There are so many options when it comes to decorating your kitchen, especially in terms of tiling. Here are some recommendations:
Tile That Looks Like Wood
It's the best of both worlds: the durability and moisture-resisting properties of ceramic tile; the basic look of wood flooring. These full body ceramic tiles come in 4" x 32" planks, just like real wood. Why only the "basic look" of wood? Because no ceramic tile has yet been able to capture the exquisite beauty of real wood. Resign yourself to loving the surreal properties of tile that look like wood.
One thing to note is that these types of tiles are rectified, meaning that they are cast in large sheets and then cut down to size. This ensures razor-sharp edges so that they can be laid super-close to each other. With wood look tiles, you don't want to have thick grout lines because real wood flooring does not have wide spaces between the boards.
Linen Texture Ceramic Tile For Kitchen Floor
You have to feel this tile surface to get the full effect of this linen texture. The best thing is that it's not an expensive, premium brand: it's Dal-Tile. It's made in Italy, part of the Identity fabric style tile. Like the wood like tile mentioned elsewhere in this article, no one will ever mistake it for the real thing. Linen-texture tile provides superior grip (after all, kitchens are wet places) and low sheen.
Super-Size Porcelain Tiles for Counters
The chief benefit, besides the sheer coolness factor, is that you can tile your counter, floor, or backsplash without those annoying seams all over. This process creates panels for this Plane series that are lightweight and free of any fiberglass backing.
In their catalog, Plane has the "aesthetic beauty of a natural slab of quarried stone," combined with the durable characteristics of porcelain. What they mean is that, unlike slab stone, you don't need to worry about sealing or staining.
Uncut Mosaic Tile For Backsplashes and Walls
Backsplashes are such a limited area that you can afford the time and, hopefully, the money to go all out with it. Marble look mosaic itself represents a certain degree of creativity, but why not go one step further and design some cool mosaic patterns on your kitchen backsplash or walls?
What they term uncut mosaic tiles, explained to me by a company representative as full tile squares within each mesh-backed sheet. Uncut mosaic tile gives your project more of a chunky, blocky look that resembles an 8-bit game.
Ceramic/Vinyl Hybrid Tile, Perfect for Flooring
Could this be the perfect tile? It's called Alterna, and it combines the best aesthetic properties of ceramic tile with the durability and softness of vinyl. Comprised of 75 percent limestone, 25 percent polymers, this hybrid tile looks just like ceramic tile.
Yet it doesn't have some of the pesky properties of ceramic, such as grouting, sealing the grout, and hardness. It uses limestone, abundant in the United States, as opposed to dwindling supplies of marble. Alterna does a pretty good job of mimicking terracotta, travertine, marble, granite, and other types of popular stones and clays.