AF

Aaron Fude

15/12/2007 12:08 PM

To replace vanity top

Hi,

I have purchased an antique dining server which I would like to use as
a bathroom vanity. And I would actually like to tile the top. The
existing top is not appropriate for tiling because in has an elaborate
edge and because it would be too thick. So I would like to replace it
and also build a little frame around the new top to house the tiles.
What's an appropriate material to support that construction? Can I go
with compressed particle board (it will be concealed) or should I go
for solid wood. Please keep in mind that I don't have a planer or a
router. All I have is a table saw, a miter saw and a router.

Many thanks in advance!

Aaron


This topic has 5 replies

dd

"dadiOH"

in reply to Aaron Fude on 15/12/2007 12:08 PM

15/12/2007 11:00 PM

Aaron Fude wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have purchased an antique dining server which I would like to use
> as a bathroom vanity. And I would actually like to tile the top. The
> existing top is not appropriate for tiling because in has an
> elaborate edge and because it would be too thick. So I would like
> to replace it and also build a little frame around the new top to
> house the tiles. What's an appropriate material to support that
> construction? Can I go with compressed particle board (it will be
> concealed) or should I go for solid wood. Please keep in mind that
> I don't have a planer or a router. All I have is a table saw, a
> miter saw and a router.

Any 3/4" exterior ply, voids are unimportant in your application.
Best wih cement board - even 1/4 - over it so you can use thinset to
set the tiles. If no cement board, I'd set them in mastic.


--

dadiOH
____________________________

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mM

[email protected] (Malcolm Hoar)

in reply to Aaron Fude on 15/12/2007 12:08 PM

16/12/2007 2:30 AM

In article <60Z8j.15162$D44.2525@trnddc04>, "dadiOH" <[email protected]> wrote:
>Aaron Fude wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I have purchased an antique dining server which I would like to use
>> as a bathroom vanity. And I would actually like to tile the top. The
>> existing top is not appropriate for tiling because in has an
>> elaborate edge and because it would be too thick. So I would like
>> to replace it and also build a little frame around the new top to
>> house the tiles. What's an appropriate material to support that
>> construction? Can I go with compressed particle board (it will be
>> concealed) or should I go for solid wood. Please keep in mind that
>> I don't have a planer or a router. All I have is a table saw, a
>> miter saw and a router.
>
>Any 3/4" exterior ply, voids are unimportant in your application.
>Best wih cement board - even 1/4 - over it so you can use thinset to
>set the tiles. If no cement board, I'd set them in mastic.

Yup, exterior ply is the way to go for the sub-base.

Particle board hates moisture and solid wood will be
expensive and prone to warping.

However, the OP refers to "a little frame around the new top
to house the tiles". I think he may be looking for some kind
of hardwood molding to finish the exposed edges...?

Depending on how you want this to look, you can consider:

* Hardwood molding
* Special edging tiles
* Metal trims of various types (kinda 60's look)
* Plastic trims of various types (kinda yuk)

I'd either go with a tile edge finish or the hardwood
molding. With the molding, one has to decide whether to
stain and match the rest of the piece (may be tricky)
or just go for a contrasting color and create an accent.


--
|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
| Malcolm Hoar "The more I practice, the luckier I get". |
| [email protected] Gary Player. |
| http://www.malch.com/ Shpx gur PQN. |
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Ks

"Kate"

in reply to Aaron Fude on 15/12/2007 12:08 PM

16/12/2007 8:18 PM

We built a vanity for one of our bathrooms. It has a black slate top on it.
We used 5/8" marine grade plywood for the top, then put hardie backer board
on top of that.

The marine grade plywood resists moisture dameage and the hardie backer
board not only resists water but is the best thing you can use to stick your
tiles to. It provides a nice strong, flat surface for your tiles.

When we put the plywood in it was inset into the fame of the cabinet then
the backer board placed on top of it.
It turned out really well.

Particle board would be a real no no. It's VERY susceptable to moisture and
may even sag under the weight.

Have you considered recycling the ornate trim to be the frame around your
tiles? If you removed it carefully it might look really nice!

Kate
PS: I'd be glad to post a photo of ours in the binary group if you'd like to
see it.


"Aaron Fude" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
Hi,

I have purchased an antique dining server which I would like to use as
a bathroom vanity. And I would actually like to tile the top. The
existing top is not appropriate for tiling because in has an elaborate
edge and because it would be too thick. So I would like to replace it
and also build a little frame around the new top to house the tiles.
What's an appropriate material to support that construction? Can I go
with compressed particle board (it will be concealed) or should I go
for solid wood. Please keep in mind that I don't have a planer or a
router. All I have is a table saw, a miter saw and a router.

Many thanks in advance!

Aaron

MO

Mike O.

in reply to Aaron Fude on 15/12/2007 12:08 PM

15/12/2007 10:09 PM

On Sat, 15 Dec 2007 12:08:32 -0800 (PST), Aaron Fude
<[email protected]> wrote:

> So I would like to replace it
>and also build a little frame around the new top to house the tiles.
>What's an appropriate material to support that construction? Can I go
>with compressed particle board (it will be concealed) or should I go
>for solid wood. Please keep in mind that I don't have a planer or a
>router. All I have is a table saw, a miter saw and a router.

Around here the tile guys don't like us to use PB on countertops if
tile is to be used for the finished top. They prefer a fir plywood
and will sometimes put a backer board (hardi-backer or similar) on top
of that.

Mike O.

Jj

"Jeff"

in reply to Aaron Fude on 15/12/2007 12:08 PM

15/12/2007 10:54 PM

Good plywood without voids, you want this to be as solid as possible.
Marine plywood would be good choice as it uses waterproof glue.

"Aaron Fude" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi,
>
> I have purchased an antique dining server which I would like to use as
> a bathroom vanity. And I would actually like to tile the top. The
> existing top is not appropriate for tiling because in has an elaborate
> edge and because it would be too thick. So I would like to replace it
> and also build a little frame around the new top to house the tiles.
> What's an appropriate material to support that construction? Can I go
> with compressed particle board (it will be concealed) or should I go
> for solid wood. Please keep in mind that I don't have a planer or a
> router. All I have is a table saw, a miter saw and a router.
>
> Many thanks in advance!
>
> Aaron


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