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13/02/2006 9:00 AM

Wood accent in tile floor

Recently, I put down a wood floor (Virginia Vintage hand-scraped maple)
in my living room. I am preparing to tile my foyer which is adjacent
to it. I thought it might be a nice accent to the tile to put squares
of leftover wood floor in the place of tiles at appropriate places in
the tile pattern. The wood accents would probably be 4" by 4" or
smaller.

My question is this: Is this a good idea? Specifically, I was
thinking I'd be attaching the wood and the tile each with the same
thinset compound, and grouting around it just as if it were tile. Does
anybody know what effects the grout or thinset might have on the wood?

Thanks,
Scott


This topic has 8 replies

ee

"ed_h"

in reply to [email protected] on 13/02/2006 9:00 AM

13/02/2006 9:13 PM

I have a similar similar arrangement in my entryway. It looks very
nice, but the wood will pull away from the grout due to seasonal
changes. This leads to grout failure over time. I've had to regrout
twice around the wood while the grout around the tiles is still solid.


[email protected] wrote:
> Recently, I put down a wood floor (Virginia Vintage hand-scraped maple)
> in my living room. I am preparing to tile my foyer which is adjacent
> to it. I thought it might be a nice accent to the tile to put squares
> of leftover wood floor in the place of tiles at appropriate places in
> the tile pattern. The wood accents would probably be 4" by 4" or
> smaller.
>
> My question is this: Is this a good idea? Specifically, I was
> thinking I'd be attaching the wood and the tile each with the same
> thinset compound, and grouting around it just as if it were tile. Does
> anybody know what effects the grout or thinset might have on the wood?
>
> Thanks,
> Scott

ee

"ed_h"

in reply to [email protected] on 13/02/2006 9:00 AM

13/02/2006 9:13 PM

I have a similar similar arrangement in my entryway. It looks very
nice, but the wood will pull away from the grout due to seasonal
changes. This leads to grout failure over time. I've had to regrout
twice around the wood while the grout around the tiles is still solid.


[email protected] wrote:
> Recently, I put down a wood floor (Virginia Vintage hand-scraped maple)
> in my living room. I am preparing to tile my foyer which is adjacent
> to it. I thought it might be a nice accent to the tile to put squares
> of leftover wood floor in the place of tiles at appropriate places in
> the tile pattern. The wood accents would probably be 4" by 4" or
> smaller.
>
> My question is this: Is this a good idea? Specifically, I was
> thinking I'd be attaching the wood and the tile each with the same
> thinset compound, and grouting around it just as if it were tile. Does
> anybody know what effects the grout or thinset might have on the wood?
>
> Thanks,
> Scott

ee

"ed_h"

in reply to [email protected] on 13/02/2006 9:00 AM

14/02/2006 9:42 AM


GeeDubb wrote:
> "ed_h" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> >I have a similar similar arrangement in my entryway. It looks very
> > nice, but the wood will pull away from the grout due to seasonal
> > changes. This leads to grout failure over time. I've had to regrout
> > twice around the wood while the grout around the tiles is still solid.
> >
> Have you tried sanded caulk? Sanded caulk is made in just about every color
> that grout come in. It moves with the wood so it might eliminate that grout
> failure.
>
> Gary
>
Good suggestion. I might try that next time.

>
>
>
> >
> > [email protected] wrote:
> >> Recently, I put down a wood floor (Virginia Vintage hand-scraped maple)
> >> in my living room. I am preparing to tile my foyer which is adjacent
> >> to it. I thought it might be a nice accent to the tile to put squares
> >> of leftover wood floor in the place of tiles at appropriate places in
> >> the tile pattern. The wood accents would probably be 4" by 4" or
> >> smaller.
> >>
> >> My question is this: Is this a good idea? Specifically, I was
> >> thinking I'd be attaching the wood and the tile each with the same
> >> thinset compound, and grouting around it just as if it were tile. Does
> >> anybody know what effects the grout or thinset might have on the wood?
> >>
> >> Thanks,
> >> Scott
> >
> >

Gg

"GeeDubb"

in reply to [email protected] on 13/02/2006 9:00 AM

14/02/2006 9:13 AM


"ed_h" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I have a similar similar arrangement in my entryway. It looks very
> nice, but the wood will pull away from the grout due to seasonal
> changes. This leads to grout failure over time. I've had to regrout
> twice around the wood while the grout around the tiles is still solid.
>
Have you tried sanded caulk? Sanded caulk is made in just about every color
that grout come in. It moves with the wood so it might eliminate that grout
failure.

Gary




>
> [email protected] wrote:
>> Recently, I put down a wood floor (Virginia Vintage hand-scraped maple)
>> in my living room. I am preparing to tile my foyer which is adjacent
>> to it. I thought it might be a nice accent to the tile to put squares
>> of leftover wood floor in the place of tiles at appropriate places in
>> the tile pattern. The wood accents would probably be 4" by 4" or
>> smaller.
>>
>> My question is this: Is this a good idea? Specifically, I was
>> thinking I'd be attaching the wood and the tile each with the same
>> thinset compound, and grouting around it just as if it were tile. Does
>> anybody know what effects the grout or thinset might have on the wood?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Scott
>
>

CS

"Charles Spitzer"

in reply to [email protected] on 13/02/2006 9:00 AM

13/02/2006 5:14 PM


<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Recently, I put down a wood floor (Virginia Vintage hand-scraped maple)
> in my living room. I am preparing to tile my foyer which is adjacent
> to it. I thought it might be a nice accent to the tile to put squares
> of leftover wood floor in the place of tiles at appropriate places in
> the tile pattern. The wood accents would probably be 4" by 4" or
> smaller.
>
> My question is this: Is this a good idea? Specifically, I was
> thinking I'd be attaching the wood and the tile each with the same
> thinset compound, and grouting around it just as if it were tile. Does
> anybody know what effects the grout or thinset might have on the wood?
>
> Thanks,
> Scott

the wood will suck the water out of the thinset, discoloring the wood and
making the thinset extremely weak. the grout you use will do the same.

prefinish the wood, and use mastic.

regards,
charlie
http://glassartists.org/chaniarts

CS

"Charles Spitzer"

in reply to [email protected] on 13/02/2006 9:00 AM

14/02/2006 11:54 AM


"GeeDubb" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "ed_h" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>>I have a similar similar arrangement in my entryway. It looks very
>> nice, but the wood will pull away from the grout due to seasonal
>> changes. This leads to grout failure over time. I've had to regrout
>> twice around the wood while the grout around the tiles is still solid.
>>
> Have you tried sanded caulk? Sanded caulk is made in just about every
> color that grout come in. It moves with the wood so it might eliminate
> that grout failure.
>
> Gary
>

no it doesn't. the sand is to prevent cracks in thick grout lines. grout of
any type doesn't move. if you want it to move, most tile places will have
colored silicone which is the same color as the grout. use that.

>
>
>>
>> [email protected] wrote:
>>> Recently, I put down a wood floor (Virginia Vintage hand-scraped maple)
>>> in my living room. I am preparing to tile my foyer which is adjacent
>>> to it. I thought it might be a nice accent to the tile to put squares
>>> of leftover wood floor in the place of tiles at appropriate places in
>>> the tile pattern. The wood accents would probably be 4" by 4" or
>>> smaller.
>>>
>>> My question is this: Is this a good idea? Specifically, I was
>>> thinking I'd be attaching the wood and the tile each with the same
>>> thinset compound, and grouting around it just as if it were tile. Does
>>> anybody know what effects the grout or thinset might have on the wood?
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> Scott
>>
>>
>

CS

"Charles Spitzer"

in reply to [email protected] on 13/02/2006 9:00 AM

14/02/2006 12:43 PM


"GeeDubb" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "Charles Spitzer" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>>
>> "GeeDubb" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>> news:[email protected]...
>>>
>>> "ed_h" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>> news:[email protected]...
>>>>I have a similar similar arrangement in my entryway. It looks very
>>>> nice, but the wood will pull away from the grout due to seasonal
>>>> changes. This leads to grout failure over time. I've had to regrout
>>>> twice around the wood while the grout around the tiles is still solid.
>>>>
>>> Have you tried sanded caulk? Sanded caulk is made in just about every
>>> color that grout come in. It moves with the wood so it might eliminate
>>> that grout failure.
>>>
>>> Gary
>>>
>>
>> no it doesn't. the sand is to prevent cracks in thick grout lines. grout
>> of any type doesn't move. if you want it to move, most tile places will
>> have colored silicone which is the same color as the grout. use that.
>>
>
> Yes it does...I didn't say to use sanded grout but to use sanded caulk
> usually made of acrylic plus silicone with a sand content (and color) to
> match the texture of the grout.
>
> Gary

oops, my bad. you're right. sorry.

Gg

"GeeDubb"

in reply to [email protected] on 13/02/2006 9:00 AM

14/02/2006 12:31 PM


"Charles Spitzer" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "GeeDubb" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>>
>> "ed_h" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>> news:[email protected]...
>>>I have a similar similar arrangement in my entryway. It looks very
>>> nice, but the wood will pull away from the grout due to seasonal
>>> changes. This leads to grout failure over time. I've had to regrout
>>> twice around the wood while the grout around the tiles is still solid.
>>>
>> Have you tried sanded caulk? Sanded caulk is made in just about every
>> color that grout come in. It moves with the wood so it might eliminate
>> that grout failure.
>>
>> Gary
>>
>
> no it doesn't. the sand is to prevent cracks in thick grout lines. grout
> of any type doesn't move. if you want it to move, most tile places will
> have colored silicone which is the same color as the grout. use that.
>

Yes it does...I didn't say to use sanded grout but to use sanded caulk
usually made of acrylic plus silicone with a sand content (and color) to
match the texture of the grout.

Gary


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