When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: cutting mosaic tile without chipping

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Ceramic tile cutter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceramic_tile_cutter

    The first tile cutter was designed to facilitate the work and solve the problems that masons had when cutting a mosaic of encaustic tiles (a type of decorative tile with pigment, highly used in 1950s, due to the high strength needed because of the high hardness and thickness of these tiles).

  3. Zellij - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zellij

    Mosaic tiling from the Qal'at Bani Hammad (present-day Algeria), 11th century. Zellij fragments from al-Mansuriyya (Sabra) in Tunisia, possibly dating from either the mid-10th century Fatimid foundation or from the mid-11th Zirid occupation, suggest that the technique may have developed in the western Islamic world around this period. [5]

  4. Diamond blade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diamond_blade

    Depending on the manufacturer's recommended blade application, vacuum brazed blades will cut a wide variety of material including concrete, masonry, steel, various irons, plastic, tile, wood and glass. Finer synthetic diamond grits will reduce the chipping of tile and burring of steel and provide a smoother finish.

  5. Porcelain tile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porcelain_tile

    Porcelain tiles or ceramic tiles are either tiles made of porcelain, or relatively tough ceramic tiles made with a variety of materials and methods, that are suitable for use as floor tiles, or for walls. They have a low water absorption rate, generally less than 0.5 percent. The clay used to build porcelain tiles is generally denser than ...

  6. Aperiodic tiling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aperiodic_tiling

    For a tiling congruent copies of the prototiles need to pave all of the Euclidean plane without overlaps (except at boundaries) and without leaving uncovered pieces. Therefore the boundaries of the tiles forming a tiling need to match geometrically. This is generally true for all tilings, aperiodic and periodic ones.

  7. Mosaic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosaic

    A tile mosaic is a digital image made up of individual tiles, arranged in a non-overlapping fashion, e.g. to make a static image on a shower room or bathing pool floor, by breaking the image down into square pixels formed from ceramic tiles (a typical size is 1 in × 1 in (25 mm × 25 mm), as for example, on the floor of the University of ...