We have a box and a half of left-over slate tiles from The Tile Shop (https://www.tileshop.com/products/copper-rust-broken-random-20-8-x-20-8-in-655837). They were used for the floor in our foyer. The wood stove (Woodstock Absolut in grey; https://www.woodstove.com/image/cat...stock-Soapstone-Absolute-211-Installation.pdf) will be located just 15-20 feet away from our open foyer, so we thought it might look nice to use the same type of tiles on top of the hearth platform too. We are thinking of making the platform about 9 inches tall all together, consisting of a wood base (maybe pine or cedar, to have a nice aroma?), and then either one or two layers of cementboard on top of that, topped with the tiles. I'm thinking that some complementary colored rounded stones could be attached on the edge of the platform. I like a rustic look.
The issue is that these slate tiles are quite uneven on the surface. I am wondering if anyone has found a good way to deal with that without throwing off the aesthetic, but that works well enough so the stove doesn't wobble. The factory rep recommended using gauged even-surfaced tiles instead, but I don't have any other use for these slate tiles at this time anyway, so it seems a shame to waste this opportunity and have to spend more money.
(btw, in browsing through this forum, I noticed that someone mentioned making a little cubby hole inside the platform to store things. I am intrigued, but not sure how practical that would be to incorporate. I guess it would be most doable if the platform edge is stained wood rather than covered with stones. We will also be using an outside air duct, and because the stove will not be near an exterior wall, this duct will go through the wall behind the stove, into the stairwell area, where it will make a 90-degree turn and go along the stairwell wall until it reaches an exterior wall. I think the duct hole in the wall will be hidden by the platform.)
The issue is that these slate tiles are quite uneven on the surface. I am wondering if anyone has found a good way to deal with that without throwing off the aesthetic, but that works well enough so the stove doesn't wobble. The factory rep recommended using gauged even-surfaced tiles instead, but I don't have any other use for these slate tiles at this time anyway, so it seems a shame to waste this opportunity and have to spend more money.
(btw, in browsing through this forum, I noticed that someone mentioned making a little cubby hole inside the platform to store things. I am intrigued, but not sure how practical that would be to incorporate. I guess it would be most doable if the platform edge is stained wood rather than covered with stones. We will also be using an outside air duct, and because the stove will not be near an exterior wall, this duct will go through the wall behind the stove, into the stairwell area, where it will make a 90-degree turn and go along the stairwell wall until it reaches an exterior wall. I think the duct hole in the wall will be hidden by the platform.)