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Painting the back of tiles to get reflective qualities.
Posted: Thu Jun 05, 2003 9:31 am
by deborahbur
What kind of paint or film should I use on the backs of clear tiles so I can attach them to the wall and not see through. I have seen some tiles with some sort of silver paint or film attached (looks painted on) but I don't know. That way I could still use transparent glass for wall tiles. Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks
Deborah

Re: Painting the back of tiles to get reflective qualities.
Posted: Thu Jun 05, 2003 9:46 am
by Ron Coleman
deborahbur wrote:What kind of paint or film should I use on the backs of clear tiles so I can attach them to the wall and not see through. I have seen some tiles with some sort of silver paint or film attached (looks painted on) but I don't know. That way I could still use transparent glass for wall tiles. Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks
Deborah

You might try this
http://www.venturetape.com/final/Brite_Bak_Sub.asp
How it works in a tile application, I'm not sure.
Ron
Posted: Thu Jun 05, 2003 12:16 pm
by charlie
a lot of tiles with reflective backs are made with a piece of mirror as the back piece, and the tile is actually cold fused to the mirror. spectrum makes a mirrorred colored glass, but it isn't fusable.
Posted: Thu Jun 05, 2003 12:37 pm
by Cynthia
I've used Pebeo glass paints that you paint on and then cure in an oven at 275F or some low temp like that. YOu can get them at craft stores like Michael's.
They come in opaque colors, transparents, opalescent, irridescent, and metalics like copper and gold. It gives a wonderful feel of reflective depth behind a transparent glass.
Posted: Thu Jun 05, 2003 5:13 pm
by Victoria Nelson
If you just want a black or white opaque glue you can use 'Optima. Its a tile adhesive sold here in Australia.
You butter the back of each tile as well as the mounting surface. Let set for 5 minutes before laying the tiles. I used the white to put up a 3 x 2 foot, 12mm thick panel on a very uneven concrete wall. Even with transparent glass there were no streaky glue lines. It looked like it had a piece of white opaque glass backing. Nearly one year later and out doors it still looks great.
Cheers, Victoria
Posted: Sat Jun 07, 2003 9:37 pm
by Cheryl Wade
You can also use car paints - the spray can type are the easiest - so you can have any colour you like, matts, metallics. They look as good on unfired glass as fired glass. Just remeber to do it outdoors and stand downwind! I've also used oil paints applied lightly and smudged on, oil and chalk pastels, metallic foil etc before spaying. You can get some really good effects.