Different types and styles of shower niches
Here is a photo of the niche I’ve used for these posts and these series of photos. If you simply want a regular hole in the wall the exact size of one tile this is all you need. If you don’t have any idea what the hell I’m talking typing about, start at the beginning here: Building a Shower Niche Part 1. More likely you’ll want to bling that bad boy out in order to make the neighbors and in-laws jealous, no?
That is what I will cover in this post. Hopefully you are reading this before you’ve cut a hole in your wall or anything else. The size, shape, location, just about everything depends on what you want your niche to look like. I will only be able to cover some very general examples since there are, literally, endless possibilities for a shower niche.
If you have any questions pertaining to your particular installation you can always leave a comment below. I do answer every one of them – I’m just super-cool like that.
You can click on any of these photos for a ridiculously large very detailed view of my lack of photography skills.
Every (except one) niche on this page was built in exactly the same way as I’ve described with these posts with only small variations in sizing, placement, etc. Small changes just to enable the design elements.
The first (photo 1) is simply a taller niche with a shelf in it (for your rubber ducky). The elements that make this niche stand out are the glass and travertine liner that run into the sides of the niche and the same liner on the back wall of the niche turned 90 degrees. Other than those it is built exactly the same as the one above.
To create a shelf in this niche I’ve used two of the bullnose tiles, the same tile used for the sides of the niche, and placed them back to back. You can use an epoxy or just regular thinset to sandwich them together. That’s it – that is your shelf.
To install it just place it into the niche and figure out exactly where you want it to be. Measure from the bottom of it to the bottom of your niche and that is the size to cut the first two side pieces of your niche. They are the two pieces below the shelf supporting it.
The order of the pieces for the interior of the niche are back wall first, bottom piece, two short side pieces – the ones you just cut, shelf pieces – the two that you just sandwiched, top piece of bullnose, then the two remaining side pieces cut and installed after everything else. This ensures an exact fit for all your pieces.
In photo 2 is the niche in the other side of the same shower. Both niches are the same size. Due to framing they are not placed in the same spot in the field tile, though. In photo 2 the sides do not line up with grout lines. And you probably never would have noticed it.
That is exactly what I mean when I say type that it is not always possible to lay out the niche where you want it. Framing dictates everything you attempt to build into the wall. if it is a supporting (load-bearing) wall you don’t have many choices without major reconstruction. So either move the niche four inches or rebuild the side of your house. You choose.
Photo 3 is another simple niche like the one at the top except it is built into a subway-style shower. The big thing about getting these to look right is ensuring the pattern follows through in the back of the niche.
The order of installation is the same – back, bottom, top, sides. However, the side pieces are twice as long as the height of the field tile, make sure you line up the grout lines or it won’t look right. It will look ‘busy’ (that’s what designers say, I have no idea what it means. I guess you don’t want your tile to look like it has a job.)
You can always offset the grout lines in the sides of the niche with the field tile, however, in doing that you must also offset the back of the niche with those grout lines. That will break the flow of your horizontal grout lines. You don’t want that, keep the horizontal grout lines flowing consistently.
Photo 4 is another subway style shower with a shelf in the niche. The order of installation is the same, however, you need to find a larger tile to use for your shelf. The subway tile in the field will not work, they are too small. Your rubber ducky will fall down.
In this case I cut down some of the same tile in a larger size for the top, bottom, and shelf of the niche. Notice, though, how the pattern still flows all the way through the niche. Keep it consistent.
In both subway showers the liner is running above the niche rather than through it. You can do it however you want – its your shower. Whatever looks best to you is the right way. If you do run the liner through the niche, run it all the way through. Don’t stop the liner on the sides, have regular bullnose all the way around the niche, then continue the liner across the back of the niche. It breaks up the liner and looks like an afterthought.
I’ll send Guedo after your ass! So don’t do that.
Number 5 is a double niche with shelves in the center. There are several aspects of these that really make them stand out.
First, obviously, is the fact that the backs of them are a different color – the same as the liner. Really makes them stand out.
I normally do not place the shelves in the center of the niche, no real reason to have four identically sized shelves. On these, though, I decided to line them up with the diamond I placed between them. Flow Baby! Yeah!
You will notice, however, that the layout and everything else is exactly the same as the rest – top and bottom line up with a grout line and the design and consistency flows through the niches. Make it look like it fits! That is the secret and the difference between a professionally designed and installed niche and a hole in the wall.
Photo 6 is the same as all the others with a shelf in them. Noticing a theme here? There are a couple of differences.
You will notice the diagonal (on-point) row flowing through it. You want to keep the pattern consistent so that if you look at the niche straight on the grout lines do not jump, break, or move. They are consistent.
The shelf is also lined up with a grout line. The flow is more important than a specific size or height for the shelf.
You will also notice (I hope by now) that the bottom of the niche does not line up with a grout line. Remember when I said typed that it wasn’t always possible or feasible? That is what I meant. In this case it wasn’t very feasible. If I did line it up on the top and bottom it would either be 17″ tall with a shelf – that’s small, or 30″ tall – that is ridiculously huge. It actually looks better with the L-cuts. If you choose a grout that matches your tile you will never notice it. Or, you know, if you haven’t read any of my posts – ever – you would probably never notice it.
It’s all right to break the rules! Well, the design rules, anyway. There is nothing set in stone (that’s a pun, in case you missed it. A tile guy pun.) If it looks good to you do it. I’m just giving you guidelines to have a more professional looking installation.
Number 7 is another rule breaker. A couple of ways. By now you should be able to spot them. Pay attention, there will be a quiz later.
The only grout line that matches is the top. Neither the sides nor bottom match. Looks like hell, huh? Or at least doesn’t look right. It’s because I did not build the niche spaces, the framer, homeowner, and drywaller did. Please do not do that then expect your tile guy to create perfection. Perfection does not start with the tile guy, it starts with the plan. Plan first! Whether you are the tile guy (or girl) or not.
I do have it there for a reason, though. Notice the vertical grout lines in the niche sides? Those are six inches deep. That’s great if you have the space in the wall. But, if you don’t you do not want that back piece to be 1/2″ wide, that looks like hell.
I’ll get guedo again so don’t do that.
The bottom of those niches is also a solid surface material rather than bullnose tile. These are products such as corian, surrell, granite slab, etc. If you use something like that it allows you to extend the niche shelf out from the wall a bit.
Photo 8 is (an awesome shower!) a marble shower. All of the shower walls, as well as the ceiling, are on-point (installed diagonally). I want to apologize ( I don’t do that often, by the way ) because this is the best photo I have of the niches themselves. I was so happy with the outcome of that shower I nearly pissed myself with joy and forgot to get good photos of the niches. So I’ll just have to describe how awesome they are.
The wall the niches are installed into is a diagonal wall and, as such, I was able to make the niches a foot deep. Talk about rubber ducky storage!
The most difficult thing about placing niches in an on-point shower is that you will not be able to line up the grout lines. No big deal, it doesn’t make a difference in this application. The hard part is making the cuts in the field tile up to the niche look right. They have to be perfect. Install your entire niche and hold up your tile to the sides of it exactly in the right spot to mark them. Then take your time cutting them. If you slip or make a small mistake – start over. Just take your time, it’s worth it.
All the sides and top and bottom of these niches are full tiles which I bullnosed on the edge. Doing this eliminates any grout lines inside the niche. Nice and clean. The secret to this application is to install the entire niche then cut the field tile to it rather than the other way around.
Photo 9 is another marble shower (I like marble). This particular niche has a solid piece of marble slab on the bottom for the shelf, which allows it to stick out a bit, and a small arch in the top.
This is only a small arch so it only had four pieces making up the top of it. If you click on it you can barely make out how they step around the arch.
You can do this with regular bullnose or, with natural stone, you can bullnose custom pieces to fit. Doing that also allows this niche to be five inches deep without vertical grout lines in the sides of the niche.
You will also notice that the sides extend past the vertical grout lines in the field tile. The grout lines follow through in the back of the niche – everything lines up.
Number 10 is another arch. In this case the arch is framed. That simply means that the bullnose pieces are placed on the outside of the niche to form a frame around it.
Notice, again, how the pattern follows through the niche. This is one way to do an arch with ceramic or porcelain and regular sized bullnose. Doing this you can also make the niche as deep as you want since the tiles inside are simply field tiles which are cut down to size.
There is another way to so an arch with regular ceramic or porcelain and standard bullnose. That is photo 11.
The bullnose is placed inside the niche as normal but the top pieces are cut into smaller (shorter) pieces to conform to the slope of the arch.
Install everything around and in the back of the niche first then do the top arch pieces. With the field tile already installed it helps guage the sizes you need for the arch. Try to work it out so that they are all the same size.
And follow your pattern through the niche, damnit! Oh, sorry, did I mention that before?
All of the niches except number 7 (that was already framed in and finished before I showed up) were built nearly identically. The same as the simple niche I’ve described in all these posts, the one at the top of the page.
They were all framed the same (except the arches) and cut and created after part of the field tile was installed. Doing it in that manner will ensure that your design flows and your niche is not an afterthought. I hate that!
Don’t do that! You know what happens.
If you have any question pertaining to your specific niche installation just leave a comment below and I’ll get back with you as soon as elvenly possible. (That’s just like ‘humanly possible’ – but with elves.)
Roger,
Thanks for the EXCELLENT pics and explanation.
Luke III
Roger,
Above you described stainless washers supporting a glass shelf in a niche, do you have any pictures of this process or finished product?
Thanks!
Hi Rob,
No I don’t. I’ve only done it twice like that and didn’t take any pictures.
Can the bottom of a shower niche be larger than the hole so that it would stick out a bit to hold larger hair product bottles?
Hi Ray,
Yes.
My tile is 13×40 but I want the niche to be more than 13 and less than 40. What should I have my tile guy do?
Hi Jo-Ann,
His job.
You can have it any size you want, there will just be cuts in the field tile around the niche. No big deal.
Hi Roger, I am considering an arched niche. Do you frame the inside top of the niche with a straight 2×4, just like you do with a regular niche? If so, what are you using to fill that empty space on the outside edges of the arch?
Hi Allen,
How would it be arched with a straight 2×4?
I miter pieces of 2×4 about two to three inches each and walk them around the top.
Hi Roger
I am using 12″ x 12″ marble tiles on bathroom walls. There will be a niche. The marble tile edges are not polished, nor is a bullnose available, so I plan to use pencil moulding. If you could talk/type about that I would be thankful. Also is AcrylPro cement the correct product to use for this type of tile. The pencil will run across the top of the tiles on the walls and along the shower wall at the same level. How do you deal with the corners?
Your posts are always entertaining – and, of course, helpful. Hope you will answer my questions. Thank you.
Hi Posie,
I don’t know what you’d like to know about the pencil rail, it’s a very good option when bullnose is not available. If you want, on your niche you can sand the edges of the marble with 80/150/220 grit sandpaper then put enhancing sealer on them. They will look polished for the edges.
Acrylpro IS NOT the correct product. You need thinset which comes in a powder in a bag which you mix with water. If you are shopping at home depot the white versabond is what you want.
Hey Roger,
I am doing Glass tile mosaic in my Niche. In a previous post above you wrote.
“I install the mosaics on kerdi-board. You can use durock, any other backer, kerdi or ditra as well. Let the mosaics cure, then install them like one large tile.”
Am I clear in saying that you could thinset the glass mosaic to the kerdiboard or hardibacker, then thinset that to the redgarded cement board back of the Niche? All after installing the niche perimeter tiles? Sorry just want to be clear that I understand.
Is it really difficult to get the mosaic in place without using this method?
Thanks,
Sorry Roger,
My previous question above probably wasn’t clear.
I would like to install glass mosaic in my niche.
It should go behind the side and top pieces right? (in all cases?)
Do you always recommend pre-installing the mosaic on hardibacker and then installing that, or was that method for solving a different problem?
Lastly if I do install it in this manner, does it matter that I now have a piece of un regarded CBU sandwiched between the regarded niche and the tile?
Thanks,
It doesn’t always need to go behind the sides, I just think it looks better that way. I pre-install it if the mosaics are thinner than the field tile, it bumps them out to the correct depth. No, it doesn’t matter having the un-redgarded backer in there.
Yes. An no, it is not difficult to do it without this method, just messier and not as efficient.
Hi Roger,
Things are moving along nicely with the niche. I have the bottom granite shelf installed and now I’m onto the back wall of the niche. I plan to use limestone mosaic. Comes in 12×12 sheets with purposely irregularly cut pieces of stone and variable width grout joints between the pieces of stone. I have a few questions:
1) grout joint width varies from ~0″ to ~1/4″. I assume I need sanded grout for the larger gaps but how do I address the smaller gaps? Also, will sanded grout scratch limestone?
2) for the bottom edge of the mosaic that contacts the shelf, is it going to make for a cleaner/easier install if I make a straight cut on that bottom edge? Otherwise I end up with the varying joint size between mosaic and shelf and I’m not sure how good it will look to have some of those larger joint sections filled with caulk.
Thanks in advance!!! — Matt
Hi Matt,
1. Yes, you need sanded grout. It will work for the smaller gaps as well. It normally doesn’t scratch, but always check first.
2. Yes, you want a stright edge at the bottom.
Hi,
Can I set the tile in my niche without gaps, and then silicone it, or do I have to worry about movement since its a change of plane? Or do we just worry about change of plane in the large walls coming together. I would like to use silicone, FYI. Thanks, great website!! I have told many friends about it.
Hi Chad,
I don’t quite understand what you mean by ‘no gaps’. You can set it with 1/16″ perimeter joints at the change of plane and silicone that, but no, you should not butt the tile.
THANK YOU for these details! My husband and father-in-law are about to start redoing our bathroom and I have requested the largest niche possible to fit the space. I am in charge of getting all materials for them before they start working and I’m still a little confused about how the shelving works. I am using a 6″X12″ Carrara Marble tile for the walls. Assuming the studs are 14.5″ apart these tiles won’t work for the shelves as they are slightly too short. So I’m assuming I need to try to order a few of the same tile but in a larger size. However, I’m confused about how the backside of the tile works with the niche. In Photo 2 you talk about putting two bull nose pieces together. This is a little thicker than I would prefer. In Photo 4 it looks more modern- no rounded edge because it’s not bullnose. This would be my preferred look. But then what does the underside of that tile look like? Or is it some kind of special tile that is the same on all sides? I tried to talk to the tile guys at the store and they just gave me a brochure for pre-set niche’s to purchase which already have shelves built in. THANKS FOR YOUR HELP!!!
Hi Megan,
Photo 4 is one piece of 4″ x 12″ travertine. The underside of that tile looks just like the top, because I polished it. Your marble will look unfinished as well unless you polish it.
I am in the process of designing my new shower and saw some niches have Led lights. I would love to know how to get that in before I start putting my shower together
Hi Jennifer,
That is a custom item requiring a professional electrician, a contractor with experience, and a lot of cash.
There may be a product for you to do it yourself, if there is I have no idea what it may be. I’ve never seen one.
Hi roger… So far so good… Shower installation is going well with kerdi installed, one wall complete, niche built but no tile installed yet… It is a tall niche to fit the horizontally placed 10×20″ wall tiles plus trim tile… Niche size is then 10″ wide by 23.5″ high. We plan on a shelf about 2/3 up and were going to use the porcelain tile, but there is no finished edge so had planned on using the schluter trim pieces we are foaming the niche with… However this makes for a rather thick two piece thick shelf with a double row of schluter trim showing … Bit of overkill… So we were thinking about a glass shelf instead… What are younsthoughts on this? Any installation tips… Ie do we still install by cutting the side niche walls then placing the glass on the lower walls then installing the upper side walls on that… Keeping the angle on the shelf to ensure water runoff?
Hi Dan,
Tempered glass shelves work very well. A better option, rather than locking it in, would be to get some 1/2″ stainless steel washers and lock them into the sides, then rest the glass shelf right on them. That way if it ever shatters or chips it’s easily replaced, can be removed for cleaning, etc. A removable glass shelf is a better option. When you lock it into the tile the expansion difference can eventually chip the edges of the shelf.
A most excellent solution Roger!
This seems like an EXCELLENT way to install a glass shelf. Would it be possible for you to describe a little more what you mean by 1/2″ washers locked in? Also, the mosaic stone/glass I’ll be using matches the slate I’m using on the bathroom floor (I’m doing a new tub surround, not shower stall). Can I use the floor slate as the bottom of my niche? Thanks so much for your useful tips and humorous anecdotes which keep me laughing!
Hi Hockey,
They are locked in between the two tiles as well as into the cuts in the wall. Yes, you can use the slate for the bottom of your niche.
Roger,
Thanks for the wealth of information. In doing a tile-backed niche you suggest ‘spotting’ with thin set. How do you handle the installation of a mosaic-backed niche? Also, it seems it would be difficult to ‘wiggle’ it so the bullnose sides would be flush. Don’t the mosaic sheets present problems of their own?
One more – did I miss how you secure the double-tile shelf in the niche? Does the grout do most of the work or is it secured before grouting?
Thank You!
Hi Ken,
I install the mosaics on kerdi-board. You can use durock, any other backer, kerdi or ditra as well. Let the mosaics cure, then install them like one large tile.
The shelf is sandwiched between the back and side tiles on the top and bottom of the niche.
Outstanding post. Was a great help as I’m planning out the rework of our shower that went bad from the previous install. I’m planning on using Kerdi to waterseal the whole thing and this post will allow me to add niches.
I do have a quick question I hope you can help with and that is that in the shower there is a glass block window recessed 3″ in from where the wall tile ends which had tile on it previously and acted as a shelf. How do you recommend sealing up against the glass block with the membrane to ensure no water seeps down between the bullnose tile and the glassblock and under the membrane and then I get to do it all again(practice makes perfect but once is enough for me).
Thanks for any advise you have.
Hi Eric,
Just install the kerdi right up to the glass block, then seal the kerdi to the glass block with kerdi-fix. Make sure the horizontal portion of the frame is sloped toward the inside of the shower.
Is it possible to build a niche in an existing tile wall ?
Hi Sid,
It depends on how the current installation is waterproofed. It is possible, but you need to locate the studs in order to be between them as well as tie in the niche waterproofing with the existing.
Mighty Elf,
Thanks Roger. I have to adjust my niche plan because of change in tile size.
So, I’m using a 12″x 20″ pre made niche and 10×20 (nominal) porcelain tile. If I line up the niche with a horizontal grout line I land 1/4″ short of the other horizontal grout line. (1/8″ grout lines will be used throughout, so 1/8″ grout line + 1/4″ gap gets me to the next tile). I’m considering some solutions and would like to get your thoughts and also any tips or tricks I’m not considering:
1) start and end the vertical height of niche on a half tile (I.e., L cuts top and bottom). Based on your manual, L cuts seem like a bad idea.
2) bottom of niche starts on a grout line, L cut at top because 1/4″ short.
3) make my own Kerdi board niche to match tile size (would rather not but will if the other options just don’t work).
4) any tile positioning or tile layout solutions?
Thanks in advance! Matt
Hi Matt,
My preference is ALWAYS to build the custom niche. However, number 1 would be the one to choose – top and bottom on half a tile.
Thanks Roger. Since the niche is not yet installed, could I shorten the height of the niche by 1/4″ as follows:
– It’s a prefab Kerdiboard niche.
– Install/place the niche so that the row of wall tile immediately before the niche (working up from the floor) will end up 1/4″ above the bottom of the niche.
– build up the bottom of the niche by 1/4″ with thinset (or something else?) before placing tile on the bottom of the niche.
What do you think? Do I run into problems when using thinset that thick?
Thanks in advance !!! Matt
I would place the bottom so it’s where it needs to be to line up with the tile and build the top down with kerdi-board or some other substrate. You can just thinset the additional substrate to the top of the niche.
Thanks Roger.
I think hardi-backer would be the perfect thickness (and I have some extra). Could I build down the top with hardi-backer and secure that to the kerdi-board with kerdi-fix?
Thanks,
Matt
Yes.
I found a marvelous floor tile that I really like to use for walls too. I would like to make a simple niche. But it’s a pattern with no bullnose. What do you do around the edges? I’m not trying to do anything fancy. Just make it look nice. Some kind of pencil trim or … ?
Hi Loren,
You can find a pencil trim (easy), use a tile edge like a schluter trim (easy), miter the corners so you have 90 degree angles (HARD), or have the tile you’re using bullnosed (easy but spendy).
Hi Roger,
I’m almost done with my shower -thanks for hanging in there with me.
My niche is placed such that the left half (side,top,bottom) will fall on grout lines while the right half will not fall on grout lines (running bond pattern). Using 3/8″ thick porcelain tile 10″ x 20″.
My plan was to use bullnose on the inside of the niche to overlap the field tile edges. However, the finished edges of the tile have a slight taper so I’m concerned how this mix of slightly tapered edges and square cut edges would look around the niche with bullnose coming over these edges.
What is the best way to approach this?
Thanks in advance! Matt.
Hi Matt,
If you go get a rubbing stone (about $4.00 at HD) you can rub down the cut edges so they have a slight taper to match the factory edges. It will never match exactly, but it will also never be noticed.
Hi Roger,
Thanks for all the great information!
I’m building a shower niche similar to photo one. Using hardibacker and hydroban to waterproof underneath.
Question is whether I need to caulk or grout the changes of plane for the tile INSIDE the niche and what size grout lines to use. Sorry if you already covered this.
Thanks.
Ed
Hi Ed,
Changes of plane on the inside of the niche need to be siliconed. Size of grout line is purely a personal choice. I prefer 1/16″ grout line on wall tile, but opinions vary.
Roger,
You have a lot of great stuff here, but this niche series is cream of the crop. Clearly it took a lot of time to put together – once again, thank you very much.
Questions (of course)
8×4 marble subways. Tall niche with 3 shelves.
1. Bottom shelf is for soap. My wife buys the big block type (rough hewn 2×4 size). How much clear space for the shelf do you feel is comfortable to be able to get your hand in there and grab the soap. 4″ would work well with the shelf lining up with the next grout line, but I’m concerned it ins’t tall enough.
2a. I don’t have bullnose tiles for the walls of the niche. I was planning/hoping to use my 4×8 subways. How would you handle the interface between the niche side walls and the shower wall. Miter them like an outside corner? Cover the niche wall tile with the main field tile? Something else?
2b. Same sort of question for the ceiling of the niche and the “floating” shelves.
3. The back wall of the niche is hex mosaic. Can I just install the shelves so they butt up against the back wall, or should I slot the mosaics so the shelf can fit into the back wall?
4. I am lacking 2 outside kerdi corners for my niche – tried to buy them locally (again) and the bastards are still out of stock. If I have to I will order some, but it will set my project back…I definitely don’t want to risk a leak, but I do have an awful lot of extra Kerdi Fix — see where I’m going with this?
One more.
I am planning on mounting the mosaic (back of the niche) on kerdi or ditra before I mount it in the niche. Assuming this is OK to do, my question is whether or not I can grout it (spectralock) before installing it on the back of the niche? I’m concerned that i won’t be able to grout it very well once installed (maybe you have a trick for that?)
BTW, I really like picture #3 above – it’s very clean and “crisp”…great work.
OK, I guess I was confused the first two times I read it. You don’t even use pre-formed outside corners at all, right? If that’s the case, then I actually have two more than I need…
Yes, it’s fine to do that. I would not grout it first unless you plan on being very careful with it as you install it. Any flex at all may crack a grout line. With the spectralock, however, this is much less of a problem. Make sure it’s the correct size, and you can actually grout it without bonding it to kerdi or ditra, let it cure and it will be like one solid piece of tile without any backing at all.
Hi Steve,
1. 4″ is plenty of space, even for a soap brick.
2a. With marble tiles you can do it any way you think looks good. The sides of marble tiles can be showing, they look fine. If you miter them you will have a very square corner, which tends to be a bit fragile.
2b. Same answer.
3. You can just butt them.
4. Just make sure you have 2″ of overlap and it will be completely waterproof. You may end up with a pinhole on the very corner, that can be sealed with kerdi-fix. See where I went with that?
I have a niche project coming up on the back wall of a roman tub. The center niche is 12″ x 33″ with a curved top about a 30″ radius. This is flanked by a pair of smaller niches that measure 6″ x 9″ with a curved top about a 4.5″ radius.
What’s the easiest way to frame and waterproof the curved tops?
Hi Steve,
The easiest way to frame it is to use several short 2×4’s and walk them around the top. Cover that with cement board by scoring the board on the backside every two inches or so about halfway through and pressing into the arch. Cover all that with a liquid waterproofing membrane.
“The bottom of those niches is also a solid surface material rather than bullnose tile. These are products such as corian, surrell, granite slab, etc. If you use something like that it allows you to extend the niche shelf out from the wall a bit.” This probably sounds dumb, but where do I source these kinds of solid shelves? Thanks! for ALL your help and info!
Hi Todd,
Get a hold of your local countertop fabricator. Google ‘corian’ and you should be able to find one. If you want stone contact a local slab company.
Hi Roger
I have built one shower using your ebooks and they were great. Now onto the second shower (this one was a hack job by the previous homeowner – just checking, it’s not supposed to rain in the room below the bathroom when you take a shower – correct?)
Anyway, none of the tile that I will be using has a bullnose. I’ll be using the Schulter edge products to edge all of the tile. The one thing I cannt figure out is how to edge a shelf for the niche. I can edge the perimiter of the niche with the Schulter quarter round, but how do I finish the front edge of the shelf? Even if schulter made some sort of half round molding (which as far as I can tell, they don’t) it would look like hell where it meets the perimiter quarter round.
If I had bullnose tile, I could just put two together back to back, but there are not bullnose in any of the tile I am using.
Any suggestions (aside from the objious – to go find a tile that coordinates that DOES have a bullnose and make the shelf a different tile)
Thanks
-dave
Hi Dave,
I don’t think it’s supposed to rain, but you didn’t state whether or not you live in a a rain forest.
I have a metal blade on my miter saw to cut schluter, you can miter them, but it’s tedious. You can also just butt the edges of the shelf trim and inset it back by about 1/8″, that looks better than trying to butt them flush. Or you can go find a piece of marble or granite to use as the shelf. You can also get a piece of tempered glass made to use as a shelf. You can also butt them and fill in the seams with j-b weld and paint it with testor’s aluminum model paint.
Or you can find a tile that coordinates that DOES have a bullnose.
I’m getting ready to tile a shower using Item 488152 from lowes. It looks like various sized stone but is acutally fairly large tile. Is there recommendation on niche placement with this sort of time as the grout lines on the tile will look like they are not on any specific placement. Additionally, this tile doesn’t have bullnose. I’m assuming that I don’t want to look at the edge of a tile so do I need to try to miter the edge of the tile?
Hi Justin,
You can put the niche wherever you want with that, it won’t make any difference. I would use a metal edge trim with that, mitering will work, but may not end up looking so well.
I built a niche with Hardibacker and plan to Redgard. Do the inside corners and seams need caulked prior to applying the Redgard?
Hi Julie,
If you have gaps 1/16″ or larger yes, you need to caulk them first.