Tips to Create Perfect Bathroom Floor Tile Layout Plans

Your new house looks splendid! Every room that it has highlights your incessant love for style and beauty. The living room is truly alive, your bedrooms are cozy enough for you to always want to sleep and your kitchen looks ready for any big parties up ahead. However, many new homeowners are not particularly interested in involving their bathrooms into the exquisite level many of their rooms had experienced so far. If this is you, why not reconsider doing renovations for your bathroom floor tile layout plans?

First, you must consider the need for the best tile layout patterns. Some of these plans could play an effective trick by creating a wider range of perspective in your master bathroom project. You may do this by measuring the area covered by your bathroom and then choosing the bathroom floor layout plans best suited for the space and the theme. Will it look spacious to have a center collection of tiles of contrasting color to the other tiles, just to have a central focus for the bathroom? Or will using just plain tiles enough already?

To achieve this goal fruitfully, it would require you to prepare a layout plan for your dream bathroom. If all the accessories are already fixed and it would entirely be costly for you to change it, better make the most out of it. Are the bigger ceramic structures cluttered in a single narrow area? Using designed or colorful tiles in a complex arrangement would only add ugliness to the clogged appearance of your bathroom, so it would be best for you to just place simpler neutral colored tiles in these problem places.

However, if your bathroom is not yet filled with the basic ceramic accessories, you can make it very spacious by accurately planning ahead. Consider, for example, the shower door. Is it strategically placed relative to your desired focal point? Or, do you need to change the plans considering that fact that the swinging of the door narrows the area of your bathroom? Also, remember that your toilet should be away from the door’s lateral view.

As much as possible, place it to a hidden area, maybe behind a divider or the shower curtain. Moreover, always keep in mind the need for the bathroom’s user to actually have the ability to move inside while using the vanity or the sink. Each of these structures has a perimeter area around it that should not cross the other structure’s own perimeter area. However, if that is impossible, minimize the area two structures would share.

The next task for you to do is to completely tile the whole area. You may start doing that at the focal point of the free space in your design. This would not necessarily be the geometric center of the whole area. The adhesive usually chosen to place the tiles is some cement mixture. With that, before actually placing your tiles, provide yourself with a sufficient amount of this mixture.

Then, with a trowel, carefully fill in the tile and completely put it in its place. You may also want to give it a wiggle just to smoothen the distribution of cement below. In placing the next tiles, use a cork separator to maintain a constant space in between each tile. As you finish tiling everything up, apply the grout for each separation distance. After it had tried, you may also apply the grout sealer.

And now your bathroom matches your lofty house! Enjoy your own abode!

By master