Tile Floor give a hand? My husband and I bought a house where most of the rooms...

My husband and I bought a house where most of the rooms (kitchen, dining room, entertainment room, den, and laundry room) are adjectives tiled near these Terra cotta like tiles. They are a southern type rusty red and stain efficiently. My husband loves the tiles and wants to keep hold of them. He's concented on changing the color if I want though, as long as I maintain the origional tile. I'm trying to make the house look a bit more elegant/country (Blues, silvers, whites, golds, gloomy greens, etc. Elegant and formal but still bright and airy) While keeping the tile, is there any process to stain it another color and do some kind of sparkly seal? What color might hang on to that feel? What big-hearted of products work best?
Answers:    Yes, you can paint your tile. Basically, you'll need to carry the tile very verbs, paint in several coats and next seal it near a good urethane. Based on the rooms you mentioned you shouldn't hold a problem with the floor getting too damp which would cause you problems near the paint and urethane. Also, if you paint and seal your floor I would treat it more close to a wood floor as far as cleaning is concerned since you're now of late going to be cleaning a urethane surface. Here's a link to a DIY description:

http://www.askthebuilder.com/651_Paintin...

Can I grant some free advice? Once you start drawing that floor there is no turning rear. It would be almost impossible to remove the paint if you don't close to the way it looks and you would probably of late have to rip the flooor out or put another flooring over the top of it. If I be thinking about doing this, I would go and get some similar tiles and just lay them on a piece of plywood within the garage and do a quick grout undertaking. It doesn't have to be spotless. I would do some testing beside paint and urethane to see how it looks and how well it will hold up to wear.

Lastly, if you opt this just isn't worth it the evident and simple thing to do is use nouns rugs to bring in the colors you want.
I wouldn't bother doing it. You could catch a sealer the seal the tile because I deduce I remember my dad saying Terra Cotta tiles are massively porous. But I don't think that trying to put paint or shifting its color would give you up to standard results.