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tortise

Help: Bathroom Tiles Installed Slanted

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Hi all,

Just checked on my reno today and noticed that one of the bathroom wall tiles look slanted (quite obvious as 2 other friends and i spotted it at first glance). The distance where the tile edge meets the perpendicular walls on the sides vary by about 2cm when i compare the bottom tile and top tile along the wall. :(

Called ID and reply was that not possible that his guys made a mistake, unless the side wall for my flat is slanted, which he says is common for old flats higher floors (i'm on 9th floor).

Will meet up with ID and discuss about this, but checking for advice from bros and sis here.

For wall tiles installation, is it common for the installers follow absolute level (i.e. using a spirit level) even though it will appear obviously slanted? Shouldn't they check with the owner first or advise/warn us beforehand? My wall is small (~1m width) and there is a vertical strip of a different color in the centre with mosiac tiles borders so the slant is emphasized.

Appreciate any advice or past experience you can share! Thanks!

Edited by tortise
 

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Join 46,923 satisfied homeowners who used renotalk quotation service to find interior designers. Get an estimated quotation

imho, your tiler did a bad job. Your wall "may" be originally slant, but they should level it.

I'm living on the 15 floor and have big issue with slant pillar and walls, my tiler have level all my walls with the cost on me(as I'm overseas during the job, and I get them to redo the whole job).

 

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Thanks for sharing your experience!

I believe you're right that the tiler did a bad job. I went to the flat again with a spirit level and discovered that these tiles were laid slanted. The walls on both sides were only slightly slanted but the slant on these tiles were even worse, so no excuses and likely have to hack and re-tile. Lose-lose situation cos more delays for me and more cost for the ID/contractor. *sigh*

 

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Your tiler is not skilled and did a bad job. Even if the wall is slanted, an experienced craftman will be able to take this into consideration before laying the tiles. Worst still is you have an ID, who shd help manage/supervise the work. Talk to yr ID, he has sufficient margin to re-tile the walls; if the slant is intolerable.

 

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