Kitchen Tiles: Tiles for your kitchen wall, floor and backsplash
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Kitchen tile ideas to inspire you
Tile can be a great wall surface in the kitchen - or an ongoing annoyance, depending on the choices made in planning and installing.
Two important questions to ask in the planning stage are: where do I want to install tile on my kitchen walls, and why?
Contents at a Glance
Kitchen Wall Tiles
Almost any tile will do a decent job of protecting the wall if it's installed correctly. A kitchen wall is not like a bathroom shower surround where water is being sprayed on it continuously and frequently. The easy cleaning rationale is another story, though.
What makes tile easy to clean? Mainly, it's the smooth, non-porous surface which water, grease and food splashes can't soak in to, stick to or stain. To get the full benefit of easy cleaning it's important to use tile which really is smooth and non-porous. Unfortunately fashions in tile often lead us astray from this ideal:
- tiny mosaic tile with acres of grout lines to catch dirt and need resealing regularly.
- textured tile with raised designs to catch dirt and take longer to clean.
- tumbled stone tile with rough surfaces and edges, and wide grout lines, to - you guessed it - catch dirt and be almost impossible to clean.
It's your call whether in your own kitchen you want to trade less ease in cleaning for more beauty or fashion - but it's important to make an informed choice. Try to talk to someone who has the tile you plan to install, in a similar location to where you plan to install it, who cooks about the same amount as you do, and ask them how easy they find it to live with before you invest the time and money.
This is critically important if you plan to install a tiled feature wall behind the cooktop as, especially with gas burners, food and grease will get deposited there no matter how careful you are and it will need to be cleaned regularly.
A tile wainscot has rather different wear and cleaning requirements from a backsplash. You are less likely to run into problems with grease and food splatters, but much more likely to have to deal with dings and bangs. For this reason, tile here needs to be stronger and to be really solidly installed. Where on a backsplash you can get away with installing tile directly on drywall, if your tile wainscot is going to be banged by chairs or flying toddlers on tricycles, you'll need a stronger, more rigid backing such as cement backerboard or plywood. Even 2 layers of regular drywall will give a stronger, more solid backing.
Read on for more talk about kitchen floor tiles, below...
Kitchen Tiles on eBay
Kitchen Floor Tiles
First of all, there are certain requirements which need to be met in order to successfully tile a floor.
- The floor structure itself must be suitable. That means strong, level, dry, and non-flexing. If it bounces when you walk on it, your tile will crack. If it's damp, the tile will lift up or not stick at all. Make sure those items are checked off before you even think about installing tile.
- The tile you choose must be suitable for floors. Much tile available is manufactured for use on walls and is not strong or wear-resistant enough for floor use.
Given those two factors, tile floors have their pros and cons:
* Water-resistant (if installed properly)
* Easy to clean (except that the grout lines catch dirt)
* Cool to the touch (great if you're in a warm climate)
* Excellent for in-floor radiant heating systems (great if you're in a cold climate!)
* Hard: dropped dishes will break, feet and legs may get sore
Tile is one of the most flexible materials you can use from a design point of view. You can do anything from a field of plain squares to a multi-colored, multi-shaped, multi-bordered extravaganza. Design choices can make an area seem larger or smaller, direct the eye to a focal point, mark off areas for different uses, soothe you or wake you up.
Kitchen Backsplashes - Tile Ideas

Here's a backsplash using mixed sizes of glass tile in a range of hues in a similar color range. Although there's a fair amount of white grout here, the random pattern means that dirt won't jump out at you as much as it would with a more regular pattern. One thing to be careful of with a 'random" design is that you make it random enough: on the right in this picture, just above the back corner of the cooktop, too many of the grout lines line up vertically and it introduces a design line which shouldn't be there.

This is more glass tile, this time a regular checkerboard on the lower half and stripes on the upper half of the backsplash. This is a bit "busy" for my personal taste but it's certainly decorative. It could be toned down by using fewer colors, or jazzed up by using more.

Tile from the 1970's showing just how well it can wear. This installation has probably been re-grouted at some point, and the tile design is dated, but it's still in fine shape and if you enjoy the color would still be worth keeping.

Another older installation showing some discoloration in the grout - but it hardly shows against the pattern and color of the tiles.

An all-white mosaic tile backsplash. If I was going to maintain a mosaic, myself I would want one with more color and pattern to make it worthwhile. If it's going to be plain white, I'd go for bigger tiles.

This all-white installation uses larger tiles with a subtle textured pattern which would be easy to clean as well as decorative.
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Kitchen Tile style books
For ideas and inspiration
Tile Style: Creating Beautiful Kitchens, Baths, and Interiors with Tile by Heather Adams, Earl G. Adams
With Stone and Designing a Home with Wood, Heather more...0 points
Glass Tile Inspirations for Kitchens And Baths by Patricia Hart McMillan, Katharine Kaye McMillan
Stunningly beautiful, high performance glass tiles more...0 points
Complete Tile by Steve Cory
Start approaching all kinds of indoor and outdoor more...0 points
Tile Style for the Home: Kitchens, Baths, and More by Tina Skinner
This book illustrates almost 500 contemporary tile more...0 points
Can't Fail Color Schemes--Kitchen & Bath: How to Choose Color for Stone and Tile Surfaces, Cabinets & Walls by Amy Wax
Can't Fail Color Schemes--Kitchens and Baths addresses more...0 points
The best book ever on laying tile
Setting Tile (Fine Homebuilding)
Amazon Price: $4.89 (as of 02/15/2012)![]()
Of the many I have read in the process of researching my own tile projects, this is THE best book on actually laying tile.
There are no pretty pictures to give you ideas, but there is page after page of detailed, specific information on exactly how to go about a tiling project, whether wall or floor, wet or dry, heavy or light use - it's all here from the all-important substrate the tile is attached to, to the final grout and sealer.
If you plan to do your own tiling, it's a must-have: if you don't, then you need this book so you know whether your tile guy is doing a high quality job or one that will fail long before it should.
Tile How-to books
The nitty-gritty of how to install tile
Tile Your World: John Bridge's New Tile Setting Book by John P. Bridge
A comprehensive and in-depth guide for amateur and more...0 points
Tiling Complete (Taunton's Complete) by Michael Schweit, Robin Nicholas
Written with the DIYer in mind, this all-encompassing more...0 points
Complete Tiling (Stanley Complete Projects Made Easy) by Stanley
Detailed photos and easy-to-follow presentation for more...0 points
Tiling 1-2-3 (Home Depot ... 1-2-3) by The Home Depot
A comprehensive do-it-yourself tiling book that in more...0 points
Tiling Step-by-Step (Step-By-Step) by Better Homes and Gardens
Clear, step-by-step instructions and photos that illustrate more...0 points
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Kitchen Remodeling on Facebook
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Questions about Kitchen Tiles
If you've got questions about kitchen tiles, ask them here and I'll do my best to find the answer for you.
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johnncrick
Feb 14, 2012 @ 11:29 pm | delete
- Nice tiles.
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DogWatchColumbus Jan 13, 2012 @ 4:05 pm | delete
- Needed this lens. My kitchen suffered a long slow leak, so now we're remodeling all of it! What a job! Now onto backsplashes and I'm having a tough time deciding...thanks for the tips!
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mytilebacksplash
Dec 26, 2011 @ 8:12 pm | delete
- I think it is just amazing the selection of tiles available!
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inhousefinancing
Dec 8, 2011 @ 12:40 pm | delete
- My brother is currently using natural stone back splash behind the stove, marble counter area and sink. It is work but the finished product is second to none. Great lens.
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ceramictiles
Dec 5, 2011 @ 10:12 am | delete
- Tiled backsplashes are a great feature to have around the sink if you have wallpaper so as not to damage the wallpaper. Some nice designs featured in this lens.
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DSVentures
Nov 9, 2011 @ 6:02 pm | delete
- I agree with @rmstouffer tile the floors before cabinets go in! I am also partial to a natural stone for back-splashes
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rmstouffer
Sep 23, 2010 @ 6:40 am | delete
- It's important that you have the tile installed before you go ahead and install kitchen cabinets. This will make the cabinet installation much easier and there won't be a chance of grout cracking out from around the base of the cabinets.
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Lee Lindsay
Sep 19, 2010 @ 8:15 pm | delete
- Can you use the same tile on your kitchen wall as on your kitchen floor?
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kevinw1
Sep 20, 2010 @ 11:16 am | delete
- Yes you can, though if the floor tile is especially thick, you may have to be especially careful about holding it up on the wall while it dries.
The other way round doesn't work, though - you can't use wall tile on the floor, it won't hold up under the wear.
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kevinw1
Aug 25, 2009 @ 1:15 pm | in reply to joe | delete
- I can think of three ways of dealing with this, but there may be more.
1. Shim up the counter so it is level. If the counter is screwed to the cabinets from underneath, you may be able to loosen the screws and insert wedges to level the countertop.
2. Do what the books say - make the bottom row of tiles not a full tile high, so all the tiles in the row are cut, and the slight diagonal caused by the out-of-level counter is much less noticeable.
3. Accept the variable gap. It will be less obvious if you have a long counter than if you have a short one, and if you're using grout color that blends with the tiles rather than contrasting. You could try taping up a row of tiles in position, and seeing how much the gap bothers you.
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by kevinw1
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