Connect with us~>
Andreaali
Laali
Lahorenorbury
Thietkewebsoctrang
Forumevren
Kitchensinkfaucetsland
Drywallscottsdale
Remodelstyle
Blackicecn
Mllpaattinen
Qiangzhi
Codepenters
Bignewsweb
Snapinsta
Pickuki
Hemppublishingcomany
Wpfreshstart5
Enlignepharm
Faizsaaid
Lalpaths
Hariankampar
Chdianbao
Windesigners
Mebour
Sjya
Cqchangyuan
Caiyujs
Vezultechnology
Dgxdmjx
Newvesti
Gzgkjx
Kssignal
Hkshingyip
Cqhongkuai
Bjyqsdz
Dizajn
Thebandmusic
Berlinpackagingus
48hourprintus
Dartcontainerus
Bankersboxus
Fillmorecontain
Ecoenclosetech
Amcorus
Georgiapacificus
3mindustry
Frenchpaperus
Imperialdadeus
Ballcorporationsupply
Brotherfactory
Fedexofficesupply
Greenbaypackagi
Ardaghgroupus
Dixiefactory
Graphicpackagin
Loctiteus
Bubblewrapus
Greifsupply
Americangreetin
Duckustech
Usgorilla
Hallmarkdirect
Averysupply
Boxupus
Lightningsourceus
Bemisus
Berryglobalus
Gotprintus
Hallmarkcardssupply
Cuteralaserus
Lumenisus
Xtoolsupply
Crealityus
Laserphotonicsus
Trumpftech
Tomdixonus
Cosentinous
Swecous
Falconussupply
Pertexus
Schoellerus
Danaherus
Eboniteus
Hitachius
Tecumsehus
Hanstonequartzus
Nexaflowusa
Leoniusa
Xeroxfactory
Flsmidthus
Siemensfactory
Covestrous
Intuitivesurgic
Hpreverb
Getransformerus
Viessmannusa
Sylvaniaus
Abbvfdusa
Lappsupply
Bakerhughesus
Flowserveusa
Reliancefactory
Coopertireus
Masimous
Hammerbowlingus
Yanmartech
Vaillantus
Visualcomfortus
Teconnectivityus
Derrickus
Canadiansolarus
Vardhmanus
Toraydirect
Thermofishersupply
Flukemultimeterus
Keysightsupply
Airproductstech
Flexcous
Basfus
Clariantus
Medlinetech
Bosefactory
  • Home
    • About
    • Contact
  • Bangles
  • Canvas Art
  • Jewelry
  • Shop!
  • Blog
  • Weddings
  • Sparkle Initiative

Join Our Newsletter

We have so much going on behind the scenes that we want to bring to you! We'll send out a newsletter at most once a month to keep you sparkly!

Join Our Newsletter

Academy of Handmade

11/18/2014

0 Comments

 
Picture
We were so pleased when the Academy of Handmade asked us to write about why we love to sell on Instagram, and review Sue B. Zimmerman's workshop on Creative Live. 

Read about it all here ~> http://bit.ly/AcademyofHandmade

If you have a story about where you like to sell your handmade goods, or if you just love Instagram like me, leave a comment below!
 
0 Comments
 

Glitter as an Initiative

11/17/2014

0 Comments

 
Picture

#sparkleinitiative - a compliment, a smile, a pat on the back have the power to transform and move mountains.

Every day there's a chance to sparkle. We know how that sounds! We, along with so many of you, get bogged down when watching the news or reading negative things right in your Facebook timeline. And sometimes those things are heavy and genuinely debilitating. We aren't suggesting a Pollyanna attitude. But close.  How do we handle it all without getting overwhelmed? Especially during the holidays?

Enter attitude. It's that thing only you can control on a daily basis, and it has the power to help or harm. So when we say that a little bit of sparkle can solve most problems, what we mean is that focusing on how to make a situation better, by doing only what we can control, can turn negatives into positives.

This holiday season is a great time to test out sparkle at holiday gatherings, and getting into the sparkly mood. Remember, the only thing you can control is yourself. Let go of other people's opinions and allow only the things that exude positivity into your realm of influence. 

Go forth and sparkle!
0 Comments
 
Blog

I Spent $3,200 Learning Why Your Shower Tile Installations Fail (And How USG Fixed It)

Posted on Friday 5th of June 2026
  • Part 1: The Surface Problem (That Everyone Thinks They Understand)
  • Part 2: The Deeper Cause (What I Missed)
  • Part 3: The Real Cost of Getting It Wrong
  • Part 4: The Solution (Short, Because The Problem Is Now Clear)

About three years ago, in the fall of 2022, I was finishing up a high-end bathroom remodel for a local developer. Twelve shower pans, all custom tile. We'd used a competitor's cement board for years without issue—or so I thought. The day before the final inspection on the first unit, the GC called. There was a problem.

Water was weeping through the grout lines on the floor. Not a leak, exactly, but enough moisture to discolor the color tiles we'd installed. We had to rip out the entire shower floor on that unit. The shower shoes—the pre-sloped pan liners—weren't the culprit. The issue was the substrate. That single mistake cost roughly $3,200 in materials and labor, plus a one-week delay. And that's when I started documenting everything.

Part 1: The Surface Problem (That Everyone Thinks They Understand)

If you search online for how to build a tiled shower, the advice is almost unanimous: use a cement board, apply a liquid membrane, and tile over it. The common assumption is that failure comes from bad tile work or cheap materials. Most contractors I know focus on the color tiles—making sure the pattern is right, the cuts are clean, the layout is balanced. Or they obsess over the shower shoes, making sure the pan is perfectly sloped.

I was in that camp. I thought we'd nailed it. But the real problem wasn't the tile or the slope.

Part 2: The Deeper Cause (What I Missed)

Here's what I didn't realize until that $3,200 mistake: the tile backer board isn't just a surface to stick tile to. It's the structural component of the waterproofing system. If it wicks moisture—even a tiny amount—the water will migrate sideways, under the tile, and eventually show up where you least expect it. In our case, the backer board we used had a higher absorption rate than the spec sheet claimed. It was wicking moisture from the pan up into the wall cavity.

See also Focusing on packaging and printing benefits: How ecoenclose enables transformation by solving inefficient and non-eco-friendly shipping with sustainable and certified solutions

The conventional wisdom says cement board is cement board. My experience—specifically with that failed shower—suggests otherwise. The real culprit was that the board's core wasn't designed to be continuously wet. It was fine for a drywall ceiling or a non-wet area, but for a shower floor, it was a disaster waiting to happen.

I started researching alternatives. That's when I landed on USG's tile backer board line. The technical spec for their Durock brand is one thing, but the USG Fiberock floor protector paper—that's the product I wish I'd known about earlier. It's a moisture-resistant underlayment that goes over the subfloor before tiling. It's not just a paper; it's a designed barrier that prevents moisture from reaching the wood structure below.

I also looked at the USG tile backer board for the walls. The key difference? It's not cement-based. It's a fiber-reinforced gypsum core that's engineered to be waterproof, not just water-resistant. In one test, I left a piece submerged for 48 hours. It came out completely dry. That convinced me.

Part 3: The Real Cost of Getting It Wrong

Let me break down the hidden costs of a shower failure—because the initial $3,200 was just the beginning.

  • Direct rework: $3,200 for demo, new materials, and labor on that one unit.
  • Schedule delay: One week lost, which cascaded into the next unit's start date.
  • Credibility hit: The developer asked us to prove our waterproofing method on the remaining eleven units. We had to submit a full written spec and get sign-off from the GC's engineer.

We probably caught 47 potential errors in the remaining units using a checklist I created after that incident. I'm not exaggerating: I literally went through every step of the installation process and identified each decision point. That checklist saved us an estimated $8,000 in potential rework across the project.

See also Offset Printing vs Digital Printing: Poster Decisions for Brand Consistency
See also Is Digital Printing the Next Normal for Business Cards in Asia?

And here's the part that still bothers me: a customer had asked me months earlier, "Where to buy salt and stone?"—meaning the kind of natural stone tile that's notoriously tricky to install because it's porous. I'd brushed it off, thinking it was a supply chain question. Looking back, I realize the real question was about how to install it correctly. They were worried about the right materials. They just didn't know the right vocabulary to ask.

Part 4: The Solution (Short, Because The Problem Is Now Clear)

If you're a contractor, a designer, or a serious DIYer, and you're working on a shower or any wet area, here's what I'd do differently:

  • Don't assume any board is waterproof. Check the spec for absorption rate and continuous wet exposure limits. The USG tile backer board is specifically rated for wet areas—it's not just a general-purpose board.
  • Use a dedicated floor protector. I'm now a proponent of the USG Fiberock floor protector paper under any tile floor. It's a relatively cheap insurance policy (maybe $50-75 per room) that can prevent thousands in damage.
  • Build a checklist. On a 12-piece order where every single item could have the same issue, a checklist is your best friend. Mine includes: verify the substrate rating, test a sample for water absorption, confirm the membrane compatibility, and check the shower shoes for proper fit.

The solution isn't about being perfect. It's about being prepared. I still make mistakes—I'm not claiming otherwise. But that one $3,200 error taught me a lesson that has saved me more money than it cost. I'd rather spend 15 minutes verifying a product spec than lose five days fixing a failure.

By the way, if you're wondering where to start: the USG website has a product selection tool that's surprisingly good for comparing options. And if you're looking for specific items—like the color tiles or the shower shoes—I recommend calling a dedicated tile supplier, not a big box store. They'll know which products pair best with your chosen backer board. The answer to "Where to buy salt and stone" isn't just a store name; it's about finding a supplier who understands the installation requirements. That's the real value.

This entry was posted in blog.
Bookmark the permalink.
author-avatar
Jane Smith

I’m Jane Smith, a senior content writer with over 15 years of experience in the packaging and printing industry. I specialize in writing about the latest trends, technologies, and best practices in packaging design, sustainability, and printing techniques. My goal is to help businesses understand complex printing processes and design solutions that enhance both product packaging and brand visibility.

Construction Specialties vs. Generic Suppliers: The Real Cost of Building Product Choices
napoleon-grill-amp-fireplace-3-scenarios-where-one-brand-fits-and-where-420
Recent Posts
  • 07 Jun My 5-Step Boise Cascade Order Checklist (After $3,200 in Mistakes)
  • 07 Jun Got a Rush Printing Request That's Way Too Small? Here's How to Handle It
  • 07 Jun Why Your Formwork Supplier Is Costing You More Than the Invoice Says
  • 07 Jun Don't Let a Missing Part Ground Your Crew: A 5-Step Checklist for Sourcing Gas Fireplace & Heater Components
  • 07 Jun 5 Mistakes I Made Ordering Fypon Products (And the Checklist I Now Use)
  • 07 Jun Delta Faucet FAQ: 7 Mistakes I Made (So You Don't Have To)
  • 07 Jun Does Coretec Flooring Need to Acclimate? A Field Guide for Contractors (Plus Moldings)
  • 07 Jun Caesarstone Countertops: 8 Questions I Wish I'd Asked Before Specifying Them
  • 07 Jun Why Most Tile Roofing Services in the Florida Keys Miss This Critical Detail
  • 07 Jun Fixing Flexographic Color Consistency Issues on Corrugated Boxes
Copyright 2014 GlitterStylesDotCom