Anonymous wrote:^^. ^My thoughts exactly. The underlying sub floor should have been prepared properly. No way should this have happened to your beautiful floor.
Anonymous wrote:A crack that spreads from tile to tile would indicate to me that the substrate is faulty. There is no reason that a drop from a hair dryer from toddler height would create impact that would do this without underlying problems.
Anonymous wrote:A crack that spreads from tile to tile would indicate to me that the substrate is faulty. There is no reason that a drop from a hair dryer from toddler height would create impact that would do this without underlying problems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can probably put some kind of clear epoxy in the crack. I would call a good tile store and ask their advice.
Now I'm glad we went with ceramic!
But ceramic looks like crap. Travertine is amazing.
Anonymous wrote:You can probably put some kind of clear epoxy in the crack. I would call a good tile store and ask their advice.
Now I'm glad we went with ceramic!
Anonymous wrote:You can probably put some kind of clear epoxy in the crack. I would call a good tile store and ask their advice.
Now I'm glad we went with ceramic!