Benefit of your experience, please.
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Benefit of your experience, please.
We are having a new kitchen put in the New Year (if you see my old one you'll agree its about time too!). I've almost decided on the kitchen furniture, handles, appliances, taps etc but can't decide which flooring to go for. What do you have and would you recommend it? What are the pros and cons of hving ceramic, porcelain or natural stone tiles?
Re: Benefit of your experience, please.
I personally wouldn't get limestone as if you drop the vinegar bottle you have a problem. We went for a fake natural look in a hard vinyl tile ( like Amti**); our long and short sighted friends seem to think it's the real thing, but it doesn't fool me. It scratches.
Re: Benefit of your experience, please.
We had slate tiles. I loved them as they were all so different-looking. I suppose the main problem was laying them (I wasn't involved in it!) as they vary widely in their depth. Once down, they looked super. They were 'sold' to us that due to being natural they will be warm in winter and cold in summer. Cold all the time! Suprisingly, not everything broke if dropped on the tiles.
In our new house we have slate effect laminate. It's warmer and not riven!
In our new house we have slate effect laminate. It's warmer and not riven!
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Re: Benefit of your experience, please.
short of putting the lovely underfloor heating under the natural stone , I would suggest the hard vinyl I am now sold on Karn***n similar to the am***o, but appears to be cheaper and the wood hard vinyl is beautiful...
Re: Benefit of your experience, please.
How about old 11+ practice papers? You can get everyone to send in all their old papers, it'll be very cheap.
We have, what I originally thought, were natural stone tiles. But they are man made, so presume they are ceramic. They are very hard wearing, no need to worry if you spill anything on them (including hot fat), and what you use to clean them.
I have Amti** in my bathroom, I did consider it for the kitchen, but did worry what would happen if hot oil or bleach was spilled on it. How do you find it mystery?
We have, what I originally thought, were natural stone tiles. But they are man made, so presume they are ceramic. They are very hard wearing, no need to worry if you spill anything on them (including hot fat), and what you use to clean them.
I have Amti** in my bathroom, I did consider it for the kitchen, but did worry what would happen if hot oil or bleach was spilled on it. How do you find it mystery?
Re: Benefit of your experience, please.
We have the original quarry tiles laid when the house was build - and they are not good. Everything breaks when dropped on them and they are hard to keep looking good. We have vinyl floor tiles in the utility room and they are wonderful - easy clean and things bounce better.
Our kitchen also needs doing but will be a major job as some walls need to be knocked down. I would definately go the "fake" route, just make sure it is water tolerant!
Our kitchen also needs doing but will be a major job as some walls need to be knocked down. I would definately go the "fake" route, just make sure it is water tolerant!
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Re: Benefit of your experience, please.
I would love doing that! Think of anypne who has ever annoyed you, imagine it is them you are hitting and hey prest, the wall is no more!!doodles wrote:Our kitchen also needs doing but will be a major job as some walls need to be knocked down.
Re: Benefit of your experience, please.
we have ceramic tiles in the kitchen cooking end and wood floor in the eating end. The tiles are brilliant for cleaning and very resilient. I wouldn;t go back to vinyl again. However, if I was starting from scratch I would fork out for underfloor heating. They are a torture implement in cold weather! I go leaping over them like those people you see walking on hot coals
Re: Benefit of your experience, please.
Exercising whilst you cook Yoyo! Don't you find everything that you drop breaks though? I would love wood all the way through (in my dreamland) but worry about water and steam.
Re: Benefit of your experience, please.
Things do break, but not that much more than usual ( a jar of chutney was pretty spectacular)..
We had a flood in the kitchen ( fitter didn;t fit water softener properly ), the water seeped under the wooden boards and they did lift. They don;t look too bad, but have gaps now. I love tiles ( have them in loo and bathroom too)
We had a flood in the kitchen ( fitter didn;t fit water softener properly ), the water seeped under the wooden boards and they did lift. They don;t look too bad, but have gaps now. I love tiles ( have them in loo and bathroom too)