I think he did a stellar job explaining everything quite well. However, I might point out that you NEVER want to swirl your thin set mortar before applying tile. ALWAYS straight lines and back-butter each tile to insure a perfect contact and no possibility of corner cracking from un-even weight. Just a suggestion. Thanks
Thanks Tommy for keeping us tilers in business. Giving advice on tiling on to a chipboard for using PVA as a primer and SPF, these tiles will be up within the year. We look forward to rectifying all tiling jobs that follow this video
Hi guys, nice tutorial, just two small hints : You should ALWAYS leave a gap of 5 - 8mm between end of the tile and the wall, NEVER push a grout in it (unless it is elastic, goes for the corners where walls meet as well), always use sylicone(because of tiny movements of the floor(walls). Saves a lot of headache, because tiny crack in the corner(which WILL HAPPEN) is really hard to clean, you may not be able even to see it but water always finds its way ... use dark opaque sylicon (not transparent or white which will show tiny specks of mold through after some time (same goes for kitchen worktops). When grouting, you should ALWAYS push the grout in at the angle of 45 degrees to the tiles(goes especially for the cleaning of the grouted tiles with a sponge as well!!), otherwise the sponge is pulling the grout out of the joint what results in uneven depth of the joint between tiles. Hope it saves some unnecessary work and improves the looks of the tiled spaces.
Thank you, I will be installing tile for my first time tomorrow on a job. After watching this, I am a true professional, my boss will have no idea this will be my first time laying tile because of this video. After the job is complete I shall celebrate with tea and crumpets in honor of the man working in this video! Subscribed! :D
What a fantastic video. I immediately want to buy this guy a beer. Thank you so much! A great no-BS presentation. No extra crap, no nonsense. Very pro, very succinct.
Thanks for the video, really helpful for a beginner. I watched it many times and then tiled my kitchen floor the other day. It went really well. I have to admit I was commentating to myself all along the way with Andy's accent while pilin' on the ad'eesiff! :)
That is a brilliant video mate, really well explained, what lots of professional people don't always realise is exactly how much knowledge they have and how they sometimes take it for granted what they know hence they don't always fully explain the whole procedure to the lay person. Superbe and thanks.
Tommy you are the man, i used to sell flooring for five years but now I'm actually doing it for a living and you are awesome supreme for advice! Your floors look fantastic! Thanks for your time dude!
Very detailed tutorial you've outlined. We find so many installers that use a metal float to grout stone floors with. The process leaves fine scratches all over.
This is one of the best how-to videos I've seen. By completing an entire project, you've managed to show us how to deal with the many issues we'd encounter along the way. Close ups of saw usage was very insightful.
I watched this video, and I do not think so. Many problems. Not everyone has an electric tile cutter! Marking that has drawn on the floor of this "instructor" does not match the tiles. The joints between the tiles are uneven! Chipped after electricity cut. And others. This work is not for the room in which you will live!
True but you can always angle grinder the tiles. A little dusty but gets the job done. We use masking tape between the tiles to help get the tiles to stick together better - helps keeps the spacing even. A few good tips though.
Exactly! When I use angle grinder with tile blade for dry cutting (sleek), I make the cut at an angle of ~25 degrees in the direction of an unnecessary part. This avoids chipping much better and in this case you can don't use duct tape! If "little dusty" you always can use a vacuum cleaner and a dust collecting pump nozzle (usually from diamond cup wheels). Cheers!
Cut the shorter length on the electric cutter and then run the ruby up the long length and it clicks off neater. Stops the wet cutter chipping the tile over a long length
2. What about checking for flex and flatness in the wooden floor? You need to reinforce the floor with minimum 18mm water resistant board (preferably 22mm) or 12mm cement board before you lay tiles, screwed down to the existing boards at 150mm intervals, and bedded into tile adhesive to take up bumps and dips. If you do not do this, the floor will flex as you walk on it and your grout will crack and tiles come loose in no time.
I never considered tiling before, but you made it seem quite straight forward. It is obvious you have been doing this a long time and it is great to see a tradesman in action. You were very instructional and gave heaps of tips along the way. Great work thanks.
I've got 10 years experience, and i'm not ashamed to check out how other people are doing it and to brush up on my own skills, plus research new developments in my trade. I wouldn't tile a floor like this guy, but i know every tiler has slightly different methods. In depth video useful for DIY peeps, thanks for the post
Living in a rented apartment at the moment and it has a cold marble floor with no insulation. To make matters worse, the stone is coarse and the dirt gets into the crevices. I considered polishing but the floors look ugly and it was going to cost more than retiling. Thanks for sharing. Seeing as how I'll probably be in this place for another year and a half, it's worth the money and effort. Again, thanks for sharing.
best by far the most informative and comprehensive step by step on any job I have ever seen. well done. someone that can explain how to do their job to others that well is a rarity. some are great at doing but useless at teaching. well done.
Excellent video as always. just to add, if your are using an electric tile cutter, I would definitely advice a dust mask as well as safety glasses and ear protectors as it can get very noisy and the dust mask stops you breathing in all that dust. #Safety first
Great video, can't understand why so many haters---------- I'm not a pro at tiling , but am precise . it's the end result that counts and you are good!!!
Everybody please make sure you waterproofing your bathroom before tiling ,its a timber floor when the water goes through grout joints it then starts to rot your timber floor ,and then leak everywhere .
Great video. I was just given 15 boxes of italian marble and will be doing my bathroom. Just bought a wet tile cutter and headed to buy the rest of what I need. Take care!
Superb video and equally well filmed, very well explained and exactly how I have been laying floors for years, did smile when you counted on your Marigolds, good one fella.
Never ever lay tile directly on a wood floor. Wood expands and contracts naturally as it breathes. Tile should ALWAYS be laid over an approved underlayment to allow it to be independent of the sub structure.
I find this video much more helpful than the one on your channel... oh wait, you don't have one! This guy is helping the less knowledgeable understand at the very least the basics of how a job like this is done, i've learnt something here watching this. If you have extensive knowledge in this area why are you watching a "How To Tile A Floor" video? It would be a lot more helpful if you post a response video and explain/show a better way of doing this.
+Robert Walls just look at him, he's putting the spacers just for the show, he is spacing the tiles manually just perfect; I guess this is the 432.598th tiling he's doing :) but yes, indeed, very relaxing video :P
Thanks Tommy I'm about to tile 1200 sq ft in my basement. I thought I had it contracted out but on two different occasions he said he'd be out to start it's been a no show, doesn't return my phone calls either. I'm pretty easy to get along with but won't be jacked with...he's done. I have a little experience with this type of work so with your tips and refresher for me I think I'll be alright. Thanks you just help me save around 5,000 bucks.
the speed with which he drops the tile almost already in place shows the clear ease of the true pro. It's a pro that makes it look easy. Puts me off even trying
Brilliant video/channel, ive just spent a good 2 hours going through most of your videos, out of boredom at first, then got more and more interested, and although I have no need to do any of that DIY for a while i already feel confident that i could do the vast majority of everything you have shown! Makes we want go practice LOL, and will save a fortune from not paying someone else. Great job keep it up, and do more !!!!!!
Great video and informative...The only thing I do different is I do not grout the whole floor and wash the whole floor...I would grout and wash in sections...It takes a lot to grout the whole floor and wash the whole floor several times.
Good video my friend and very informative. Quick tip that might help, I use a sponge mop to clean my floor after the grout has harden up instead of being on your knees with a sponge in your hand
Fantastic video, I was thinking if should watch few minutes of this (since was thinking first to put tiles on my bathroom that was thinking of renovating.. 46 minutes later and enjoyed every minute of it, everything filmed nicely and beautifully explained and shown.
This is how most tile professionals set up the layout in my area. I've been working in tile for 7 years and this type of method can be very fast once you get the hang of it. Of course, we use laser levels off of our initial wall line and measure for 2 tiles and 2 grout spaces in order to get the 2nd perpendicular line. Basically, this is a basic version of how to begin a grid pattern which is very fast and allows several installers to begin at different ends of any job.
I was wondering how they maintain the perfect space between the tiles, now i know the secret it is the spacer being used. The tiling starting from the middle meaning only tiles being cut at the sides to give a uniform look. Great Stufff. Thanks
makes cuts around doors and walls alot easier, but I love the rapid set thinset....I do alot of tile and makes it so much faster.......you can tell this guy been doin this for awhile
Thanks Tommy, my boss was doing the grout and starting to panic and lose his temper,as usual. ,I watched your video and went out there and got it done.Thank You
thanks for the great videos! I watched this one a few times and the bath tub wall one as well and was able to do my first tile job! Everything turned out very nice - thanks again!
being critical the tiles could be moved side to side to bed down and if the troweling lines were straight there would be more adhesive and tile contact to minimise chance opf breaking under load but pretty good apart from that
Thanks Tommy, despite the negative comments I suspect your work holds up OK. Only one thing: you commendably emphasize safety glasses, but you might also mention hearing protection. Those cutters make a racket.
PVA is soluble. But i don't know why he has to put water in there. You just pretty much put it as it is. He's gotta have an explanation on why he did that and I would like to know about it. I've read that there is a correct ratio in mixing PVA with water. I'm eager to learn about that, too! Anyhow, this is a great video for amateurs like me :) thank you so much!
Hi Tommy, thanks for the wonderful video. I love your English accent- very easy to follow directions. I'm faced with a remodel of a small bathroom that involves removing 3 layers of vinyl before I hit the subfloor. I found layer of glue underneath that original layer of vinyl over the plywood which will be challenging to remove. I'll need to peel off all of those layers before I can put down the 1/4" Durock cement board underlayment. The other challenge I have is my rear-outlet toilet. I'm not sure why our townhouse units here in the U.S. had these installed back in the 70's as these are not your typical in-floor waste pipe toilet models. I found out they're more used in the UK. If I strip out the vinyl that which the toilet was originally sitting on and tile over that area, it may be much higher now than that of the thickness of the vinyl tiles which means the toilet will probably be propped-up a bit. Do you recommend that I leave the layers of vinyl where they are under the toilet and tile around? Doing so will be noticeably ugly because the toilet is now below tile level. The wax ring is flushed to the backwall and looks like it cannot be adjusted. This is really baffling to me. Any recommendations are greatly appreciated- Thanks!!
Excellent Video, thanks. My local tile vendor tells me that I need to put down a layer of special board before tiling on to a wooden floor. My house is 12 years old and the floor looks similar to this one. Am I being spun a line here? Thanks.
I totally agree with you. If they have a better skills compare to the guy, then they should make their own presentation. The Guy on the video did his best in presenting the simplest way.
Great Video, any chance you guys can do a short video on "how to determine the starting point when tiling the floor when the room is not square. Or do you just find the middle of the room and work your way out? Cheers Nick
thank you so much for taking the time to make this incredible video. i have learned so much in a short 46 minute video to install tile. very informative and professional.
I think he did a stellar job explaining everything quite well. However, I might point out that you NEVER want to swirl your thin set mortar before applying tile. ALWAYS straight lines and back-butter each tile to insure a perfect contact and no possibility of corner cracking from un-even weight. Just a suggestion. Thanks
Thanks Tommy for keeping us tilers in business. Giving advice on tiling on to a chipboard for using PVA as a primer and SPF, these tiles will be up within the year. We look forward to rectifying all tiling jobs that follow this video
Hi guys, nice tutorial, just two small hints :
You should ALWAYS leave a gap of 5 - 8mm between end of the tile and the wall, NEVER push a grout in it (unless it is elastic, goes for the corners where walls meet as well), always use sylicone(because of tiny movements of the floor(walls). Saves a lot of headache, because tiny crack in the corner(which WILL HAPPEN) is really hard to clean, you may not be able even to see it but water always finds its way ... use dark opaque sylicon (not transparent or white which will show tiny specks of mold through after some time (same goes for kitchen worktops).
When grouting, you should ALWAYS push the grout in at the angle of 45 degrees to the tiles(goes especially for the cleaning of the grouted tiles with a sponge as well!!), otherwise the sponge is pulling the grout out of the joint what results in uneven depth of the joint between tiles.
Hope it saves some unnecessary work and improves the looks of the tiled spaces.
Thank you, I will be installing tile for my first time tomorrow on a job. After watching this, I am a true professional, my boss will have no idea this will be my first time laying tile because of this video. After the job is complete I shall celebrate with tea and crumpets in honor of the man working in this video! Subscribed! :D
What a fantastic video. I immediately want to buy this guy a beer.
Thank you so much! A great no-BS presentation. No extra crap, no nonsense. Very pro, very succinct.
I just took a look around my room and wondered what it would look like with different tiles, Now I want to be a builder. Great video guys.
Thanks for the video, really helpful for a beginner. I watched it many times and then tiled my kitchen floor the other day. It went really well. I have to admit I was commentating to myself all along the way with Andy's accent while pilin' on the ad'eesiff! :)
That is a brilliant video mate, really well explained, what lots of professional people don't always realise is exactly how much knowledge they have and how they sometimes take it for granted what they know hence they don't always fully explain the whole procedure to the lay person. Superbe and thanks.
Tommy you are the man, i used to sell flooring for five years but now I'm actually doing it for a living and you are awesome supreme
for advice! Your floors look fantastic! Thanks for your time dude!
Very detailed tutorial you've outlined. We find so many installers that use a metal float to grout stone floors with. The process leaves fine scratches all over.
Just a tip score your tile in the Ruby cut before u put it through the wet cutter. It saves your tile chipping. 👍😀
This is one of the best how-to videos I've seen. By completing an entire project, you've managed to show us how to deal with the many issues we'd encounter along the way. Close ups of saw usage was very insightful.
this was a really well spoken instructional video. calm, normal paced, almost feels im listening to a cooking channel.
I've watched a shit load of tiling videos and this by far the most informative, professional one i've ever seen... Props to you guys!
I watched this video, and I do not think so. Many problems. Not everyone has an electric tile cutter! Marking that has drawn on the floor of this "instructor" does not match the tiles. The joints between the tiles are uneven! Chipped after electricity cut. And others. This work is not for the room in which you will live!
True but you can always angle grinder the tiles. A little dusty but gets the job done.
We use masking tape between the tiles to help get the tiles to stick together better - helps keeps the spacing even.
A few good tips though.
Dude, use a grinder with a tile blade... Maybe you should make a video better if you think there's issues!
Exactly! When I use angle grinder with tile blade for dry cutting (sleek), I make the cut at an angle of ~25 degrees in the direction of an unnecessary part. This avoids chipping much better and in this case you can don't use duct tape! If "little dusty" you always can use a vacuum cleaner and a dust collecting pump nozzle (usually from diamond cup wheels). Cheers!
What about the dust???
Cut the shorter length on the electric cutter and then run the ruby up the long length and it clicks off neater. Stops the wet cutter chipping the tile over a long length
2. What about checking for flex and flatness in the wooden floor? You need to reinforce the floor with minimum 18mm water resistant board (preferably 22mm) or 12mm cement board before you lay tiles, screwed down to the existing boards at 150mm intervals, and bedded into tile adhesive to take up bumps and dips. If you do not do this, the floor will flex as you walk on it and your grout will crack and tiles come loose in no time.
I never considered tiling before, but you made it seem quite straight forward. It is obvious you have been doing this a long time and it is great to see a tradesman in action. You were very instructional and gave heaps of tips along the way. Great work thanks.
I'm about to do my Dads bathroom floor so glad i found this. Thank you, you certainly gave me a few heads up for sure.
I've got 10 years experience, and i'm not ashamed to check out how other people are doing it and to brush up on my own skills, plus research new developments in my trade. I wouldn't tile a floor like this guy, but i know every tiler has slightly different methods. In depth video useful for DIY peeps, thanks for the post
Living in a rented apartment at the moment and it has a cold marble floor with no insulation. To make matters worse, the stone is coarse and the dirt gets into the crevices. I considered polishing but the floors look ugly and it was going to cost more than retiling. Thanks for sharing. Seeing as how I'll probably be in this place for another year and a half, it's worth the money and effort. Again, thanks for sharing.
best by far the most informative and comprehensive step by step on any job I have ever seen. well done. someone that can explain how to do their job to others that well is a rarity. some are great at doing but useless at teaching. well done.
my job came out PERFECT!!! thanks, for the tips...I was prepared and NAILED it...
You make it look so easy. True sign of a craftsman.
good video , i am a tiler by trade and worked all over europe , this guy knows what he is talking about ...
This wouldn't fly here in England, this guy is nothing but a handyman...he's jack of all trades..master of none.
Excellent video as always. just to add, if your are using an electric tile cutter, I would definitely advice a dust mask as well as safety glasses and ear protectors as it can get very noisy and the dust mask stops you breathing in all that dust. #Safety first
I have watched a lot of tiling videos but none were as good as yours. Thank you, Andy!
Great video, its nice to watch someone that doesn't constantly repeat themselves all the time! Cheers.
Great video, can't understand why so many haters---------- I'm not a pro at tiling , but am precise . it's the end result that counts and you are good!!!
always trowel in straight lines noob or the air gets stuck underneath and u risk cipping & breaking.l2tile
Everybody please make sure you waterproofing your bathroom before tiling ,its a timber floor when the water goes through grout joints it then starts to rot your timber floor ,and then leak everywhere .
that's what a sealer and caulk is for.
brilliant vid mate, job from start to finish, i'll watch this over and over until the process sinks in, cheers! (mature student)
Great video. I was just given 15 boxes of italian marble and will be doing my bathroom. Just bought a wet tile cutter and headed to buy the rest of what I need. Take care!
Superb video and equally well filmed, very well explained and exactly how I have been laying floors for years, did smile when you counted on your Marigolds, good one fella.
The effort you've done to teach people this. Thank you!
Wonderful video, simply explained with all the details needed to do the job. Thank you so much.
Never ever lay tile directly on a wood floor. Wood expands and contracts naturally as it breathes. Tile should ALWAYS be laid over an approved underlayment to allow it to be independent of the sub structure.
I find this video much more helpful than the one on your channel... oh wait, you don't have one!
This guy is helping the less knowledgeable understand at the very least the basics of how a job like this is done, i've learnt something here watching this.
If you have extensive knowledge in this area why are you watching a "How To Tile A Floor" video?
It would be a lot more helpful if you post a response video and explain/show a better way of doing this.
Very helpful, I have a concrete floor to tile, I've done it before but this video will speed the job up a lot. With thanks, John
I could watch this guy tile all day, very relaxing.
Funny bastard
+Robert Walls just look at him, he's putting the spacers just for the show, he is spacing the tiles manually just perfect; I guess this is the 432.598th tiling he's doing :)
but yes, indeed, very relaxing video :P
It is indeed
Robert Walls
How to drill floor tiles
Thanks Tommy I'm about to tile 1200 sq ft in my basement.
I thought I had it contracted out but on two different occasions he said he'd be out to start it's been a no show, doesn't return my phone calls either.
I'm pretty easy to get along with but won't be jacked with...he's done.
I have a little experience with this type of work so with your tips and refresher for me I think I'll be alright.
Thanks you just help me save around 5,000 bucks.
really nice job! only for the grout to crack in future time :( he was lazy in not using backer board.
Probably the best instructional video for DIY I have seen! Good Job. Feeling confident that I will be able to do a good job tiling my bathroom
the speed with which he drops the tile almost already in place shows the clear ease of the true pro. It's a pro that makes it look easy. Puts me off even trying
Brilliant video/channel, ive just spent a good 2 hours going through most of your videos, out of boredom at first, then got more and more interested, and although I have no need to do any of that DIY for a while i already feel confident that i could do the vast majority of everything you have shown! Makes we want go practice LOL, and will save a fortune from not paying someone else. Great job keep it up, and do more !!!!!!
Excellent video mate, I just bought a house and I'm doing the work myself, to save money, and feel proud.. :)
This is superb video to learn tiling, you are very good teacher!
Franstatic fast and no fancy detail . I like this video. good job mate .
I have been tiling for 75 years and this man is showing the wrong way to tile!
Great video and informative...The only thing I do different is I do not grout the whole floor and wash the whole floor...I would grout and wash in sections...It takes a lot to grout the whole floor and wash the whole floor several times.
Good video my friend and very informative. Quick tip that might help, I use a sponge mop to clean my floor after the grout has harden up instead of being on your knees with a sponge in your hand
Best tiling video around. As with all Top Professionals he makes it look easy
Nice compact video. However, I had been told that swirling should not be done when using the notch trowel. What is your view on that?
Fantastic video, I was thinking if should watch few minutes of this (since was thinking first to put tiles on my bathroom that was thinking of renovating.. 46 minutes later and enjoyed every minute of it, everything filmed nicely and beautifully explained and shown.
Good video, anybody watching this and understands it should be able to do a decent job in their own house, just take your time!!
THANKS!! mine came out GREAT!!! you're a great teacher!
This is how most tile professionals set up the layout in my area. I've been working in tile for 7 years and this type of method can be very fast once you get the hang of it. Of course, we use laser levels off of our initial wall line and measure for 2 tiles and 2 grout spaces in order to get the 2nd perpendicular line. Basically, this is a basic version of how to begin a grid pattern which is very fast and allows several installers to begin at different ends of any job.
Excellent video. One of the best. Great tips from obviously someone who knows the work. Thank you.
a tip.comb the thin set straight so the air pushes out to prevent any voids under the tile,looks good though
I was wondering how they maintain the perfect space between the tiles, now i know the secret it is the spacer being used. The tiling starting from the middle meaning only tiles being cut at the sides to give a uniform look.
Great Stufff.
Thanks
This is the best how to tile video I have watched by far.
makes cuts around doors and walls alot easier, but I love the rapid set thinset....I do alot of tile and makes it so much faster.......you can tell this guy been doin this for awhile
Thanks Tommy, my boss was doing the grout and starting to panic and lose his temper,as usual. ,I watched your video and went out there and got it done.Thank You
i live in america but if this guy was over here i'd want him doing my tile.. this dude's a machine
Perfect. Exactly the information I needed. I am about to lay tile on a new sub-floor. I was going to start in a corner. Tommy, I'm subscribing!
Looks good to me, very informative and clear even for the novice to understand 10/10.
One of the most informative DIY videos I've seen, subscribed!
thanks for the great videos! I watched this one a few times and the bath tub wall one as well and was able to do my first tile job! Everything turned out very nice - thanks again!
being critical the tiles could be moved side to side to bed down and if the troweling lines were straight there would be more adhesive and tile contact to minimise chance opf breaking under load but pretty good apart from that
lol im not even doing anything where i need to know this lol i dont know why i watched the whole video but good job!
LampOfMagic
iv
Excellent... thanks for taking time to make this video.. I will use the techniques in the video to tile a couple of rooms in a rental house.
Thanks Tommy, despite the negative comments I suspect your work holds up OK. Only one thing: you commendably emphasize safety glasses, but you might also mention hearing protection. Those cutters make a racket.
i am watching and learning how to tile a floor very helpful safty classes and gloves are good to have as well
PVA is soluble. But i don't know why he has to put water in there. You just pretty much put it as it is. He's gotta have an explanation on why he did that and I would like to know about it. I've read that there is a correct ratio in mixing PVA with water. I'm eager to learn about that, too! Anyhow, this is a great video for amateurs like me :) thank you so much!
Hi Tommy, thanks for the wonderful video. I love your English accent- very easy to follow directions.
I'm faced with a remodel of a small bathroom that involves removing 3 layers of vinyl before I hit the subfloor. I found layer of glue underneath that original layer of vinyl over the plywood which will be challenging to remove. I'll need to peel off all of those layers before I can put down the 1/4" Durock cement board underlayment. The other challenge I have is my rear-outlet toilet. I'm not sure why our townhouse units here in the U.S. had these installed back in the 70's as these are not your typical in-floor waste pipe toilet models. I found out they're more used in the UK. If I strip out the vinyl that which the toilet was originally sitting on and tile over that area, it may be much higher now than that of the thickness of the vinyl tiles which means the toilet will probably be propped-up a bit. Do you recommend that I leave the layers of vinyl where they are under the toilet and tile around? Doing so will be noticeably ugly because the toilet is now below tile level. The wax ring is flushed to the backwall and looks like it cannot be adjusted. This is really baffling to me. Any recommendations are greatly appreciated- Thanks!!
Excellent Video, thanks. My local tile vendor tells me that I need to put down a layer of special board before tiling on to a wooden floor. My house is 12 years old and the floor looks similar to this one. Am I being spun a line here? Thanks.
Really helpful, just starting to tile our bathroom, lot more confident now. Thanks . rob. Spain.
how did it work out?
Very informative. Thanks. I was always told that a plywood subfloor is too flexible for ceramic tile.
Very good video for us diy-ers. Good level of detail. Grateful for you sharing it.
Thanks a lot for this very professional and helpful explanation!
well that way far easier to follow than previous tilling videos ive watched :)
I totally agree with you. If they have a better skills compare to the guy, then they should make their own presentation.
The Guy on the video did his best in presenting the simplest way.
First time doing ceramic tiles. This was very helpful. Thank you. Anything needed to know different when doing the shower stall?
Great Video, any chance you guys can do a short video on "how to determine the starting point when tiling the floor when the room is not square. Or do you just find the middle of the room and work your way out? Cheers Nick
thank you for that, you are very passionate about your demonstration,
Thank you Tommy!
+Tom Ausman Thank you for watching
That's one of the best how-to videos I've seen. Thank you.
Thanks for taking the time to share this. Much appreciated!
Thanks a lot. This is what i need right now.Tiling my bathroom.Cant relay on "pro" builders.
I really love your videos..
Wonderful video. Excellent for beginners! Thanks Tommy.
Absolutely the best tile video I have ever seen. Awesome!
A very decent presentation geared toward 'amateurs', nonetheless, still very informative to those with skills. Nice job mate.
Excellent video, well explained. I'm surprised I watch the whole video due to the heavy accent,, but I did. Thank you for posting.
This man is the GOAT. Beautiful
Thanks for sharing, I enjoy the tutorial video. I won't be doing it myself, because I don't have the cutting machine.
Great refresher course for me. thanks for you efforts, this was very useful
Grrrrrrite video mite! Thanks for helping me through my Sunday afternoon project.... one criticism..... get english subtitles!
thank you so much for taking the time to make this incredible video. i have learned so much in a short 46 minute video to install tile. very informative and professional.
Fantastic Video. Followed the instructions and it worked for me.
Great video! Actually looking forward to laying my own tile floor in the future. Thanks!