How Geeks become Do-It-Yourselfers and Tile their Kitchen
Perhaps you'll see yourself, Dear Reader, in this story.
My family is Handy. Well, let me qualify that. The {set of all people in my family who are not me is Handy}. That's "Handy" with a Capital-H.
My dad, was a Firefighter for thirty years, and my brother
(pictured in a headlock and covered in baking soda at right. He's the short one. Of course, now he's a Triathalon-running-biking-swimming 6'2" ninja, but at the time of this picture I could beat his *ss. Didn't last long, needless to say.)
is also a Firefighter. They are both handy. Josh and his wife also run Starry Nights Stables filled with all sorts of Handy things that they build themselves like horse runs from scratch.
I, on the other hand, hire a guy to mow my lawn. You get the idea.
Seemed like I'd be the non-Handy Hanselman and I'd resigned myself to the situation. Recently we decided to remodel our kitchen. We'd had a bunch of tiles just fall completely off the counter, messed up cabinets, scratched walls, yada yada yada. Seemed time to do something about it.
We tend to research things a lot before we take action so we started at the library. We got books on tile, on counters, on painting, etc. We went to Lowe's and The Home Despot. I had little confidence in my ability to make this happen, but Josh and Dad said they'd be happy to help. They came up a few weekends (they live 90 minutes away) and helped tear out the old counter and level the cabinets for the new one.
When it came time to decide about the "backsplash" - the tile that's up against the wall, connected to the counter in case there's any confusion ;) - I figured I'd hire a guy. Josh and Dad had really worked hard but I didn't want them to keep driving up to help. Both assured me that I helped them in substantive ways, but for some reason occasionally running Windows Update or installing SpyBot didn't seem to be a fair exchange for tearing up a kitchen. (Yes, I know they are family and family helps folks without the need for payback, but you're missing the point. You have no focus!)
Mo said that if we did the tile ourselves that there'd be a Sense of Accomplishment.™ I figured that we could buy a Sense of Accomplishment™ while sitting on the couch. But, her wisdom prevailed and I declared that I'd be doing the tile myself. We smiled with a feeling of pending accomplishment. This will go well, right?
Aside: Once three years ago I tried to change out the Water Filter on the Refrigerator and hooked it up backwards. The resulting explosion of carbon dust from the filter is currently hovering over Fiji moving in a South-South-Westerly direction.
Realizing that I am in fact, not Handy, I decided that I'd need to supplement my skills with Tools. This, Dear Reader, is how the Geek becomes a Do-It-Yourselfer. One word people - lasers. But, I'm getting ahead of myself.
Here's how Geeks do Tile.
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Go to a Tile store and borrow their board of Tile. This is a big wood board covered in Tile.
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Scan said Tile board. Scan it into PhotoShop. Create a 1:1 scale model of the Tile design and print it out on your Inkjet printer.
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There's nothing like fake inkjet tile taped to your kitchen wall to give you a clear idea of what the final design is going to look like.
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Aside: "Random" is hard. I ended up coming up with a pattern for this tile that would look random for a moment, then looked like a pattern later without falling into a checkerboard or moire thing. It also made efficient use of the colors of tile we had. But making it look Random was tricky.
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Measure like ten times. Seriously. We were using 2" tile that turned out to be actually 1 7/8" so a little thought had to go into it.
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I estimated I'd need 386 tiles. Apparently they don't sell 2" tiles all onesy-twosy like that, so don't go to a Tile Store and declare "I require 386 two-inch tiles."
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We ended up buying 12" squares with 36 tiles each and had a few left over.
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When the tiles show up, lay it ALL out exactly as it should be. Sticking tiles on the wall isn't the time to decide how it ought to look.
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Get a freakin' laser. Chalk lines? Pencils? For Handy People, I say. Geeks use Lasers. I'd say it made it so much easier, but since this was the first time I'd done tile, I don't have another frame of reference. Still, pencils? Please.
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Did I mention lay it all out ahead of time? Do that. I also put little pieces of paper every 5 tiles so I could tell where 10 inches would be.
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Decide if you can do the whole thing without cutting a tile. One wall was 81" so I'd need to either use 40 tiles and cut one, or make up the space over the whole span. I was able to add the 1" by making the 1/8" grout an extra 1/40" wider between each tile. You really don't want to show up at the other side of the wall unprepared. :)
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Spacers - use a metric crapload of them. I used something like 1250 little plastic spacers to make the grout lines just so. Love 'em.
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Thinset is the cementy glue that you use to make the tile stick. Don't mix it yourself, get the premixed stuff.
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When you put the tiles on, twist them slightly as you push to get the maximum amount of the Thinset on the back of the thing. Use the Grout Float - that I called the "pressy rubber thing" before I learned it was a Grout Float - to push against the tiles and apply even pressure over the whole field.
I'm very happy to announce we now have a Sense of Accomplishment™ and that I have joined the ranks of Handy Hanselmen who are Do-It-Yourselfers.
P.S. I promise I won't even think about the opportunity cost of this whole operation.
P.P.S. OK, maybe a little.
About Scott
Scott Hanselman is a former professor, former Chief Architect in finance, now speaker, consultant, father, diabetic, and Microsoft employee. He is a failed stand-up comic, a cornrower, and a book author.
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Regarding tile, I came home from work one day years ago to find that my wife had completely ripped up half of our carpet in the living room and hallway. As I stood there dumbfounded she proudly announced that she was going to tile part of the floor. Six weeks later we had a beautiful tile design as the entryway to our house. Alls well that ends well. :)
Really makes you appreciate contractors don't it? You gonna try your hand at plumbing too? Ahh the smell of burning flux...
Also - tile is measured allowing for one grout seam. So the missing 1/8" is to account for the grout :).
I swear we had more lasers going in the backyard then a Pink Floyd presentation at a planetarium which went great with all the smoke coming from the saw as we cut the pressure treated 4 x 4s.
Fortunately our neighbours were on vacation and didn't witness the spectacle. We do look at the fence with an added appreciation of having done it ourselves, hopefully you feel the same about your tile which looks great by the way.
If you'll indulge me, I'd like to share something: I was a geeky kid. My dad tried to get me involved in being handy and mechanical (as in, cars), but I was too busy with geeky stuff - code, sci fi, video games, and music - Yes, I was also a "band" geek.
Then I went to college. I was 17, still a geeky kid, but somewhere in there I started seeing some girl (who I now call "wife") and I had even less time for dad. My sophomore year, my dad died. I was 18. And I began to realize that, while I found my identity in my geekiness, I had really screwed up and blown countless opportunities to spend time with my dad learning these things.
The saving grace in this story is my wife's dad and brothers. Thanks to them, I had plenty of opportunity to learn the stuff I should have taken the time to learn from my own dad. Together we finished my basement, worked on my truck, built swings for my son, and a bunch of other stuff. When my father-in-law died last year, I found I was really grateful that I hadn't missed that second chance.
And now my wife is the envy of all her friends due to her handy husband, and I have something besides geekiness to pass to my son and other due-November-3rd as-yet-unidetified-gender kid-in-utero.
Not totally germane to your post, Scott, but an anecdote I thought I'd pass along. Geek-to-geek. :)
-Excel is great for calculating how many x-inch tiles can fit in y-feet, given z-inch spacing.
-The spacers come in different sizes (which I figured out after getting a few tiles up and set).
-Lasers (the self-leveling kind) do work great, but only when your house is level. No sense making tile perfectly level if the tub (or counter) underneath it slopes...
As for "Measure like ten times": In Germany we say "Wer viel misst, misst viel Mist" which roughly translates to "Who measures much, measures nonsense".
Do you ever wonder what you'd be doing say if it was 1959 instead of now? No laptops...High Speed.. tile mason? I think you'd look good in Carharts.
Jack
I'm just about done with my master bath floor. It took me 4 months to figure out how to do the grout in a 1/4" gap only to find out I was using the wrong type! Anything over 1/16" tile spacing should use SANDED grout. When I read a bit about it on the internet I found one of the reasons why: it makes it stronger. Go figure.
Great job though and a great write up for those "geeks" that are too afraid to try this. (As far as fingers hurting, it's only temporary and it reminds you the next day what great work you are doing on your home. The back hurting is another issue all together...) It really isn't as difficult as it seems. And yes, lasers are helpful even on an uneven surface. You at least get to see the straight line and can then compensate for it accordingly (granite counter tops require no more than a 1/16 inch deviance from level. When your wall has a hump in it, the laser can find it).
It's funny though... You may not think you are handy with a power saw, but you sure are handy with the more intricate things such as the Coding4Fun stuff! All you need to do now is find that one thing that you can do for you dad and brother in that form then you won't feel so guilty about them coming up to help you. Besides, it is a family love...
What's the next project? I did kitchen and bath cabinet refacing... That one is kinda cool.
When we did our kitchen I wrote a little app to render a different random pattern every time I hit the spacebar.
"ooh! That's pretty random looking!" [Tile for a week]
Seriously, do you actually hire someone to cut your grass? ;-)
have patience.
Also... Rad picture of you and your brother.
-Cameron
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I used to love to build stuff, but all this working with computers has permanently spoiled me. Until I can "Google search / copy / paste" a kitchen floor, that is.
But your kitchen's looking great. Congrats.