Can someone tell me why he built up the material (the mud on the chicken wire) so that the base cove tile sticks off of the drywall so much? Is he getting ready to mud and tile that wall? I wish the video kept going. Oh! Nevermind...I see there are lots more videos. Great!!
Kinda odd how you only see cove base tiles in 80's bathrooms. They're special order these days, everyone's all about bull nose now, a not at all seamless option.
I did a bathroom one time in hexagonal the with green accents with mosaic cove base , worked and looked really nice seeing it on top of the for tile instead of cutting the floor up to the wall cove. Also, with poured shower drains I like using the round ones, take the round plate, smooth all edges and then get longer stainless screws and run the tiles under the plate, super clean, also the drain piece if tiling up to it, whether round or square, will have to be in and leveled before you pour as the base of the drain assembly may be perfectly level, but the finish piece won't be as there's a great pitch, so the second part of the drain assembly might have to be shimmed, but if you to with the round shower drains you can just put it in; the plate sitting on top of the finish floor will be perfect with the tile
You make very good videos. I like the way you set things up to show the process. Thank you for the instructions. I feel more confident of performing my little tiling job.
ashame there are not more vids on this subject. I would like to see how he handles border. I guess put your inner course in fulls and then come back after and do your cove and cuts?
I'd your in a house I prefer just baseboards and qtr round or just base board if you do the tile first but commercial almost always does tile base with tile floors