Decorating Ideas

Cheap Backsplash Ideas: Painting Tileboard

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Need cheap backsplash ideas? Have laminated tileboard paneling in your home that you’d like to update? Here’s how painting tileboard panels can give your room a fresh new look!

What is Tileboard?

Tileboard is an affordable and widely available in most home improvement stores. It’s made of high-density fiberboard with a shiny plastic-like coating (laminated). The panels are usually 4′ wide by 8′ long and are typically made to represent a cluster of 4″ tile.

Tileboard is used in a wide variety of places such as bathrooms, kitchens, hallways, mudrooms, and entryways.

Related: Tileboard: Fast-Install Substitute For Real Ceramic Tile

Tileboard is not real ceramic or porcelain tile.  It is medium density fiberboard (MDF) pressed board with a hard melamine layer on top.

The melamine top is grooved to give the appearance of tile’s grout lines. One popular tileboard is Georgia Pacific’s Lionite® Tileboard. – Lee Wallender

Note: Lowe’s calls their tileboard Fashionwall and Home Depot calls theirs Aquatile.

If you need a lightweight, waterproof, and easy-to-install and clean wall covering tileboard is a good choice. For less than $25-30 per sheet (around .79 cents per square foot), you can have the look of tile without the fuss of grouting and installing each tile one-by-one. Here are two rooms with tileboard:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The biggest problem with tileboard is their limited style choices. There’s usually only a handful of patterns available but with the right products and know-how, you can easily update them with paint.

Here’s how our feature contributor, Pam Willis, updated the tileboard backsplash in her kitchen. The previous owner had installed the tileboard paneling and she found a way to update it to better match her decor.

Cheap Backsplash Ideas – Painting Tileboard

When we moved into our 1975 Marshfield Single wide, the previous owner had made some upgrades in the kitchen but I wasn’t at all happy with the backsplash or the finish on the cabinets. It took me a little over one year to decide what to do with the kitchen.

 

The backsplash, which ran the entire length of the kitchen was made of plastic laminate tileboard. It was white, with some gray swirls (to look like marble?) and fake grout lines. The board was very shiny, and I didn’t like the way light bounced off of it.

Replacing the entire backsplash would have cost more than I was willing to spend. It would also require the removal of all the cabinets along an entire wall, which I was very reluctant to do.

I’d already done a lot of faux painting in my previous home, and after some research on the internet decided I would try painting the backsplash; I’d just take the leap and do it!

Painting Tileboard to Look Like Real Stone Tile

The goal was to make it look more like stone tile, to reduce some of the reflective qualities, and make it blend with what I had in mind for the cabinet paint.

Step 1 – Cleaning and Sanding

I thoroughly cleaned the tileboard with Dirtex then lightly sanded with rough sandpaper.

Step 2 – Priming

I painted the entire backsplash with a Super Adhering Primer. I used Zinzeer 123. There are other brands on the market that are quite good. When choosing a brand of Primer, always choose a ‘Super Adhering’ product when painting a laminated surface.

Step 3 – Painting

Next, I painted the entire surface with my chosen base color. In this instance, I used Ace Royal Latex in a satin finish. The color was Stagecoach, it’s also the color that I planned on using for the glaze when repainting my cabinets.

Step 4 – Glazing

I applied the glazes last. Glaze can be applied using a variety of tools: brushes, rags, sponges etc., depending on the look that you want.

Apply each glaze, let it sit for 30-60 seconds then gently wipe with a wet rag. I used 3 layers of pigmented glazes, hoping to achieve a look of tumbled stone tile.

The first layer was applied by dabbing with a natural sponge, a greenish beige (Valspar’s Churchill Downs), which was to also be the base color of the cabinets.

 

Related: These products were also used in Pam’s ceiling fan facelift project here.

The second glaze, Pecan, was applied using a small artist’s brush, making small swirls.

 

The third glaze was a very light grey over the entire project. This last glaze was applied to soften the look and give it that chalky tumbled stone feel.

Lastly, using a small artist’s brush, I painted in the ‘grout lines’ with a stronger pigment of gray mixed with glaze.

 

Summary: Time, Cost, and End Results

The entire project took 3 days, allowing the various layers to dry thoroughly. I would estimate the cost of the project at less than $50, much cheaper and easier than replacing the entire backsplash.

The end results!

Over-glazing the entire backsplash did a good job of sealing the paint and making it quite washable. It’s been a little over one year since I painted this backsplash and it’s holding up well. I’ve had NO problems with chipping or peeling.

Another Blogger Paints the Tileboard in Her Bathroom

Shannon Wells, a DIY enthusiast, and blogger at So Pretty Is As Pretty Does also painted her tileboard. She did the same steps as Pam and had similar results.

This is a photo of her sanding the tileboard panel after cleaning it and before painting:

 

Here are Shannon’s beginning and end result, with a modern gray strip:

 

Here are more articles about painting tileboard:

How to Paint Plastic Tile Paneling

Paint Over Tileboard Panels (forum Q and A)

How to Paint Plastic Wall Tile

Thanks so much for reading Mobile and Manufactured Home Living!

Do you have a great mobile home makeover project? We’d love to share it, contact us in the comments below!

Kim Alley

Kim Alley is a writer here at Mobile Home Living and I am honored to have her join us! She has lived in a manufactured home for over 20 years and took on many remodeling and upgrade projects during that time. Kim has three kids, ages 17 to 25, and enjoys spending time with her family, hiking, and camping whenever she can.

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