ᐅ Door frames with partially tiled walls – Request for example photos

Created on: 5 Oct 2017 12:48
K
Kaspatoo
Hello,

In the bathrooms, the wall tiles are only installed up to about 1.50m (5 feet) high. When the door frame is mounted on top of this, a gap appears between the wall tiles and the wall above.

The door installer explained to me that you should leave the tiling area around the frame free first, then install the frame, and afterwards install the tiles.
Advantage: no gap, the frame sits flush against the wall everywhere
Disadvantage: the thickness/depth of the frame is largely absorbed by the thickness of the tiles, which might look odd

The tiler said this is nonsense and that the tiles come first, then the frame is mounted on top, and the resulting gap must either be sealed with silicone or, for a more professional look, covered with an additional wooden strip.
Advantage: the frame is fully visible in its complete profile
Disadvantage: at the top, the frame is much thicker/deeper due to the wooden strip

Of course, each proposed solution is much easier for the person responsible for the installation.

I’m interested in hearing your opinions on the appearance of these approaches.
If possible, could you share photos of how it looks in your case, so I can better understand the differences in appearance? That would be really helpful.

Specifically, I am looking for photos of the following three variations:
1) Frame mounted on the wall and tiles installed up to it
2) Frame mounted on the tiles with the gap sealed by silicone
3) Frame mounted on the tiles with a wooden strip covering the gap

Thank you very much.
11ant5 Oct 2017 20:04
Aotearoa schrieb:
And then it should be possible for any tradesperson to transfer exactly this width to the door opening, plus 0.5 cm (0.2 inches) on the left and right of the door frame (I believe that’s how it was done for us; I remember a mark beside the door opening)

Putting this theory into practice requires precision that not every tradesperson may be willing to commit to. However, there are still those who actually enjoy that level of accuracy.
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truce5 Oct 2017 21:37
Here is our version in the previous apartment:

The door frame is placed on the tile floor and slightly chamfered and reduced at the bottom.

Above the tiles, the plaster was simply applied directly.

It looks neat.
Close-up of a door frame made of brown wood profile next to a white, rough wall
Kaspatoo5 Oct 2017 21:56
truce schrieb:
...

The shading makes it look like an optical illusion.
Could you perhaps also take a photo from the side?
D
DNL
5 Oct 2017 23:23
There is usually a 1cm to 2cm (0.4 to 0.8 inch) tolerance with a door frame. There needs to be space for the foam, so extremely high precision is not necessary. Tile up to the frame, then install and adjust the frame accordingly.

We did the same.
Winniefred15 Oct 2017 08:01
For us, the tiles were laid right up to the door frame. The tiler had the door frame measurements and tiled as far as necessary. After that, the door frame was installed, and the small remaining gap will be filled with silicone (we haven’t managed to do this yet). In any case, it looks neat, and the door frame sits flush against the wall all around.
A
Alex85
15 Oct 2017 08:47
And here is option 4 from our rental building.

Corner of a room: white wall, side metal sliding door, and marble floor trim.


Otherwise, here they managed to install the doors so that the edges are not visible, for example because the door is positioned in the corner of the room.