missing anything? I was planning to stagger the joints to help hide any inconsistency in the tile. The only things I'm worried about is how well it will hold up. I don't want tiles coming up in a couple months.