How Porcelain Became Synonymous with Bathrooms

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How Porcelain Became Synonymous with Bathrooms Anyone who has ever been in a bathroom can tell that the most dominant material in the room is porcelain. The floors and walls are covered in porcelain tiles, and the major fixtures are all made of smooth porcelain.

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Scratch Proof: Close Enough Fortunately, there are actual reasons behind the predilection of designers to choosing porcelain as their favourite bathroom item, the first of which is its body. It has a solid colour that runs straight through from the surface to the bottom; there are not any different shades or signs of discoloration anywhere. This means that no one will notice if furniture scratches the surface immediately.


No other material on Earth can achieve that illusion through natural colour. Chips and scratches are immediately noticeable in wood and stone floors; even a floor hewn from precious stones is not immune to the chip and scratch problem. In fact, light refraction would make the chips in a diamond anything would make it glaringly obvious. No one can manage to chip a diamond.

Wood versus Stone versus Porcelain The second reason porcelain is everywhere is because it can. The material is readily available all over the world, and porcelain fixtures are easier to install than most of the other options. Consider what such options offer in when applied to realistic scenarios of a common bathroom. On the affordability front, porcelain’s biggest rival would be wood. This material would fare poorly in a high moisture environment, because even if the fixtures were varnished, it would still be subject to thermal expansion. The last thing anyone wants is a sink that shrinks during the winter; the same goes for metal.


Stone is just an impractical bathroom choice on almost every front. First, it is more difficult to cut stone into tiles of sinks, making it costlier. Second, it is heavy; this trait automatically disqualifies it from being used anywhere apart from first storey floors. Both wood and stone have problems as bathroom applications, with none of porcelains advantages. SOURCES: http://www.hgtv.com/remodel/bathroom-remodel/reasons-to-choose-porcelain-tile http://www.bathroomsandmorestore.co.uk/ http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/thermo/thexp.html


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