Kitchen Tile & Backsplash
What We Get Right in Kitchens
Outlet Cuts & Edge Stay Clean
Floors Planned for Smooth Transitions
We phase work so you can still cook
Our Process
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Step 1.
Measure & Layout Marks
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Step 2.
Surface Preparation
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Step 3.
Set Tile, Grout, and Finish Trims
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Step 4.
Wipe-Down & Appliances Re-Set
What a Typical Kitchen Project Looks Like
Example Project: Everyday Kitchen, Clean New Look
Here’s what a typical kitchen tile and backsplash project looks like with us. In this example, the homeowners wanted to update an older space without tearing their whole house apart or losing their kitchen for a week. We started by measuring the floor and backsplash areas, planning the layout so grout lines line up with key features like the range, sink, and island. Floors are planned to transition cleanly into the living room and hallway so there’s no awkward height change or trip edge.
For the backsplash, we mark every outlet, switch, and corner before we ever cut tile. That keeps outlet cuts tight and even, instead of the jagged gaps you see in rushed installs. We protect countertops, appliances, and nearby cabinets, then phase the work so the homeowners can still use part of the kitchen each day. One phase might be backsplash only, another the floor on one side of the room, and so on.
By the end, they’ve got a level tile floor that’s easy to mop, a backsplash that makes the cabinets pop, and a kitchen that looks like it was built that way from the start—without living on takeout the entire time.