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Good Questions: Opinions on Nemo's Coconut Shell Tile?

3.27TILES.jpgHello AT,

We are looking to start our kitchen renovation in 2 weeks and are having trouble finding the right backsplash.

We were at Nemo Tiles last week and found a really great, natural looking and eco-friendly tile made from coconut shells.

It seems like a wonderful way to break the texture in the kitchen.

We have a silestone countertop, steel appliances, a mud-washed- looking stone floor tile and medium brown cabinets.

The coconut tiles seem to complement the "contemporary-earthy-natural" look (is there such a thing?) we want in our kitchen (except we have a steel backsplash behind the cooktop to keep away the grease)...

(Note: Include a pic of your problem and your question gets posted first.)

Nemo claims it works well in dry areas, but I'm skeptical about the durability. (P.S. The service at Nemo is terrible, I wish some other place would carry this tile).

Have you heard of this coconut tile before? Any reviews on how good it works as a kitchen backsplash?

Would love to hear what you think of this?

Thanks! Vidula


Comments (10)

From the photo, it looks like it would be very difficult to clean.

I'd lean towards recycled glass...

posted by bepsf on 2008-03-27 13:43:23
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It's pretty in a Gilligan's Island kind of way, but I just don't think I could do it.

posted by Curtis on 2008-03-27 13:54:50
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Blech.

posted by Lori on 2008-03-27 14:19:54
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Actually its a really neat and truly green product. It also comes in tons of finishes. Coconuts are seriously watertight and have a natural resin in them that is resistant to insects, decomposition and makes them so hard. Having seen it in person, I think its a really great product. Some of it doesn't look like coconut at all, more like fossilized stone.

Check the maker's website for a full rundown:
http://www.ekobebrasil.com/site_en/

posted by CarlW on 2008-03-27 14:34:17
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Interesting, but not for me. It looks like it would be too difficult to keep clean.

posted by suzy8track on 2008-03-27 14:39:06
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I agree.. even if you are sure that it is watertight I still would be concerned about dust and grime building up on the textured surface. Especially within a kitchen.

posted by jick on 2008-03-27 14:44:08
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thanks for the link to that site, CarlW, i really liked several of the featured coconut treatments.

i just hope the material has been garnered from places like restaurants and food-processing plants which utilized the meat and milk and opted to donate the husks.

i'd hate for yet another ecosystem and/or native community to be disrupted just to make way for acres of coconut farms per the trend of the moment.

posted by *heather leaf* on 2008-03-27 14:46:24
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I don't like the picture that's included, but the stuff on Ekobe's site looks really nice, or at least some of them do. The picture at the top looks like they're three-dimensional, but the Ekobe ones make it look like the tiles are pretty flat. As far as clean-up, how many people actually clean the walls of their kitchen regularly, or even on a every-few-years basis? I don't think I'd worry about it unless I was a person who cooked with grease or fried things a lot. For what it's worth, I liked PCRH-30 best, followed by MR-30.

posted by kls987 on 2008-03-27 15:30:03
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can you mount a layer of glass over it, maybe with a 1/4" spacer so it looks "on purpose" (i.e. like a design element). that way you'd get ease of wipe-down, but still get your natural/neutral with a little modernized touch.

posted by lindsey kathlene on 2008-03-27 18:01:51
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Ehhh, this looks about as lovely as the "peach pit" floors that were shown a week ago.

With all that natural stuff in the kitchen, go for something a little sleeker on the walls. Find a good green or goldish tile, or something.

posted by artsandletters on 2008-03-27 18:02:54
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