How to Make a Mosaic Stepping Stone

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By CraftingStepByStepPublished

Based on a video by mosaicsbymaricela.

A plain concrete paver goes into this project. A colorful garden stepping stone comes out. Maricela from the mosaicsbymaricela channel walks you through the whole thing, and the best part is you never touch a tile cutter.

You lay pre-cut ceramic pieces onto a printed template, sandwich them in contact paper, then set the whole design into thin-set mortar on the paver. After grouting and sealing, you get a weatherproof stone that looks great tucked into a garden bed.

It is a relaxing, beginner friendly build, and kids can help with the tile-laying part too. Grab a paver and a bag of tiles and follow along.

Step-by-Step Guide

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Step 1: Lay Your Tiles on the Template

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Step 1: Step 1: Lay Your Tiles on the Template

Tape your printed template to the work surface, then cover it with a sheet of clear contact paper, sticky side up. Now the fun part. Set each pre-cut ceramic piece face-up onto the sticky paper, following the design. Match Maricela's colors or pick your own. If a gap feels bigger than about half an inch, drop in an extra tile to fill it. This is a great spot to let kids help.

Tip

Your tiles may vary a little in color and size, so just follow the pattern as closely as you can. It does not have to be perfect.

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Step 2: Sandwich the Design in Contact Paper

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Step 2: Step 2: Sandwich the Design in Contact Paper

Once the layout is done, cut a second piece of contact paper the same size and lay it on top, this time sticky side down. Press firmly across the whole surface so the tiles get pinned between both layers of paper. Do not stress if the sheets do not line up exactly. You can overlap a few smaller pieces to cover any bare spots. The goal is one solid, portable sheet of tiles.

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Step 3: Prep the Concrete Paver

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Step 3: Step 3: Prep the Concrete Paver

Grab your concrete stepping stone and make sure it is clean, dry, and free of dust. Maricela likes to rinse hers and let it dry all the way through before starting. A dusty surface keeps the mortar from gripping, so this quick step matters more than it looks. A standard 12 by 12 inch paver from the hardware store is exactly what you want here.

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Step 4: Spread the Thin-Set Mortar

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Step 4: Step 4: Spread the Thin-Set Mortar

Pour some pre-mixed thin-set into a bowl and keep the rest covered so it does not dry out. Spread an even layer across the whole paver with a spatula. You want it thick enough that a tile sinks about halfway in. Test it first: press one tile into the mortar and see how far it goes. Too much or too little and you adjust. Think Goldilocks, just right.

Tip

Keeping the tub covered really helps in a warm climate, where thin-set can skin over fast.

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5

Step 5: Press and Tap the Tiles In

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Step 5: Step 5: Press and Tap the Tiles In

Lay your tile sheet design side up onto the wet mortar and press it down with your hands first. Then tap gently with a soft wooden mallet, or lay a scrap of wood on top and tap that. The tapping seats every tile evenly into the adhesive so nothing sits proud. Maricela sets a little weight on top and lets it dry overnight before moving on.

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Step 6: Peel the Paper and Fix Loose Tiles

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Step 6: Step 6: Peel the Paper and Fix Loose Tiles

The next day, slowly peel off the top layer of contact paper. If a tile or two lift away with it, no problem. Just dab a little more thin-set underneath and press them back in. Run your eyes over the whole design and reset any other loose pieces. Now you can see all that color for the first time with the paper gone.

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Step 7: Grout the Mosaic

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Step 7: Step 7: Grout the Mosaic

Once everything is fully dry, spread grout over the entire surface and push it into every gap between the tiles. You can use a spreader, a plastic card, or your gloved hands. Build a little grout wall around the edges so no tile sits exposed. Then wipe the excess off the tiles with a damp sponge, rinsing and wringing it out often so you do not pull grout back out of the seams.

Tip

Let the grout haze dry about an hour, then buff it off with a clean cloth. A toothpick clears any stubborn grout off the tile faces.

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Step 8: Seal It and Set It Out

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Step 8: Step 8: Seal It and Set It Out

Let the mosaic cure for 24 to 48 hours, then brush on a thin coat of sealer. Give it a minute, wipe off the extra, and add a second coat if you like, letting it dry in between. The sealer is what lets your stone shrug off rain and sun for years. Set it into a garden bed or along a path and enjoy. You made a mosaic stepping stone with zero tile cutting.

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☐ The Checklist

How to Make a Mosaic Stepping Stone

Tools
7
Materials
8
Steps
8
Video
7 min

Your Guide

mosaicsbymaricela

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