1920s Kitchen Quarry Tiles - Restore or Replace?
Posted: Tue Mar 07, 2017 1:42 pm
So we are doing the kitchen in our 1928 house.
Under the old lino we find the original reddish quarry tiles. But they are in bad nick, covered in glue and one or two missing (replaced by concrete).
It will cost £400-£600 to professionally clean and restore them, but they won't ever be perfect, the concrete gaps will be painted rather than replaced.
The second option is to buy modern replica quarry tiles and tile them over the top, which won't work out much more expensive. Whilst not original, they will be in keeping with the house character. Only thing is they will be glued over the top of the original tiles (destroying them fortever) and put in using modern grouting, rather than the original 1920s method where they were pressed together.
Third option is simply forget the original feature and put vinyl floor covering over.
Any views? Are the 2nd and 3rd options sacrilege/vandalism, etc? or are we being overly sentimental here?
Under the old lino we find the original reddish quarry tiles. But they are in bad nick, covered in glue and one or two missing (replaced by concrete).
It will cost £400-£600 to professionally clean and restore them, but they won't ever be perfect, the concrete gaps will be painted rather than replaced.
The second option is to buy modern replica quarry tiles and tile them over the top, which won't work out much more expensive. Whilst not original, they will be in keeping with the house character. Only thing is they will be glued over the top of the original tiles (destroying them fortever) and put in using modern grouting, rather than the original 1920s method where they were pressed together.
Third option is simply forget the original feature and put vinyl floor covering over.
Any views? Are the 2nd and 3rd options sacrilege/vandalism, etc? or are we being overly sentimental here?