For those who wish they could tile an entire room but may not have the budget, take heart. These rooms show how tiling just one area in a room creates a dynamic focal point and keeps a busy tile from feeling overwhelming. Scroll down for some spaces that use tile to amazing effect.
What makes this tiled wall extra intriguing is the stepped border of the diamond-shape tiles, which helps subtly define the open-concept kitchen and ease the transition to the living area.
Photographer: Lauren Miller
Designer: Andi Wheelband (Two Birds Design) Architecture: Perspective Views
In this kitchen, stained glass tiles laid in a stacked bond pattern create a one-of-a-kind kitchen, and creates a cohesive effect with the navy cabinets.
Photographer: Donna Griffith
Designer: Cynthia Ferguson
In this kitchen niche, a French bistro–style patterned backsplash tile was the jumping-off point for the saturated palette. To balance the bold choice, designer Ami McKay added in plenty of white oak millwork and simple pendants as a calm counterpoint to the look-at-me tile.
Photographer: Janis Nicolay
Designer: Ami McKay, Pure Design
This backsplash benefits from not only a glossy gray hue, but a groovy texture, to give white cabinets some extra punch.
Photographer: Alex Lukey
Designer: Katelyn Hermant and Sarah Siwik
Viewed through an arch, a tiled wall in a range of whites gives depth to this kitchen, and it’s a quiet counterpoint to the “electric Cookie Monster–blue island,” according to designer Ben Leavitt.
Photographer: Ema Peter
Designer: Ben Leavitt, PlaidFox Studio
This tile proves small spaces don’t have to be afterthoughts. “We gave this tiny utility space its own graphic hit,” says designer Nam Dang-Mitchell of this walk-in pantry, where cool diamond-patterned cement tiles up the style quotient.
Photographer: Colin Way
Designer: Nam Dang-Mitchell
In this laundry room, a herringbone tile accented by dark grout adds a crisp note to rustic barnboard-style storage cabinets and grey appliances.
Photographer: Alex Lukey
Designer: Katelyn Hermant and Sarah Siwik
Navy subway tiles are a nod to signature maritime colors — an appropriate choice in a Halifax kitchen. The tiles’ glazing varies in intensity, so some tiles have a darker hue, giving it an artisanal look.
Photographer: Janet Kimber
Designer: 31 Westgate
This groovy Pop Art tile is a fun note in a laundry room where denim blue cabinetry and a quirky backsplash give new life to the room’s white envelope.
Photographer: Stacey Brandford
Designer: Aránzazu González Bernardo & Michael Fohring, Odami
Dsigned by Senior Interiors Editor Stacy Begg, this show-stopping feature wall of hand-painted ceramic tiles makes the kitchen of former editor Beth Hitchcock’s Toronto kitchen an H&H favorite.
Photographer: Michael Graydon
Designer: Stacy Begg
The homeowners’ love of sea glass was the inspiration behind the frosted-glass backsplash in this P.E.I. kitchen, and it doesn’t take up a lot of real estate to lift to this white kitchen.
Photographer: Alex Lukey
Designer: Architecture by David Lopes
This bathroom bedecked with Popham Tiles turns a wall into a work of art, creating a European-style wet room set under a skylight that illuminates the diamond pattern.
Photographer: Virginia Macdonald
Designer: Sally Armstrong
The Egyptian tiles behind the stovetop were the inspiration for the color palette, as well as a natural focal point in this circa-1845 cottage kitchen.
Photographer: Robin Stubbert
Designer: Susan Burns
Designer Andrea Armstrong clad this kitchen wall in a small-scale, exotic tile for a dose of wow-factor. “The tiles are the showstoppers in here for sure,” she says.
Photographer: Alex Lukey
Designer: Andrea Armstrong