Latest news with #tiling


Daily Telegraph
30-07-2025
- Entertainment
- Daily Telegraph
The Block 2025 Episode 3 and 4 recap: Dan fires up at ‘dodgy' Han while teams are forced to rip tiles from walls
A last minute tiling disaster leaves two teams high and (not so) dry as one contestant is caught blue-handed breaking the rules. With just 40 hours left until tools down, Britt and Taz and Alicia and Sonny were informed that they would have to pull their freshly laid tiles off the wall. The reason? Both their tilers had used a slow-drying glue, which – as Foreman Dan foreshadowed earlier in the week when he spotted a tub of the stuff – is banned on The Block. A NEW START: Why The Block 2025 is different WINDFALL: How Daylesford is cashing in on The Block WON'T BE MISSED: Why Scott Cam doesn't care about big fish leaving the show In the normal renovation world, tiles can be left several days to dry on a wall or floor before they are grouted. On The Block, that window can be crunched to a matter of hours, hence the need for a fast-drying glue. The only exception to this rule is ceramic tiles, which are porous enough to allow even the slower-setting adhesive to dry. Taz's tiler, after putting in a valiant effort to defend his craftsmanship, was crushed to be told to start again. As was Taz. 'You put in a good shift, you put in the work and you see all your beautiful work up on the walls, and they tell you that have to tear it all off,' Taz said. Poor Alicia and Sonny faced an even worse situation. All of their tiles needed to be washed by hand before they could be reapplied. And some of their waterproof membrane lifted off with the tiles and would also need replacing. Channelling his inner football coach, Sonny gave his exhausted tradesmen a rousing pep talk, urging them to carry on. Meanwhile Mat and Robby were off shopping for bathroom decor, blissfully unaware of what was going down on site. There, Mat discovered Robby's indifference and indecision on soap dish selection was the kryptonite to his 'gay styling superpowers'. They may be the least experienced team on The Block, but Robby and Mat have proven they are a force with which to be reckoned. The pair were the first to pass their waterproofing inspection (despite having to blow dry their floor the day before). And they were the first to begin tiling. And now their potentially game-changing wine cellar plan has been approved, the boys have shown they are not just here to play. 'Dark horse baby! Neigh, neigh b***h!' Mat declared. Upon their return to site, they learned their own tiler had also used the banned glue. But unlike the other teams, Mat's choice of undulating ceramic tiles had saved them from also having to start from scratch. They just had to remove the grout. 'Compared to everyone else, we got away with murder,' Robby said. While Robby and Mat dodged a bullet, Han found herself in Foreman Dan's crosshairs when she blatantly ignored his instructions and sneakily tried to make a start on the second coat of waterproofing without professional supervision. Caught roller in hand, blue waterproofing splattered all over her fingers, Han first claimed the plumber was with her when she was applying the second coat (even though he was nowhere to be seen) before then tearfully telling Dan she hadn't understood his instructions. 'I've lost trust because you've just gone behind my back,' was Dan's response. 'He thought I was being dodgy so that hit hard,' Han worried. 'You're just handy Han,' reassured Can. 'It's a really high pressure environment and she is a really hard worker who likes to get in there and get her hands dirty. 'At home we would be doing all of this by ourselves.' Han's can-do attitude paid off with Scotty Cam and Shelley Craft (who rolled into town in a red sports car to survey the sites). Deemed the hardest worker on site, Han was rewarded with five plants of her choice (as long as they were no taller than Shelley). Nonetheless the hosts had grave concerns the girls had bitten off more than they could chew with their ambitious design and one-man tiling crew. It wasn't to cut costs, the tiler is a perfectionist who insists on working solo. No mean feat when there's floor to ceiling tiles and a curved feature wall of finger tiles to complete in small space of time. But hey, at least he knew what glue to use!

News.com.au
30-07-2025
- Entertainment
- News.com.au
The Block 2025 Episode 3 and 4 recap: Dan fires up at ‘dodgy' Han while teams are forced to rip tiles from walls
A last minute tiling disaster leaves two teams high and (not so) dry as one contestant is caught blue-handed breaking the rules. With just 40 hours left until tools down, Britt and Taz and Alicia and Sonny were informed that they would have to pull their freshly laid tiles off the wall. The reason? Both their tilers had used a slow-drying glue, which – as Foreman Dan foreshadowed earlier in the week when he spotted a tub of the stuff – is banned on The Block. In the normal renovation world, tiles can be left several days to dry on a wall or floor before they are grouted. On The Block, that window can be crunched to a matter of hours, hence the need for a fast-drying glue. The only exception to this rule is ceramic tiles, which are porous enough to allow even the slower-setting adhesive to dry. Taz's tiler, after putting in a valiant effort to defend his craftsmanship, was crushed to be told to start again. As was Taz. 'You put in a good shift, you put in the work and you see all your beautiful work up on the walls, and they tell you that have to tear it all off,' Taz said. Poor Alicia and Sonny faced an even worse situation. All of their tiles needed to be washed by hand before they could be reapplied. And some of their waterproof membrane lifted off with the tiles and would also need replacing. Channelling his inner football coach, Sonny gave his exhausted tradesmen a rousing pep talk, urging them to carry on. Meanwhile Mat and Robby were off shopping for bathroom decor, blissfully unaware of what was going down on site. There, Mat discovered Robby's indifference and indecision on soap dish selection was the kryptonite to his 'gay styling superpowers'. They may be the least experienced team on The Block, but Robby and Mat have proven they are a force with which to be reckoned. The pair were the first to pass their waterproofing inspection (despite having to blow dry their floor the day before). And they were the first to begin tiling. And now their potentially game-changing wine cellar plan has been approved, the boys have shown they are not just here to play. 'Dark horse baby! Neigh, neigh b***h!' Mat declared. Upon their return to site, they learned their own tiler had also used the banned glue. But unlike the other teams, Mat's choice of undulating ceramic tiles had saved them from also having to start from scratch. They just had to remove the grout. 'Compared to everyone else, we got away with murder,' Robby said. While Robby and Mat dodged a bullet, Han found herself in Foreman Dan's crosshairs when she blatantly ignored his instructions and sneakily tried to make a start on the second coat of waterproofing without professional supervision. Caught roller in hand, blue waterproofing splattered all over her fingers, Han first claimed the plumber was with her when she was applying the second coat (even though he was nowhere to be seen) before then tearfully telling Dan she hadn't understood his instructions. 'I've lost trust because you've just gone behind my back,' was Dan's response. 'He thought I was being dodgy so that hit hard,' Han worried. 'You're just handy Han,' reassured Can. 'It's a really high pressure environment and she is a really hard worker who likes to get in there and get her hands dirty. 'At home we would be doing all of this by ourselves.' Han's can-do attitude paid off with Scotty Cam and Shelley Craft (who rolled into town in a red sports car to survey the sites). Deemed the hardest worker on site, Han was rewarded with five plants of her choice (as long as they were no taller than Shelley). Nonetheless the hosts had grave concerns the girls had bitten off more than they could chew with their ambitious design and one-man tiling crew. It wasn't to cut costs, the tiler is a perfectionist who insists on working solo. No mean feat when there's floor to ceiling tiles and a curved feature wall of finger tiles to complete in small space of time. But hey, at least he knew what glue to use!


BBC News
21-05-2025
- Business
- BBC News
SkillBuild NI: Young people honing skills in the construction industry
From fine art at university to studying how to tile walls and floors is quite the career it is one that Rebecca Gavigan, who studies in Limavady, has made and she is making a success of represented North West Regional College in the SkillBuild NI competition in wall and floor competition tests students from Further Education (FE) Colleges across Northern Ireland on construction apprenticeship programmes. Mature student Rebecca, who joined as a mature student, said she wanted to do something practical."At university I did fine art, and then 10 years later I was working and doing all sorts of stuff and finally decided that trade would be the best way to go about the rest of my journey," she told BBC News NI."Tiling can be very practical obviously, but very rewarding and creative so I thought that would be a good route to go down."It took a long time for me to decide to do that and make that leap as a mature student, but I'm glad I did."She has already proven herself as a tiler, qualifying for the SkillBuild UK finals in 2024. Competitor at SkillBuild Aaron Emerson, who studies carpentry and joinery in South Eastern Regional College (SERC) in Lisburn, has also gone back to has worked as a labourer on building sites for a number of years."An opportunity came up on the building site just to go in to joinery," he said."So I sort of took the leap."Aaron was competing in carpentry and joinery at SkillBuild NI, but said he received little information about going into a trade when he was at school."It's only in recent years that I've really realised that I can have carpentry and joinery," he said."I always sort of enjoyed it when I was younger but I maybe didn't have the courage to leap into it."He said that "plenty of patience" and "being fussy" was key to being a good goes into college one day a week and works on building sites on joinery the rest of the has ambitions to be self-employed as a joiner."I'd like some day to be able to look at a house and say: 'I put the roof on that by myself and hung all the doors'," he said. David Magee, meanwhile, was competing as a furniture and cabinet 19-year-old works as an apprentice for a kitchen company and also spends one day a week in college."I left school and came to the tech in Lisburn and I'm enjoying it so far," he said."I didn't really like paperwork and being in a classroom all day every day, so I preferred then to go for the apprenticeship route." Construction workers needed The Construction Industry Training Board (CITB) NI organised the SkillBuild NI event held at the Downpatrick campus of to Rachel Dorovatas, from CITB NI, there is a need for more young people like Rebecca, Aaron and organisation forecasts that 3,000 more construction workers will be needed in Northern Ireland by 2028."We have 11 trades happening in the competition, from wall and floor tiling to plastering, carpentry, joinery, a whole host of activities," she said."We know that the construction industry is definitely facing a skills shortage."We also know that there's an ageing workforce in some of those sectors."There are so many great opportunities and great roles from the trades," she more women into construction is also a priority and Rebecca Gavigan certainly has no regrets about choosing tiling as a career."I'm planning to hopefully work for myself, maybe start my own company at some point," she said."Tiling is definitely an art form and it takes a lot of years' practice and craft to really hone it."