Many readers fell in love with the confetti tile bathroom in the 1955 Minneapolis time capsule ’tile house’ time capsule featured recently. How to recreate this look today? We went researching and so far have found four sources. Clayhaus Ceramics — which offers an online design-your-own-mix tool — seems to offers the most versatility — including direct-with-manufacturer service — so they get the first spotlight in our Where To Get Confetti Tile miniseries. Another miniseries — about minis!
The owners of our “model bathroom” in the 1955 time capsule house owned a tile store, so they knew how to make tile sing. In this little bit of perfection bathroom, they maximized the beauty of the busy confetti tile, which was placed in the toilet niche, by juxtaposing it with the serenity of natural wood and calm blue wall tiles in the adjacent sink area. And, since a custom confetti tile mix may get a little spendy — hey, relatively little square footage may be all you need.
We reconnected with the photographers at Spacecrafting, who were kind enough to send us a high resolution photo of the bathroom so we could ‘zoom in’ and inspect the mosaic tile blend more carefully. Zooming in, it looks like the confetti tiles in our time capsule house might be solid-body porcelain. For this research project, though, we found glazed ceramics as a proxy.
Matching the 10 colors in the time capsule confetti tile
Next, Kate tried to determine how many different color tiles were present in the vintage mosaic tile pattern — an eye-crossing task. She counted at least 10 different colors. How many different beiges do you see???
Then, she tried to figure out which colors available through Clayhaus Ceramics most closely matched those colors. From what she could tell — having not seen the Clayhouse Ceramics colors in person — it looks like all of the colors can be matched quite closely, though it would be wise to request color samples before placing any orders.
Now for some fun: Kate began plugging colors into the Clayhaus ‘You Design’ tool to generate a custom blend. The tile blend design tool only allowed her to use seven colors and her vintage blend has at least 10. So, she contacted Clayhaus Ceramics to see if it is possible to make a custom blend with more than seven colors, and also inquired about pricing.
Clayhaus Ceramics replied:
Yes, customers can purchase more than seven colors in a blend, but it will carry an additional 25% upcharge for any blend using more than five colors. The design tool feature was designed to max out at seven since most blends don’t use more than seven. (I can only think of one time where we made a blend using 11 colors!)
Our 1″ x 1″ mosaics retail direct from the manufacturer for $57.74/sf. We do offer trade discounts.
Clayhaus Ceramics also offers 6″ x 6″ square tiles in shades similar to the 6″ x 6″ tiles used on the walls in the tile house time capsule bathroom.
Clayhaus Ceramics took a look at our photos and suggested their colors Abstract Blue, Spa or Cascade Gray in matte finish as possible matches for the wall tile. Be sure to tile-in the mirror, too! These retail direct from manufacturer for $32.72/sf.
For the floor, we’d likely aim to find a floor tile that matches one of the light beiges from the confetti tile mix — make sure you find a tile that is specified/designed for floor usage. Note, the Clayhaux 6×6 tiles are rated for vertical use only, the company told us.
This bathroom: Kind of midcentury modern timeless, don’t you think!
Thanks, Clayhaus Ceramics, for all the help with this story. We hope it helps you sell some confetti tile!
John Hedge says
Clayhaus Ceramics is one of my favorite lines of tiles to design with and sell. They have the greatest color choices and a nice selection of matte finishes too. They are great for the many mid century homes our clients work on here in Palm Springs. Our clients like knowing they are made in Oregon too. Their craftsmanship is impeccable. We hand pick their tile among the many other home finishing products in our showroom, which is unique and most relevant to our clients.
Ali says
This house is far and away my favorite RR time capsule, and that’s saying something!
For those on a budget trying to replicate the mosaic wall in the bathroom, I wonder if buying white ceramic tile and painting it with ceramic paint such as Pebeo would work. The paint isn’t exactly inexpensive, but would definitely total less than $57/sqft, especially if you buy tiles secondhand or at a discount.
Mary Elizabeth says
I was thinking the same thing. Or you could buy individual sheets of six or eight colors and take apart the sheets and rearrange, as one RR reader did!
Another idea would be to paint an non-tiled wall in the bathroom or another room with little squares–sort of a do-it-yourself paint by numbers.
valvashon says
2 things-
1- I notice an area of 1×1 tile under the loo, all the same color. The loo appears to be updated- is that some repair work, perhaps where they ran a new cold water pipe up the wall?
2- I also noticed that the light switch at some point has been switched out for a “Decora” style, which did not come into use until sometime in the late 70’s, if my research is correct. Although not period correct, they do have a clean, Mid-Century look. How do you feel about updating to the Decora style? I’m in the process of installing Decora outlets and switches in our 1961 ranch to accommodate the GFCI outlets and modern dimmers, and to allow everything to match, rather than have the “replaced with whatever happens to be handy” collection which is currently in place.
Mary Elizabeth says
DH and I ran into the same problem when fixing out-of-code electrical outlets in the knotty pine kitchen and adding brand new ones in the pink and gray bath. We needed GFI but thought the new style outlets would ruin the look of the 1959 house and not match the outlets elsewhere throughout the house. Also, there were five outlets in the backsplash, and that meant buying five GFI outlets. In the bathroom, we settled for a ank of outlets and switches in the more modern look, but we solved the problem in the kitchen differently. We wired all the outlets that showed on the backsplash to a GFI connected to the circuit breaker box in the basement. Ask your electrician if he or she can do that.
Of course, the disadvantage is that if the GFI shuts off the outlet, it shuts off all the outlets in the kitchen (except the refrigerator, dishwasher, and anything that is separately wired) and then you have to go down into the basement and fix it. But in four years, it has never happened.
cc says
If you are wanting this look at a discount price, it doesn’t hurt to ask around for old sample sheets from tile stores. Tile stores often have lots of old sample boards running around their back rooms–you just need a putty knife and some elbow grease to get them off the boards.
pam kueber says
Yes, good idea, albeit: Some therapy!