Re: 36" Pompeii in DC
I'm starting to think about tiling the exterior of my dome. I was originally thinking of doing a mosaic design, with some trepidation as I have very little artistic talent. Then I happened across some very nice looking slate tile while wandering through my local home depot. Mosaic artistry may be beyond me, but fitting rectangles onto a hemisphere is more within my power. The only question is how to put them on, and whether they will stand up to the weather.
In principle, slate ought to be impermeable enough to be frost resistant. In practice, many slate tiles seem to be rather more absorbant, I guess because they are actually shale or quartzite? I picked up a 4-pack of tiles this weekend and tested them by soaking in a pan of water. One tile absorbed less than .2% of its weight in water. Another, which seemed to have pocked areas on the underside, absorbed more like 1-1.2%. The standard for exterior tile seems to be .3-1%. I'm thinking this may be close enough. Worst case scenario, they're cheap, and easy to replace if one pops off.
Questions: Would it be possible and desirable to lay the slate tiles in an overlapping manner, much like slate shingles? See attached pictures.
Also, I have never worked with thinset before. Do I need to make the surface flatter before tiling (e.g., by applying another coat of stucco?). How big of a tile can I reasonably apply? (I'm fairly sure that the 6" tiles in the picture would be too large).
Still waiting for my steel to arrive, and hoping the existing door doesn't crumble or burst into flames in the meanwhile...
I'm starting to think about tiling the exterior of my dome. I was originally thinking of doing a mosaic design, with some trepidation as I have very little artistic talent. Then I happened across some very nice looking slate tile while wandering through my local home depot. Mosaic artistry may be beyond me, but fitting rectangles onto a hemisphere is more within my power. The only question is how to put them on, and whether they will stand up to the weather.
In principle, slate ought to be impermeable enough to be frost resistant. In practice, many slate tiles seem to be rather more absorbant, I guess because they are actually shale or quartzite? I picked up a 4-pack of tiles this weekend and tested them by soaking in a pan of water. One tile absorbed less than .2% of its weight in water. Another, which seemed to have pocked areas on the underside, absorbed more like 1-1.2%. The standard for exterior tile seems to be .3-1%. I'm thinking this may be close enough. Worst case scenario, they're cheap, and easy to replace if one pops off.
Questions: Would it be possible and desirable to lay the slate tiles in an overlapping manner, much like slate shingles? See attached pictures.
Also, I have never worked with thinset before. Do I need to make the surface flatter before tiling (e.g., by applying another coat of stucco?). How big of a tile can I reasonably apply? (I'm fairly sure that the 6" tiles in the picture would be too large).
Still waiting for my steel to arrive, and hoping the existing door doesn't crumble or burst into flames in the meanwhile...
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