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14
Apr
denouement

The Way Slate Tile is Supposed to Look

by denouementComment Published at 19:4119:411 comments 1 comments158 Visits 158 Visits
This post is from from my other blog here

As a cost cutting measure we did some additional finishing work in the basement rather than have our incompetent contractor and his unsupervised crew do it. Finishing was definitely not their strong point, to put it mildly. We decided to buy more of the slate tiles we had them install in the sunroom and entry ways to put on the unfinished concrete floor in the basement. When our contractor's guys first installed the tile it looked great for about one day before it got a gray haze and just looked like a dirty mess. No amount of cleaning would help, the tile would look stellar when wet and then dry gray and boring. It drove me insane. So when we laid the new tile down we decided to actually read up on the best way to install slate tile and realized they had made a big mistake—surprise, surprise. Fortunately we were smart enough to do some research and come up with an infinitely better way to do things.

Since slate is a natural stone tile it is prone to breaking apart and capturing a lot of dust and grit in its pores. What our contractor's guys should have done is laid the tile and then cleaned and sealed it before grouting. When you grout you essentially have to spread the grout on the entire surface of the tile and then wipe it off after the grout has sets. The varied, uneven surface of slate makes washing off the grout very difficult and then all that grout in the pores is what gives you the hazy look. If they had sealed the tile before grouting it would have been much easier to clean off the grout and the rich color would have been preserved. That would have certainly been the easier way to do things. They could have even done the grout first and then cleaned the tile really well and finished it off with the sealer, but again they had no eye for finishing details and could not have cared less about doing things correctly.

To remedy this Eric and I got down on our hands and knees and did three passing of scrubbing our new slate tiles in the basement after it was set in the mortar—yes, it's that dirty naturally. Then we put one layer of the tile sealer on. When wet the tiles looked amazing: beautiful, bright and vibrant. We waited with baited breathe for the tile to dry. And when they did they still had that wet look, no more haze! Then we grouted and it was infinitely easier to wipe off the newly sealed tiles which preserved their lovely colors. We will definitely go back to do another coat of the sealer as soon we've finished all the painting in the basement, but the difference is night and day as you can see. We plan to go back and deep clean and seal the rest of the tile that was done incorrectly by the contractor in the near future, which will be much harder than it would have been if they had done it correctly in the first place. Oh well. At least we should get the same results in the end.

Here is the tile in the sunroom, which has not been thoroughly cleaned or sealed yet. See how gray and boring it is. Also see how cute Vincent is:

Same exact tile in the basement, all the tiles outside the red lines have been cleaned and sealed. There's much more of it done that you can't see in this photo. What we are showing here is that everything inside the red line yet to have the grout cleaned off of it. Big difference and this is just one coat of the sealer. It may have took hour and hours and been a real pain but we love it! 24 hours later they still look exactly the same. Yay! Next we will do another layer of the tile sealer and use a grout sealer to seal the grout. That will make the grout a slightly darker gray. After that these tiles should be good with just mopping for 3-5 years before they need another deep cleaning and sealing. Behold their majesty:

   

 

Comments


 ParagonRenovations
Journeyman ParagonRenovations | Vote: | April 2008
Re: The Way Slate Tile is Supposed to Look

Very good advice!

You can also clean and seal the tiles as they come out of the box.  It is ESSENTIAL ESSENTIAL ESSENTIAL to seal any pourous stone like slate PRIOR to grouting.  The reason as mentioned in the article is that it is a pourous material and it has POURS!!!  Pours are like sponges and spponges ABSORB.  They absorb the color out of the grout and there is no getting it out most times. 

You should seal the tile at LEAST one time and more coats is not harmful but make sure you follow the manufacturers time threshold recommendations.  If it says recoat the tile within 20 minutes and if not resealed within 20 minutes wait 24-48  hours then listen and wait.

Again you can clean and seal the tiles as they come out of the box OR you can set them and then seal the tiles but NEVER grout without sealing them you will be sorry.

Also you can get color enhancing sealers that really make the slate pop with vibrance.  Be careful of the brand you selsct however.  If you do not like a glossy surface some of the color enhancing sealers will give you a shiny look (not highly polished like marble but shiny like wet).  You can get matte finish color enhancing sealers but once you enhance the slate you can't un-enhance it so test it on a scrap piece of slate before you commit to it.  If you simply want to seal the tiles and maintain some of the natural patina then the regular sealer is the way to go.

Denouement sorry to hear you found an incompetant contractor and wish you and your the best with all future projects.  Also for those of you looking to do slate you can really get some stunning results by turning the slate at a diagonal or framing a diagonal pattern.  Don't be afraid to experiment with the materials and take some "risks" with your design.

Good luck to you all and I hope you all have good results from the contractors you choose!

Sincerely,

James D. Van Raden/ Owner

Paragon Renovations

Moorhead, MN USA



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