I have been seeing some of my favorite bloggers use peel and
stick tiles in their bathrooms, laundry rooms, kitchens or on their fireplace surrounds.
With roots dating back to the Egyptians and the Romans, why do we always try to
stick tile in the bathroom or the kitchen?
I have been seeing some of my favorite bloggers use peel and
stick tiles in their bathrooms, laundry rooms, kitchens or on their fireplace surrounds.
Not exact matches
Peel and
stick tiles work beautifully
in small
bathrooms and powder rooms.
Peel - and -
stick stair riser decals: Peel - and -
stick vinyl floor
tiles: Wood floor
tiles: Look how cute the vinyl looks
in this quirky
bathroom: (Mobile Bay -LSB-...]
I am slowly putting some character back into the place, by replacing the modern
bathroom sink with a pedestal, putting up thick trim around the windows, pine boards down
in the
bathroom to replace the peel -
in -
stick floor
tile, replacing accoustical ceiling
tile with beadboard....
The
bathroom is likely to be the last room I do anything cosmetic with so the embossed vinyl wallpaper
in shades of peach and 80s grey and pink
tiles are going to be
sticking around for a while.
In one of my last kitchens and bathrooms I intentionally used white and cream tiles in order to not be stuck one way or anothe
In one of my last kitchens and
bathrooms I intentionally used white and cream
tiles in order to not be stuck one way or anothe
in order to not be
stuck one way or another.
ABOVE
In the guest
bathroom, a peel - and -
stick floor (Mirth Studio, Flower Folk
Tile) adds a punch of color and pattern.
The
tiles in the
bathroom are starting to wobble and come loose, the vinyl floor (which looked like real herringbone when they put it down) is starting to come loose and
stick up at the seams, and the kitchen already needs replacing.