Professional tile installers trim the bottom of the door casings to allow the tile to tuck underneath which produces the best result.
Ceramic tile door jamb.
You can trim the door frames without removing them to allow.
Install all of the ceramic tiles in the room first.
Ceramic and especially porcelain tiles are made of a dense material that.
This allows you to butt the tile right up to the door frame.
Begin sawing into the door jamb using the tile as a guide to keep the handsaw at the correct height.
I would add that you would be wise to cut the door jamb and casing so the tile fits under both.
Then install the door casing leaving a small space between the top of the tile and the bottom of the casing.
To trim door jambs and casings for tile on a wood subfloor.
Flip a tile over and lay a woos saw parallel to the floor and cut away the wood casing and part of the jamb.
Ceramic tile is difficult to cut at odd angles while wood is much easier to cut.
You might have to snap the wood out with a screw driver.
Laying ceramic tile may raise the level of your existing flooring which means your door jambs may be too low for the tile to fit under.
Put a tile on the plywood subfloor.
Saw through the room side and inside of the door jamb.
Lay a handsaw flat on top of the tile.
When installing tile flooring in most of the cases you will face the issue of installing ceramic tiles around door jamb as to get a nice appearance.
Installing tile around door jambs can prove to be difficult.
This article is about how to install tile around door jamb cutting tile around door jamb is easy if you take the right measurement and you use the right tools.
Install the tile on the concrete stab using thin set adhesive.
Demonstrated by master tile setter armen tavy.