Terracotta & Quarry Tile Cleaning · Bath & Wiltshire
Victorian terraces in Bath. Farmhouse kitchens across Wiltshire. Conservatories full of original Mexican or French terracotta. If your floor looks dark, dirty and tired — it’s almost always layers of old wax, polish and oil. We strip it back, deep clean, and reseal. The result is dramatic.
The thing nobody tells you about old terracotta
Walk into a Victorian terrace in Larkhall or Oldfield Park, or a farmhouse kitchen near Westbury or Calne, and you’ll find original quarry tiles or terracotta that look exhausted. Dark. Patchy. Dirty in a way that mopping won’t fix. The owner’s been told the tiles are “just old” and that’s how they look now.
It’s almost never true. What you’re looking at is decades of accumulated wax, oil, polish, sealer and yellowing varnish — sometimes going back to the 1920s. Victorian quarry tiles were originally maintained with beeswax and linseed oil. Later owners added acrylic waxes, modern sealers, even yacht varnish on top. None of it was ever removed before the next layer went on.
Stripping it all back is slow work but the result is transformative. Under the layers is bright red, orange, yellow or terracotta-brown tile that looks 80 years younger. We’ve done this on floors in Bath where the owners assumed they’d inherited a dark floor — and discovered it was actually a vibrant terracotta one.
Victorian quarry tiles
Quarry tiles are dense unglazed clay tiles fired to high temperature. They were laid in millions of Victorian and Edwardian terrace houses across Bath — particularly in Oldfield Park, Twerton, Walcot, Larkhall and the older parts of Trowbridge.
They’re tough. They handle wear well. But they’re porous, which means without sealing they pick up every drop of anything that lands on them. And because they’re commonly found in old houses, they’ve usually been waxed and re-waxed for a century.
Our job: strip the wax, clean the tile, reseal properly. Result: the original colour and pattern, visible for the first time in decades.
Terracotta
Terracotta is similar to quarry tile but generally softer, more porous, often imported (Mexican, French, Spanish, Italian terracotta is common). You’ll find it in country kitchen extensions, conservatories, farmhouse hallways and conversions across Wiltshire.
Terracotta is even more sealer-dependent than quarry. Unsealed, it absorbs everything — water, grease, drink spills, dirt — and turns dark and unattractive within a few years. Properly sealed and waxed, it has a warm, rich glow that nothing else matches.
Restoration is the same process: strip, clean, seal. Sometimes followed by a wax topcoat for the traditional matt sheen.
Our terracotta process
We identify the tile type, the layers on top, and what’s hiding underneath. Fixed quote at the survey.
Almost always for terracotta and quarry. The layers can be unpredictable. We test in a corner first.
Alkaline stripper, agitation, repeated passes. Sometimes 3–5 cycles before all the wax and old sealer is out.
Once stripped, the tile gets a proper deep clean to get embedded dirt out of the surface.
Modern impregnating seal for low-maintenance, or traditional wax topcoat for the period look. We’ll show you both.
Mistakes that ruin terracotta and quarry tiles
Most of the floors we see are damaged by maintenance, not by use.
The classic Victorian maintenance trap. Every layer traps more dirt. Eventually the floor is more wax than tile.
Damages grout, drives water into porous tile, lifts uneven amounts of old sealer. Makes restoration harder.
Patchy bleaching, damaged grout, no actual cleaning of the wax build-up. Avoid.
Sometimes recommended online for terracotta. Risky — can damage tile colour and grout. Specialists know when and how. Most homeowners don’t.
On old terracotta without a damp-proof membrane (a problem also common with original flagstone), trap moisture. Cause blooming and lifting.
Olive oil, red wine, coffee — all permanent on unsealed terracotta. The sealer is doing all the work.
Terracotta questions we get every week
Almost certainly not. Nine times out of ten, black-looking quarry tiles are red or orange tiles buried under decades of wax that has darkened with age and dirt. Once stripped and cleaned, the original colour comes back. We’ve done this on hundreds of floors. The before-and-after photos are the most dramatic in our portfolio.
Yes. It takes longer than removing wax — sometimes needing solvent strippers as well as alkaline strippers — but it can be done. We’ll see what’s on the tile at the survey and tell you what to expect.
Personal preference. Modern impregnating sealer is much lower maintenance — you just clean with pH-neutral cleaner and it lasts years. Traditional wax has a softer, more authentic period look but needs re-waxing every couple of years. We’ll show you both finishes on test patches at your floor before you decide.
No, the strippers we use are tile-safe. If grout is already damaged or missing — which is common in old quarry floors — we can re-point as part of the job, charged separately. We’ll flag that at the survey.
With modern impregnating sealer, a properly restored quarry or terracotta floor should be fine for 5–10 years before any meaningful work is needed. With traditional wax finish, you’ll want to re-wax annually or every couple of years to keep the sheen.
Yes — we’d source a reclaimed replacement from a yard, fit it in, and the restoration of the floor blends it into the others. Reclaimed Victorian quarry tiles are easy to find in this region. Reproduction Victorian quarry tiles are also widely available if reclaimed isn’t possible.
Get your quote
Fill in the form and we’ll get back to you the same working day. Surveys are free and there’s no obligation to book.
We’re a small team and we usually pick up. If we miss you, leave a message and we’ll call you back.
01225 683687