We put a tiny wood stove in the 1960’s vintage mobile home we bought as a vacation home on a lake. I got the gold peel and stick for the backdrop to match the paneling of that era. Looks great. Went in easy. Day later pieces began to fall off. The photo shows that we had stuck it to bare plywood nailed in a window opening . I reapplied using contact cement. Stunk at first but holds well. I noticed others had the same problem for a wood stove installation. I would advise that you start right off with the contact cement or apply a test section as is. Get a rip roaring fire going 48 hours after application to end your test. Pieces fell during first fire.I will update if the contact cement pieces fall. I don’t think they will.We bought this product because installing ceramic tile was too expensive, so we thought this might be a less costly alternative. Since Amazon sells a lot of this type of tile, we studied the customer reviews carefully before we picked one. And that turned out to be an important factor. We made sure the wall was properly prepped by lightly sanding down the texture and making sure the wall was dust-free and dry. The tile is easy to cut to fit into the space we wanted to cover. But you have to be very careful in your placement... once it makes contact with the wall, it sticks hard and you can't move it. So take it slow and easy. Once the wall was covered, there were some very visible seams, so we went back to customer reviews to see what the best solution was. We got some sand-free grout and carefully thinned it down with water until it had a spreadable consistency (a little thicker than soft serve ice cream). Then we spread it liberally all over the tiles, focusing on the seams, and then wiped it off with what turned out to be almost a whole roll of paper towels. When the grout dried three hours later, we had a beautiful wall. The next day we wiped down the tile again and caulked around the edges. It is a very nice finished wall and we highly recommend this product.My small bath ceiling has been a wreck for years; ceiling paint peeling, mold in upper corners, just ugly. I couldn't get a look to "come together." I started by fixing the ceiling with patching, anti-peel primer, anti-mold paint, then a sand-texture finish. I couldn't stop there, because the ceiling looked great and the drywall over the tub enclosure looked horrible.I research SO MANY products, including just putting the sand texture on the walls. I also priced new drywall and a new tub enclosure, $10K! Absolutely did not have that kind of money! Finally decided on the PVC 12" x 12" tiles, as I was not up to cutting the real-stone tiles that come in the same size sheet.I am crazy in love with the new look, and included some before, during and after photos.I watched a lot of You-Tube videos on applying peel-and-stick tiles first, then decided to start with the center of the large back wall and work out from there. Here are some tips for application, cutting, and keeping your project on track:-Do a test layout, and hold the tiles up with good quality painters tape until you are ready to start application. Decide in advance where your tiles will stop on the short walls; I stopped mine before the shower-rod holders so I didn't have to pull them out, reinstall, and patch the paint.-Set up a big cutting board over your sink/vanity. An adult-height vanity is the right height for all the cutting you will do.-Make a jig to hold the tiles, and tiny pieces of tile you will need at the end of the project for corners and tops. I used the boxes the tiles came in to make a corner jig. Free and quick.-This product is actually small mosaic tiles, not solid sheets. It's MUCH easier to apply if you break it down into single rows, or rows of 3. If you try to apply a full sheet on top of a full sheet, you will get gaps between the full sheets.-Peel off the backing from the bottom row, place the bottom row, then pull upward from behind the tiles. Again, press down on the rows to eliminate horizontal gaps, and you may need to press inward to eliminate vertical gaps.-You will need a lot of spare razor blades! I did not want to try an Exacto knife as I did not have spare blades.-I bought an Amazon- recommended product - the silver pvc edging strips. Really cleaned up the wonky final edges. See my "tools needed" photo - scissors were good for cutting thin slivers for perfect fits, and the hack saw was definitely needed for the silver edge strips. I also had a variety of straight edge tools for cutting, ranging from 6" to a full sized T-square.-You will feel like you are in a step class if you are doing this solo. Up and down the ladder and tub edges dozens of times for the corner and top and outer edge fittings.-Buy extra! You will get mad at a few cuts.-Put a towel in the bottom of the tub before you start, and some old socks on the legs of your ladder.-You will have red strips of the peel-off-backing everywhere; take breaks to clean up your debris.-These tiles are addictive.-The back wall took me about 2 hours to get right. The side walls took about 1 hour each, due to the inside corner cuts.- I am debating some customer-color caulk for the few edges that just don't line up, the interior corners, and the bottom where the tiles meet the fiberglass insert.-Have fun!It adheres great to our painted wall surface, just make sure you have it positioned exactly where you want before you apply it on the surface because it adheres immediately.good and easy to use as backspash in kitchen.Brought these to make a slash back, wanted something cost effective, easy to do but not compromising on look. I always wanted a slate look but natural slate chips, hard to cut and really expensive.I’m really impressed so going to order more.TIP:Plain your placement - Once these are suck on they don’t come off easy.Easy to cut - I used a craft knife to deep score then snapped in half.Made some steps into the shower as fed up with the Aintree Chair effect when climbing out. The steps were ugly but saved my shins getting battered. Bought 'puffy grey stickers' for the risers and these solid bronze/black/brown tiles for the treads. These tiles need scoring with a stanley knife multiple times to get a clean line, but it is worth the effort. Each mini square can be cut off of the main construction with is a plus by cutting along the sticky backing. Overall, these are a good 'cheat' for those not wanting to tile.Not worth the money the small amount you getWill not cover a bathroom or kitchen unless it’s aKitchen side board .洗面所とトイレの手洗い場に防水のため付けました。思ったより厚みも重さもあり、しっかりとしたもので貼ると一気に高級感が出ました!裏に粘着テープが付いているので、貼りやすいです。壁紙の上から貼りましたが、今のところ外れることなく付いています。オススメです!