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The hardest task when remodeling with ceramic tile is to actually choose the tile itself. When selecting a tiling contractor, it is smart to find one that not only has the craftsmanship to lay and grout the tile but the artistic ability and background to help create a custom design.
Tile is one of the most artistic, durable, and cost-effective wall and floor covering. Tile is hard, strong, easy to clean, and fire resistant. Tiles can be glazed or unglazed and the variations in color are literally limitless.
Ceramic tiles are made from different mixtures, types of clay, sands and other natural substances. The tile body is molded into shape, and then fired at high temperatures in a kiln. Glazes are created from different minerals, mixed with a clay base, and applied to the tile. The tile is then fired. The process of tile creation, as well as materials used, allow for an infinite range of design, shape, and varieties of color. Tiles may be made not only of clay, but fired glass as well as cut from stone such as marble, granite, limestone, and slate. Tiles may be mass-produced or created individually by an artist.
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New Jersey is surrounded by water except along the 50 mi (80 km) of northern border with New York state. The northern third of the state lies within the Appalachian Highland region, where ridges running northeast and southwest shelter valleys containing pleasant streams and glacial lakes. Beyond the crest of wooded slopes are long-established farms given over to dairying and field crops. The Kittatinny Mts., with the state's highest elevations (up to 1,803 ft/550 m), stretch across the northwest corner of New Jersey from the New York border to the Delaware Water Gap. In 1961 New Jersey, along with three other states and the federal government, signed the Delaware River Basin Compact, providing for the control of water resources and rights throughout the Delaware River basin.
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