@@VineyardGHS Exactly.... been tiling 30+ years. Never mind the grout degradation where there's not enough space between pieces, or the lack of water proofing. That shower base is gonna stink link an old college locker room inside of 5 years.
But when they are installed that way, you can usually easily see the edges of the sheets because of how the pebbles are attached. You only need to remove and manually replace the outermost pebbles though, and that is enough to break the unnatural finish while taking very little extra time and effort.
@@LosChongodepends on the tile. If it’s pebble I don’t because they are usually different thickness. If it’s flat 2x2 or something I’ll set the floor first.
@@AllBayEveryDay i get it, theres more than one way to skin a cat. All I’m saying is I do the renovations for 2 large flooring companies. Probably seen 30+ different tile crews over the years (as in the only work they do is tile) and never seen a pan tiled before the walls.
House cleaner here and this is my most hated shower floor type, especially the ones that used domed stones. The showers that have them almost never have detachable heads which makes clean up even worse. If you have them the best option in my experience is dish detergent (degreaser for all the conditioner and moisturizers), baking soda ( acts as a gentle scrubber) , and hot water scrubbed with a soft bristle push broom. Ps. I clean for people who are sensitive to off the shelf cleaning products hence the DIY solution
My first thought on seeing this floor is that it must be hell to clean. Guess that's why only people who can afford to pay someone else to do it will het them.
I do condo cleaning and the struggle is so real with these showers. I typically use tolet gel cleaner because of how it can get in shower and grout lines for mold/mildew.
It’s no worse than regular tile because you still go over it with grout/sealant. The gaps you see won’t be there when the whole thing is finished. :) Edit: I’m speaking from personal experience. My apartment shower has this and it’s easy to keep clean/maintain.
when i was a kid my parents did the bathroom in river rock, but we were too poor to afford to buy tile so we went to the river and gathered buckets and buckets of the flattest stones we could find. ive always wanted to try and recreate it with my own house one day.
@@TimmyTheSnail Let's imagine you're a dingle berry hanging from some ass hair. After a shower, you fall down to the grout level. After a while, the surrounding water MOSTLY evaporates. There will be some left over moisture BTW. So now you're a dingle berry lodged in the pours of the grout, and it's pretty damp down here. 💩+💦+🦠=☣️
Most home owners won't do this because after a while the floor gets really disgusting and unless you have a pressure jet, you can't really clean it. And even that, it will make a mess.
exactly my thought! just a month of use hair would be stuck in there. If you never vaccumed a bathroom floor, this will definitely force you to do that
Man. These shower floors have always been so pretty to me. I've always wanted one. Then I started cleaning houses... never. Never will I ever get a floor like this anywhere in my home. It's SO HARD TO CLEAN.
All you gotta do is get down there after every shower and thoroughly scrub each crack with your toothbrush, then blow dry it so there's no sitting water. Easy. We all should have at least 4 hours dedicated to cleanign a shower a day right???!?
exact same thing happened to me, always thought they were beautiful until I had to clean a GIANT shower that took up half of the master bathroom and it was made up of tiles like that. Top to bottom. Never going to get those tiles if I can help it.
I’ve used these before. It hurts 😂 you have to find a specific spot in the shower so you’re feet don’t hurt standing on them. But once you find that spot it’s really nice.
@@ChaosDraguss nope. I live at my house and the bathroom is cleaned pretty regularly but still I wouldn't shower barefoot. not just because of cleanliness concern but also because there's a high chance I could slip and crack my skull. end my life right then and there lol and I don't want that
@@ax_lz ??? That has nothing to do with what I commented above. Clearly he is going to grout in between, and it’s also not the first time I’ve seen people remove tile or stone from mesh to create a certain look, I can’t say if it paid off in this but it very well may have instead of the usual look and pattern, people do it all the time to create patterns and mosaics
Ok, so as a tile installer, unless you were going for a very specific pattern, you made your life so much more difficult than it needed to be by removing the backing. Most of those stone mosaics are made to interlock, and if there is a line between sheets you can clearly see, all you have to do is remove a few pieces and replace them as desired. Also, if you spread with a trowel like you did, then smooth the ridges, when you place the sheeting you can use what I call a "soft squish", more commonly known as a dumfloat, to apply an even pressure to set the netting into the mud and level any raised edges. I don't know what your prep work was or the dimensions of your shower, but achieving the correct sloping into the drain is also crucial. From the filmed perspective its hard to see the sloping, but it appears very flat which can cause improper drainage, standing water, and mold development. Looks good though! 👍
@yeeshatraveller the space between the stones is filled with any grout of choice. You also have to be careful around the drain that the drain continues to sit lower than the grout and stones but that's not too difficult to do 🙂
now i understand why my mom says im always think negative, dude did a great job and all you guys can say is the problems it will have. just be happy he did a good job and leave it at that.
I think 99% of tile guys won't do this because they know grout isn't waterproof and if you have irregular shapes on the floor there is more area of permeable grout and you end up with water in your floor/ceiling.
@@pandapower5902it also makes it cleanable and longer lasting, and then there’s the drainage problem. This is a shower, running water is going to destroy that grout work if they don’t apply some kind of sealant. Not to mention the sanitation problems.
I was kind of wondering, shouldn’t that shower have some angled slant towards the drain? Won’t this person have to squeegee all the standing water to the drain?
This is done before the tile is put in. Usually twice. The first time, a slope is created for a rubber lining that acts as flashing for the shower. The second time is the additional mortar layer the tile rests on. Then, you put in the mortar that holds the tile in place with the slope already set.
@@kalebfrei9927 your right. Someone only does this to bare concrete and not a mud floor if they dont know what they are doing. Same with laying them like this. No membrane no nothing either.
@@mattpassos5689you rub grout in between all the spaces in between the pebbles then clean it off after all the gaps are filled and it’s just like normal tile job
Alright… very nice…. How you gonna ensure that it drains properly, or does water stand between the stones?? Or when does the epoxy come in? Adding texture to epoxy? Or just goons be under the stone height.
It won't drain properly. My husband and I installed this pebble tile several years ago because we fell in love with the look and the pebbles were source from my home country, Bali, Indonesia. It really looked amazing next to the engineered bamboo flooring in the adjacent room. Not long after that, we realized that water always pooled in between the pebbles because the grout was always lower than the surface of the tiles. If you want it dry, you have to mop the excess water. Luckily we didn't install in the shower. Just the bathroom floor - which was previously carpeted (doink!)
These are definitely harder to clean than traditional tiles, but if you install them properly, and seal the heck outta them, they are quite manageable. It's not an easy DIY, for sure.
@@deadfisher0000 We did seal the pebbles and grout (the pebbles came already sealed from the manufacturer so they were double/triple sealed by the end of installation). Nevertheless the pooled water wins. The floor near shower where it gets splashed often becomes cloudy because we have hard water. It's hard to scrub and easily goes back to cloudy.
I personally think this would make a nice outside shower, for a hot tub or pool rinse off, where you can use a pressure washer every now and then and its not used every day. But there are so many other options for inside.
i agree, as other ppl in the comments said, it looks like it’d be nearly impossible to get this clean regularly because the gaps between the stone are level with the drainage system. unless he filled them in with something and didn’t show us, i don’t see how any water is going to come out of those spots easily
@@thefakebluejay5394 You think they leave the gaps? wtf? ... 95% of comments on social media should never be made. People need to learn to ask more questions and make fewer uninformed comments.
@@Chris-xo2rq i mean i clearly said “unless he filled them in with something and didn’t show us” so no i wouldn’t think he’d leave the gaps but there’s a chance because the process wasn’t shown. id love to ask questions and get a response, like you mentioned, but making an informed guess is usually what i resort to since it’s highly unlikely a youtuber would even see my comment, let alone reply to it, out of the hundreds and thousands of comments they get everyday on their videos. if i’m wrong on my assumption, that’s fine because i tried my best based on what i knew and there’s plenty of more knowledgeable people to correct me, like yourself, but i’d really prefer if it was done in a polite and respectful manner, thanks
Real f****** nice! Looks really good. I've done quite a few exposed aggregate floors (showers, ect.) I've also done similar pebble floors to yours. I just use pre-made sheets and just cut them apart where I have to to make sure they look custom and not like it was done with sheets. Great job!!
The guy was using a quarter inch trowel and hand setting, most decent tile setters would use a smaller one due to the size of stone. Then use a float to tap them down evenly, come back and clean around the stones for grout. What's the grout gonna look like with varying heights. Your gonna have grout over the top of your low stones. Which hold water. And give u a nice foot massage.
99%of people won't ask tile guys to do this if they have common sense . The dead skin cells and dirt accumulated between the pebbles will be very easy to clean 😂
I’d flood epoxy it flush to the surface of the stones. And I’d make the floor section in the shop and install it as a fully finished assembly. Much more control over the variables that normally lead to leaks or bad seams for shit to build up in.
@@ddhurry4168 granted. But people also need to look after things properly, which (in my experience) they don't do. I'm a decorator and one of my customers had TWO really nice shower rooms installed and both of them are in a shocking state less than 2 years down the line (poorly maintained). I was round there just last week painting the interior of a shepherd's hut, brilliant white 🙄🤦♂️
Is it possible to have this the bathroom flooring. Where there's potentially less water and easier cleaning than the actual shower floor? And have something else for the shower flooring. Honestly curious.
A tile guy should offer a “prep” service for this. They do everything but lay the stones, they will show you how to spread mud and then let you place the stones how you want them
2 things. Personally I would cover the stones in several coats of polyurethane. Make sure the stones are flat unless you are covering with multiple polyurethane coats.😀
Here’s why. Because you can clearly see the outline of the 12 x 12 after it’s installed. The human eye will pick up the pattern. It’s the same reason that the best looking LVP floors have completely random staggers at the end seams. Authentic wide plank hardwood flooring is random and that’s what LVP is mimicking. Same with pebbles on a shower floor. Personally, I don’t think it takes any longer to install them individually because you can work it out to wear there are no cuts around the parameter of the shower floor by just grabbing the right size pebbles. With a sheet, a few trips to the wet saw is going to be required.
We had a large master bath in our last house and had the tile guys come and do our shower.They did this same pebble floor and it was awesome!!! Felt great to stand on, like the bottom of your feet were being massaged while taking a shower. Loved it! Really nice if you can afford it.
I usually separate the sheets a couple inches a fill them in..last job I did this and it really didn’t take as long as I thought it would and it looked so good…your the goat brother love your videos
Where I am, the edges of the sheets appear relatively square. So my tiler removes the outer stones, lays the sheets edge to edge and then manually uses the outer stones to fill in the void so that it looks more natural. Takes him next to no extra time and gives a stunning, natural finish.
@yamaszlofmcdurkin Is it though? "Separating the sheets" says to me that he is putting them further apart, not stripping pebbles from the outer ring. Hence my reply specifically mentioning laying the sheets edge to edge...
Yea either way gives it a natural finish and eliminates the manufacturing sheet look…but it reality it’s the same exact thing…I’ve been laying all mine lately 1 pebble at a time like this video,I get paid good for my work the extra time and effort doesn’t matter at all
I lay them down a sheet at a time. When they aren't fitting closely, I'll pull off the 1-3 rocks that are causing the issue. Then, I'll end up with a small batch of stones to work with on filling in the holes. I also like having whole stones around the drain instead of cutting it & ending up with a few slivers. These floors take a lot of grout, but I love the finished look. Great job!👍
My husband did this with linear drain in our zero entry shower. Fantastic job, no leaks, looked wonderful. Let me put the pretty stones where I wanted them! Turned out fabulous!
I know this takes longer, I have done it this way in the past. The whole job looks more natural when finishing against a wall and not having to cut through them. What you could do if it was a really large area is to leave them on the mat and stop short of the wall by 4/5 inches then fill in by hand 👍🏻
Either way, don’t you want your customers to brag about you when they show off their bathroom? Do you think theyll tell their friends that it looks bad because they chose the cheap option or do you think they’ll leave that out when they mention their contractor? Maybe you just say that to justify the higher price, but no body ever takes the cheap option. If you do the cheap job, you lose out twice.
@Andrew-fb4vn "nobody ever takes the cheap option" you are absolutely delusional if you think that is the case. I fix shit work all the time because homeowners decided to go with the cheaper bid.
@Andrew-fb4vn I don't see the point. I've done multi-million dollar homes that spare no expense I've also done simple remodels that are done on a budget. It's a job to job basis.
That's the best and only way to lay those tile and not see lines from the edges of the sheets. I like to use my grout float as a light tamp after I place all the stones. Gets them all nice and flush so there's no lippage when you're done and grouted.
I recently installed a pebble floor in a shower. Admittedly, I didn’t install them one pebble at a time, but I wouldn’t have taken me any long to do so and I certainly will on the next one. I’ve read where other tile guys claim that the square pattern can be seen when they’re laid down as a sheet. I figured I would be clever and place the sheets at obscure angles so the eye wouldn’t pick up a noticeable pattern. To make a long story short, I still end up placing more than half the pebbles individually and it took longer because I was filling in between pebbles which meant I had to basically search for the right size pebbles to fill in areas between the sheets. I’ve installed tile for many years, but I’m new to tiled showers. There’s so much to learn when you venture into unfamiliar territory.
Feel like people in the comments dont understand that grout comes after tile.. this is an awesome concept, looks great.. did industrial tile for 3 years and always wanted to get into residential work.. miss it a lot, such a great trade
I must say you are right but now that I saw this I’m seriously thinking about doing this..Genius hack that in all accounts, really isn’t genius..Just a professional looking job!..Salute
I know someone who had the tile guy remove the mesh to create a custom pattern. It lasted about 4 years before the stones started coming loose and had to be redone
The stone sheets are slotted to fit together. Most amateurs even know this. And for those who thinks dead skin is going to get trapped between the stones you're wrong it should get sealed and then it gets grouted flush to the top of the Stone.There is a technique to flush the grout to the stone. it looks better the way the manufactor positions the stones on the mesh. Take for granted you may need to cut a stone out of the mesh or even add one from time to time but that's it. Now it would be a pain to clean if its not grouted correctly. If it's done right it'll be a smooth surface but ever so bumpy for a foot massage. Now who wants stones in there shower floor.
THANK YOU for actually understanding this. this IS NOT difficult, at least not as difficult as the FNG here is making it. 99% of tile guys will not do this, because it is being wrong, eh? cheers!
I USED TO DO THIS!!! I learned i needed to get those rubber grip gloves and dunk them so my hands wouldnt go fully raw, but me and my dad's company did this every time! I also started wearing nitrile gloves under the grip gloves so my hands wouldnt get soggy. If you dont do this in your showers, you wont have floors nearly as beautiful as you COULD if you DID
99% of tile guys won’t do this because 99% of customers don’t have the money to pay for a tile guy like this
Exactly this is to impress his wife who donking the electrician.
1000% true
that and that mesh isn't there to make it easier it's there to help keep them in place and add stability.
About 50 times a year we get called in to cover these over because they're absolutely hated by people who showered in them a few times
@@VineyardGHS Exactly.... been tiling 30+ years. Never mind the grout degradation where there's not enough space between pieces, or the lack of water proofing. That shower base is gonna stink link an old college locker room inside of 5 years.
Someone should invent a mesh backing that makes it quicker and easier to install
They already come like that
@@leoarzola4791 woosh
@@leoarzola4791woosh
@@leoarzola4791its called Sarcasm
But when they are installed that way, you can usually easily see the edges of the sheets because of how the pebbles are attached.
You only need to remove and manually replace the outermost pebbles though, and that is enough to break the unnatural finish while taking very little extra time and effort.
99% of Tile Guys won’t do this because this isn’t the correct way to do it.
Do you do tiles?
@@vibe9318i do hes right
@@vibe9318you don't have to do tiling to understand that you're not supposed to remove the mesh
@@veradistheeggcat229why
U dense mofos dont know a thing
Correction, 100% of tile guys will not do this
I always do it this way
@@Apexjasonmorganllc you set your pan tiles before walls?
@@LosChongo it depends on the tile really. Sometimes I do and sometimes I don’t.
@@LosChongodepends on the tile. If it’s pebble I don’t because they are usually different thickness. If it’s flat 2x2 or something I’ll set the floor first.
@@AllBayEveryDay i get it, theres more than one way to skin a cat. All I’m saying is I do the renovations for 2 large flooring companies. Probably seen 30+ different tile crews over the years (as in the only work they do is tile) and never seen a pan tiled before the walls.
House cleaner here and this is my most hated shower floor type, especially the ones that used domed stones. The showers that have them almost never have detachable heads which makes clean up even worse. If you have them the best option in my experience is dish detergent (degreaser for all the conditioner and moisturizers), baking soda ( acts as a gentle scrubber) , and hot water scrubbed with a soft bristle push broom. Ps. I clean for people who are sensitive to off the shelf cleaning products hence the DIY solution
My first thought on seeing this floor is that it must be hell to clean. Guess that's why only people who can afford to pay someone else to do it will het them.
I do condo cleaning and the struggle is so real with these showers. I typically use tolet gel cleaner because of how it can get in shower and grout lines for mold/mildew.
That was my first question when I saw this, so thank you!
Yeah, shoutout to whoever cleans this - seems like a nightmare. Give them a raise.
Я думала это зальют чем то прозрачным. Типо эпоксидной смолы. Есть же наливные полы.
Mold has entered the chat
😅
And fungus
It’s no worse than regular tile because you still go over it with grout/sealant. The gaps you see won’t be there when the whole thing is finished. :)
Edit: I’m speaking from personal experience. My apartment shower has this and it’s easy to keep clean/maintain.
Haha looking for this comment
@@MaoMatsuri
Mold is a type of fungus.
when i was a kid my parents did the bathroom in river rock, but we were too poor to afford to buy tile so we went to the river and gathered buckets and buckets of the flattest stones we could find.
ive always wanted to try and recreate it with my own house one day.
The mold is gonna be gnarly on them tiles
What makes you think that?
Snail, my friend, did you never cleaned a shower?
@@Aersznivek the tiles are grouted and sealed after installation. Cleaning is easy if you do it after you shower
@@TimmyTheSnail Let's imagine you're a dingle berry hanging from some ass hair. After a shower, you fall down to the grout level. After a while, the surrounding water MOSTLY evaporates. There will be some left over moisture BTW. So now you're a dingle berry lodged in the pours of the grout, and it's pretty damp down here.
💩+💦+🦠=☣️
@@john56801that’s why the tiles get sealed 🙃
Most home owners won't do this because after a while the floor gets really disgusting and unless you have a pressure jet, you can't really clean it. And even that, it will make a mess.
You grout it…
That's what cleaning is for...
Truth!! And bleach cleaners make the stones turn colors in spots, it’s a freaking nightmare.
exactly my thought! just a month of use hair would be stuck in there. If you never vaccumed a bathroom floor, this will definitely force you to do that
Yeap, we have that in our shower.
It is grouted but still a pain in the ass to clean, and the rocks will change colors with certain cleaning products
Man. These shower floors have always been so pretty to me. I've always wanted one. Then I started cleaning houses... never. Never will I ever get a floor like this anywhere in my home. It's SO HARD TO CLEAN.
All you gotta do is get down there after every shower and thoroughly scrub each crack with your toothbrush, then blow dry it so there's no sitting water. Easy.
We all should have at least 4 hours dedicated to cleanign a shower a day right???!?
@@naefaren3515😂
exact same thing happened to me, always thought they were beautiful until I had to clean a GIANT shower that took up half of the master bathroom and it was made up of tiles like that. Top to bottom. Never going to get those tiles if I can help it.
@@lindsay9868 THE WALLS TOO?? Oh jeez 😩😩
I don't understand why its not grouted?
I’ve used these before. It hurts 😂 you have to find a specific spot in the shower so you’re feet don’t hurt standing on them. But once you find that spot it’s really nice.
I was just thinking how this looks like it would be a literal pain to stand barefoot on unless you take some really quick showers.
There are people hunting barefoot in the jungle and these fuckers can't stand on flat stones lol
Y'all shower barefoot???😟😟😭
@@user-vv7hc7kb5o Do you live in some manner of communal housing where you share the shower? Because if not, why wouldn't you?
@@ChaosDraguss nope. I live at my house and the bathroom is cleaned pretty regularly but still I wouldn't shower barefoot. not just because of cleanliness concern but also because there's a high chance I could slip and crack my skull. end my life right then and there lol and I don't want that
I love the totally appropriate driving adventure music for laying pebbles on a short floor.
99% of tile guys would go back and fill in the cracks so the water doesn’t sit between the “pebbles” and eventually ruin the floor.
Grouting will come later, he is only showing laying the pebbles.
Ever heard of grouting lol
@@mystica-subshe said 99% of tile guys wouldn't do this then he should show the full job the 1% would do.
@@JlNXEDthen what’s the point of laying down the pebbles one by one instead of just using the mesh
@@ax_lz ??? That has nothing to do with what I commented above. Clearly he is going to grout in between, and it’s also not the first time I’ve seen people remove tile or stone from mesh to create a certain look, I can’t say if it paid off in this but it very well may have instead of the usual look and pattern, people do it all the time to create patterns and mosaics
Ok, so as a tile installer, unless you were going for a very specific pattern, you made your life so much more difficult than it needed to be by removing the backing. Most of those stone mosaics are made to interlock, and if there is a line between sheets you can clearly see, all you have to do is remove a few pieces and replace them as desired. Also, if you spread with a trowel like you did, then smooth the ridges, when you place the sheeting you can use what I call a "soft squish", more commonly known as a dumfloat, to apply an even pressure to set the netting into the mud and level any raised edges. I don't know what your prep work was or the dimensions of your shower, but achieving the correct sloping into the drain is also crucial. From the filmed perspective its hard to see the sloping, but it appears very flat which can cause improper drainage, standing water, and mold development. Looks good though! 👍
Yeah the floor at my gym has this problem. Instead of going down the drain it spreads across the whole floor and flees are always there.
@@yeeshatravellerhuh? What do you mean? Grout?
You r an 8 year tile man at best.
@humble.pie. Jesus do you work out at a maximum security prison?
@yeeshatraveller the space between the stones is filled with any grout of choice. You also have to be careful around the drain that the drain continues to sit lower than the grout and stones but that's not too difficult to do 🙂
Really loving the song choice in the floor looks awesome too
now i understand why my mom says im always think negative, dude did a great job and all you guys can say is the problems it will have. just be happy he did a good job and leave it at that.
I think 99% of tile guys won't do this because they know grout isn't waterproof and if you have irregular shapes on the floor there is more area of permeable grout and you end up with water in your floor/ceiling.
I was expecting an epoxy pour and now I'm slightly sad 😂 beautiful floor though
Epoxy takes away from the natural feel of it, makes it like linoleum. It’s probably best to just grout it to still keep that natural look.
@@pandapower5902 that might also be less slippery I imagine 😅
I know right? I was at least thinking the cracks would be filled
@@oreogurl1234exactly.
@@pandapower5902it also makes it cleanable and longer lasting, and then there’s the drainage problem. This is a shower, running water is going to destroy that grout work if they don’t apply some kind of sealant. Not to mention the sanitation problems.
Looks awesome. Very professional job.
Bruh the grey omes all being grouped together just made my eye twitch. 😂
I too love having standing water in my poured concrete shower, looks great bud
underrated comment
LMAO. Also worst music ever
I was kind of wondering, shouldn’t that shower have some angled slant towards the drain?
Won’t this person have to squeegee all the standing water to the drain?
@@dtschuor459 yeah. It's called "pitch" .. all concrete /masonry needs to drain away from structure or into drains.
He's supposed to grout it after placing the pebbles to fill the gaps.
Remember to ensure the flow of water to the drain; ie the lebe of the stones must be higher than the drain -at a slant.
For real 😂 those rocks gonna be disgusting years down the line. Or they'll need to be replaced sooner & this guy gets to make another quick buck 😂😂
My first thought too.. Clearly he is in a wrong profession
@@goober112more like a few weeks jesus
It looks like theres epoxy in the cracks
This is done before the tile is put in. Usually twice. The first time, a slope is created for a rubber lining that acts as flashing for the shower. The second time is the additional mortar layer the tile rests on. Then, you put in the mortar that holds the tile in place with the slope already set.
He's right . Not because he is so good , but because nobody in their right mind would waste the time when its completely unnecessary.
👍 Wonderful pebble you have brought up! Thank you very much for sharing.
You are correct most wouldn't do that because it is pointless and just makes more work for no reason.
Unless you get paid more to do it that way.
@@aaavellone only if you don't know how to run a business
@@kalebfrei9927 You don't charge for the amount of time it takes to do a thing? We all do project rates sometime but as they say, time is money.
😂
@@kalebfrei9927 your right. Someone only does this to bare concrete and not a mud floor if they dont know what they are doing. Same with laying them like this. No membrane no nothing either.
The music makes me feel like I'm in an 80's movie montage. I love it.
You'll need the coke to finish the job!
I love how the only positive comment so far is about the music😂🎉
GTA III
Scarface!
I love that look. Great work. Would like to see the entire shower when viewing these. Thanks for sharing
The floor is great I like it so much😃👍🏽🎉awesome floor
You're right. 99% of tile guys wouldn't use the 3/8" side of the trowel for small pieces. They'd probably use the 3/16
All the best cleaning that floor !
exactly. gross
It he’s caulked and the. It can be cleaned like any other tiles bathroom floor.
There won't be empty space between the pebbles when the work's done.
@@dud3655is he going to epoxy it?
@@mattpassos5689you rub grout in between all the spaces in between the pebbles then clean it off after all the gaps are filled and it’s just like normal tile job
Alright… very nice…. How you gonna ensure that it drains properly, or does water stand between the stones??
Or when does the epoxy come in? Adding texture to epoxy? Or just goons be under the stone height.
It won't drain properly. My husband and I installed this pebble tile several years ago because we fell in love with the look and the pebbles were source from my home country, Bali, Indonesia. It really looked amazing next to the engineered bamboo flooring in the adjacent room. Not long after that, we realized that water always pooled in between the pebbles because the grout was always lower than the surface of the tiles. If you want it dry, you have to mop the excess water. Luckily we didn't install in the shower. Just the bathroom floor - which was previously carpeted (doink!)
These are definitely harder to clean than traditional tiles, but if you install them properly, and seal the heck outta them, they are quite manageable.
It's not an easy DIY, for sure.
@@deadfisher0000 We did seal the pebbles and grout (the pebbles came already sealed from the manufacturer so they were double/triple sealed by the end of installation). Nevertheless the pooled water wins. The floor near shower where it gets splashed often becomes cloudy because we have hard water. It's hard to scrub and easily goes back to cloudy.
I love the river rock shower pans!
Will be putting one in my house someday
I personally think this would make a nice outside shower, for a hot tub or pool rinse off, where you can use a pressure washer every now and then and its not used every day. But there are so many other options for inside.
i agree, as other ppl in the comments said, it looks like it’d be nearly impossible to get this clean regularly because the gaps between the stone are level with the drainage system. unless he filled them in with something and didn’t show us, i don’t see how any water is going to come out of those spots easily
Probably put grout down after the mud underneath set
@@thefakebluejay5394 You think they leave the gaps? wtf? ... 95% of comments on social media should never be made. People need to learn to ask more questions and make fewer uninformed comments.
@@Chris-xo2rq i mean i clearly said “unless he filled them in with something and didn’t show us” so no i wouldn’t think he’d leave the gaps but there’s a chance because the process wasn’t shown. id love to ask questions and get a response, like you mentioned, but making an informed guess is usually what i resort to since it’s highly unlikely a youtuber would even see my comment, let alone reply to it, out of the hundreds and thousands of comments they get everyday on their videos. if i’m wrong on my assumption, that’s fine because i tried my best based on what i knew and there’s plenty of more knowledgeable people to correct me, like yourself, but i’d really prefer if it was done in a polite and respectful manner, thanks
@Chris-xo2rq Yup, and your comment falls under the 95%.
"I'm better than professionals because I do unnecessary extra steps that make it take longer."
Real f****** nice! Looks really good. I've done quite a few exposed aggregate floors (showers, ect.) I've also done similar pebble floors to yours. I just use pre-made sheets and just cut them apart where I have to to make sure they look custom and not like it was done with sheets. Great job!!
That looks incredible
Love how you didnt pitch the floor or tap them down evenly so theyre all at different heights. Now i really feel like im showering on stones.
How do you know the bonding surface wasn't pitched? If it was pitched enough, the slight variation in tile heights really won't matter that much.
The shower pan should've been pitched before the tile ever goes on.
This feels more like a feature than a bug, I’d imagine you get more traction with the rocks at slightly different heights
Drainage has to be terrible
The guy was using a quarter inch trowel and hand setting, most decent tile setters would use a smaller one due to the size of stone. Then use a float to tap them down evenly, come back and clean around the stones for grout. What's the grout gonna look like with varying heights. Your gonna have grout over the top of your low stones. Which hold water. And give u a nice foot massage.
99%of people won't ask tile guys to do this if they have common sense .
The dead skin cells and dirt accumulated between the pebbles will be very easy to clean 😂
it gets sealed and grouted buddy
@@DSkimRSWell, since the video didn’t show the final result, I can understand the guy
I’d flood epoxy it flush to the surface of the stones. And I’d make the floor section in the shop and install it as a fully finished assembly. Much more control over the variables that normally lead to leaks or bad seams for shit to build up in.
Because it's going to get grouted and sealed you absolute troglodyte
😂😂😂 it’s gonna be sealed
Way better then leaving them on the sheets. The gaps always drove me crazy
That looks mint dude
That shower rocks
Dude you rock!! (I see what you did there)
These comments got off to a rocky start until you came along!
If this shower were a song it would be “Rock of Ages” by Def Leppard
@@heywoodjablome7834 I think "we will rock you" is better
Out, out, get out all of you. Now.
I usually just tell people to look at a 2or 3 year old pebble shower floor....99% of the time they decide they dont want it.
I was just gonna say I bet it looks absolute shite in about 2 years time.
@@wavydavy9816 epoxy grout keeps it looking much better a lot longer
@@ddhurry4168 granted. But people also need to look after things properly, which (in my experience) they don't do. I'm a decorator and one of my customers had TWO really nice shower rooms installed and both of them are in a shocking state less than 2 years down the line (poorly maintained).
I was round there just last week painting the interior of a shepherd's hut, brilliant white 🙄🤦♂️
Yeah, even brand new, it looks like something not very easy to maintain or last
Is it possible to have this the bathroom flooring. Where there's potentially less water and easier cleaning than the actual shower floor? And have something else for the shower flooring. Honestly curious.
That is beautiful.
Im 35yrs in. This is the only way to set river rock. My sons hate the time it takes. But its the best look! Keep up that sexy looking work ⚒️
A tile guy should offer a “prep” service for this. They do everything but lay the stones, they will show you how to spread mud and then let you place the stones how you want them
Ok, I would LOVE that
2 things. Personally I would cover the stones in several coats of polyurethane. Make sure the stones are flat unless you are covering with multiple polyurethane coats.😀
But would the poly pose a slipping hazard? I see that these stones have a nice flat surface.
No need to cover with anything but tile and grout sealer.
This is egat i was expecting him to do
So cool decoration!
99% of tile guys won’t do that because it’s 100% a waste of time. The link together perfectly on the mesh sheets why would you take them off?
Here’s why. Because you can clearly see the outline of the 12 x 12 after it’s installed. The human eye will pick up the pattern. It’s the same reason that the best looking LVP floors have completely random staggers at the end seams. Authentic wide plank hardwood flooring is random and that’s what LVP is mimicking. Same with pebbles on a shower floor. Personally, I don’t think it takes any longer to install them individually because you can work it out to wear there are no cuts around the parameter of the shower floor by just grabbing the right size pebbles. With a sheet, a few trips to the wet saw is going to be required.
As a tile repair guy, great job. I don't see no reason for mold to grow
I really hope that's satire
How will the water get out from between the rocks and into the drain?
@@KeyboardError_PressF if only that's what he actually did 🤣🤣
@@KeyboardError_PressF not saying it can't be. Easy enough to get it flush if u put the extra work in
@@liamhgd581it's not satire.... its sarcasm.
imagine the maintenance on the spaces between each stone
Well it gets grout of course, and if the tile guy is smart, epoxy grout.
Beautifully done!!!❤
We had a large master bath in our last house and had the tile guys come and do our shower.They did this same pebble floor and it was awesome!!! Felt great to stand on, like the bottom of your feet were being massaged while taking a shower. Loved it! Really nice if you can afford it.
I usually separate the sheets a couple inches a fill them in..last job I did this and it really didn’t take as long as I thought it would and it looked so good…your the goat brother love your videos
Where I am, the edges of the sheets appear relatively square. So my tiler removes the outer stones, lays the sheets edge to edge and then manually uses the outer stones to fill in the void so that it looks more natural. Takes him next to no extra time and gives a stunning, natural finish.
@yamaszlofmcdurkin Is it though? "Separating the sheets" says to me that he is putting them further apart, not stripping pebbles from the outer ring.
Hence my reply specifically mentioning laying the sheets edge to edge...
Yea either way gives it a natural finish and eliminates the manufacturing sheet look…but it reality it’s the same exact thing…I’ve been laying all mine lately 1 pebble at a time like this video,I get paid good for my work the extra time and effort doesn’t matter at all
Experts guide to growing mold
I love pebble shower floors. They clean and massage your feet as you shower.
‘80’s music gets me every time!!! Keep it up Bubba! I’m Subscribing
You like the Scarface music huh?
Paul Engeman “Push It To The Limit”
Great sound track. Tony would be proud
How do you think he was able to lay this entire shower in under a minute 😂
@@jackvillan5151 exactly! I’ll need that same energy when it comes time to clean li! 😅
I actually do this all the time Casey’s complete home improvements
Thats a beautiful project
I lay them down a sheet at a time. When they aren't fitting closely, I'll pull off the 1-3 rocks that are causing the issue. Then, I'll end up with a small batch of stones to work with on filling in the holes. I also like having whole stones around the drain instead of cutting it & ending up with a few slivers. These floors take a lot of grout, but I love the finished look. Great job!👍
To me they're like penny rounds, they can be so beautiful right after the installation but that's a lot of grout to have in a shower
My husband did this with linear drain in our zero entry shower. Fantastic job, no leaks, looked wonderful. Let me put the pretty stones where I wanted them! Turned out fabulous!
Looks fantastic
We're going to need a montage! Even Rocky had a montage!
I know this takes longer, I have done it this way in the past. The whole job looks more natural when finishing against a wall and not having to cut through them. What you could do if it was a really large area is to leave them on the mat and stop short of the wall by 4/5 inches then fill in by hand 👍🏻
I do pebble stone all the time. I ask during bid if they would like it clean or cheap. I will do either way but not for the same price.
Either way, don’t you want your customers to brag about you when they show off their bathroom? Do you think theyll tell their friends that it looks bad because they chose the cheap option or do you think they’ll leave that out when they mention their contractor?
Maybe you just say that to justify the higher price, but no body ever takes the cheap option. If you do the cheap job, you lose out twice.
@Andrew-fb4vn "nobody ever takes the cheap option" you are absolutely delusional if you think that is the case. I fix shit work all the time because homeowners decided to go with the cheaper bid.
@@austinheath8461 what do you think the point of my comment was?
@Andrew-fb4vn I don't see the point. I've done multi-million dollar homes that spare no expense I've also done simple remodels that are done on a budget. It's a job to job basis.
Totally thought you were doing that over carpet at first. 😳😆
If you can get the money, it’s definitely the way to do it. Well done 👍 Sick soundtrack haha
If you’ve ever walked on one of these they are amazing. Just so weirdly stimulating.
Looks good guy!
I've used this exact tile set and for all of the corners and any small part, cutting and grinding each stone is very tedious, props ma.
That's the best and only way to lay those tile and not see lines from the edges of the sheets. I like to use my grout float as a light tamp after I place all the stones. Gets them all nice and flush so there's no lippage when you're done and grouted.
Only remove the outermost pebbles - leave the centre ones attached.
this is how I do it too.
It’s so pretty. Fantastic job.
Very good job. Your very talented! That has gotta be a tedious job
I recently installed a pebble floor in a shower. Admittedly, I didn’t install them one pebble at a time, but I wouldn’t have taken me any long to do so and I certainly will on the next one.
I’ve read where other tile guys claim that the square pattern can be seen when they’re laid down as a sheet. I figured I would be clever and place the sheets at obscure angles so the eye wouldn’t pick up a noticeable pattern. To make a long story short, I still end up placing more than half the pebbles individually and it took longer because I was filling in between pebbles which meant I had to basically search for the right size pebbles to fill in areas between the sheets. I’ve installed tile for many years, but I’m new to tiled showers. There’s so much to learn when you venture into unfamiliar territory.
This is so beautiful…but how do you clean in between them?
This.
You just grout it with a color that matches most of the stones. Clean the grout the same way you clean any grout. It's very easy.
@@carollynt thanks for the response bc I would love a natural stone tile but I was worried about the clean up
LOL
@@sis_devine It's not very easy to clean FYI.
This looks incredible!
This is dope.. would have liked to see u finish it.. did you put some kind of clear sealer on top?
Shower floor, cool. Soundtrack…AWSOME !
Nice, not selling the walls and the foundation is brilliant.
Not the Scarface music 😮
This is amazing!
People using eye of the tiger to work out got nothing on this song.
@@bland9876 so true!
What about Youre the Best from the Karate Kid 💪🏾
I am now creating an 80s workout mixtape (playlist 😂)
@@iluvdissheet share it with us all
That’s beautiful
Feel like people in the comments dont understand that grout comes after tile.. this is an awesome concept, looks great.. did industrial tile for 3 years and always wanted to get into residential work.. miss it a lot, such a great trade
That looks beautiful
I must say you are right but now that I saw this I’m seriously thinking about doing this..Genius hack that in all accounts, really isn’t genius..Just a professional looking job!..Salute
Imagine all of those stone tiles came on a mesh sheet, would make it so much easier
Hats off to u man great work
How do you keep its clean? The little spaces between the stones will be dirty no?
Grout
@@chopprguyThere isn't any grout there .
@@EnochPowellsLibrarian lol that’s what I’m saying Donald
The grout gets applied later.
That dude's gone. The zelle cleared, and he ain't lookin back.
Are those work shoes your using… yeeezys? 😭
Yes haha
Water build up is gonna be insane on this one
Damn that’s clean
It looks gorgeous! Do you have to add any grout in between the pebbles afterwards or do they stay like that? Also does it hurt your feet at all?
Yes you must grout
I did a shower sauna like this 15 years ago or more and we brought fiber optic fibers between the stones, it was awesome
True I don’t do this but I will try it, looks easier by far
I know someone who had the tile guy remove the mesh to create a custom pattern. It lasted about 4 years before the stones started coming loose and had to be redone
It takes time (money) to do this but it’s so much nicer than seeing the faint outline of tile sheets in a mosaic.
Oh yeah. You can see through the grout?
@@Yyyst no... you can literally see where the mosiac sheets meet if you have a trained eye
The stone sheets are slotted to fit together. Most amateurs even know this. And for those who thinks dead skin is going to get trapped between the stones you're wrong it should get sealed and then it gets grouted flush to the top of the Stone.There is a technique to flush the grout to the stone. it looks better the way the manufactor positions the stones on the mesh. Take for granted you may need to cut a stone out of the mesh or even add one from time to time but that's it. Now it would be a pain to clean if its not grouted correctly. If it's done right it'll be a smooth surface but ever so bumpy for a foot massage. Now who wants stones in there shower floor.
Grouted flush with the stone - this is the step most amateurs and even some tilers fail. They'll grout like normal because it's less work.
THANK YOU for actually understanding this. this IS NOT difficult, at least not as difficult as the FNG here is making it.
99% of tile guys will not do this, because it is being wrong, eh?
cheers!
Love this ❤❤❤❤ (Great music track too 🎼 🎵🎶)
I USED TO DO THIS!!! I learned i needed to get those rubber grip gloves and dunk them so my hands wouldnt go fully raw, but me and my dad's company did this every time! I also started wearing nitrile gloves under the grip gloves so my hands wouldnt get soggy.
If you dont do this in your showers, you wont have floors nearly as beautiful as you COULD if you DID
Beautiful. Looks like a river bed. How did you caulk it? Did you use standard caulk? epoxy?
It’s grouted like normal tiles
Absolutely gorgeous! And I love the 80s training montage music 😂