Updating a basement bathroom due to a water issue from the exterior (that’s another story). Gutting all except the original showerstall which is done in the classic mint green and black deco 4×4 tile and is in great condition. Want to keep the same vintage look in the bathroom but need to find more of this mint green tile. Does anyone know who carries these – or, a maufacturer that produces similar tile I can use for the walls and floor?


Comments

  1. As mentioned above, Recycling the Past is awesome. I wish I’d found them earlier as I previously paid $5 plus shipping per antique subway tile, and they ask $3.75 I think. Some of their tile stock is on line:

    http://www.recyclingthepast.com/

    Also in NJ, and closer to NYC is World of Tile. This is a store that opened in the last 50s or early 60s, and they still have a lot of new old stock from then. I got a reasonable match for a floor tile in a 1939 late Deco bathroom:

    http://www.worldoftile.us/

  2. Hi,

    http://www.lesperancetileworks.com is my company. We specialize in tile reproduction. Can probably make your tiles for you.

    Our shop is in the Saratoga Springs area, but we are very comfortable working with submittals back and forth.

    Send me an email and we can start the process.

    Don Shore
    518-884-2814

    PS if you have ever seen the Danny DeVito movie starring Ben Stiller – “DUPLEX” – The upstairs bathroom tile… that’s ours!

  3. If they are the green that is in the pics recently on one renovation blogger’s posts here, I think you will not find anybody making them now. At least not the square ones – I tried diligently to find some for a friend who was patching her bathroom after a flood, with no luck (online vintage makers, and the stores who sell all styles). (She eventually found some in the basement that someone else in her building had left for others, after renovating them out in their bath – and no, my friend is not likely to want to part with them, given the propensity of their old plumbing to burst.) So you will likely need to find someone renovating and disposing of them. Not as hard as it sounds, given how common these tiles were, and the many bathrooms being renovated these days – it would seem that contractors might be your best source. Good luck.

  4. A bit far away but worth a call. There is a place in South Jersey called “Recyling the Past” that has an entire barn full of old tiles.