This page contains a Flash digital edition of a book.
WHAT’S NEW?


TOPPS TILES LAUNCHES


REWARDS+ Tile specialist Topps Tiles is excited to announce the launch of its improved loyalty scheme, ‘REWARDS+’, which is now available to traders in over 340 stores nationwide .


With the new REWARDS+ card, customers earn £2 for every £50 spent in store or online, which can then be redeemed on top of their usual trade discount. Traders will also be given the option to ‘Trade Up’ and use their points across the full range of items, including a selection of lifestyle products, which will be considerably cheaper when paid for in points than in cash.


Sian O’Neill, Head of Marketing and Online at Topps Tiles, commented: “The launch of this loyalty scheme enables us to continue rewarding our loyal customers, but in a much more convenient way. Traders can earn as they spend and also have the flexibility to use the points as currency or ‘Trade Up’ to exchange for a variety of specialist and lifestyle products.”


For more information about the new REWARDS+, please visit your nearest Topps Tiles retailer.


www.toppstiles.co.uk/trade


A CHARITABLE SOLUTION


FROM BAL BAL, specialist in full tiling solutions, has teamed up with The Yorkshire Tile Company to provide a range of products to support the development of a new facility in Rotherham for Grimm & Co, a worldwide charity which aims to get children excited about literacy.


The Rotherham outlet is the first for the charity in the UK, outside of London. Each store boasts a different concept to inspire the imagination of children, which they can then take back with them into school.


The theme for the Rotherham facility focuses around “Master Graham Grimm”, a straight-talking Yorkshireman who runs a thriving apothecary, supplying unnatural products and sought after services to magical beings. Jeremy Dyson, a writer and director best known as the non-performing member of comedy group The League of Gentlemen, is one of the charity ambassadors and has helped write the concept story.


Grimm & Co can be visited by children throughout South Yorkshire, with school classes able to take a workshop where they enter a magical apothecary, learn all about Master Grimm and are then encouraged to write about what they discover.


The charity is reliant upon donations but is also supplemented by an in-house apothecary which not only makes a great background to the story but is somewhere you can buy bath salts but not as you know them, they may be called “pinch of


— 6 —


happiness,” for instance, or “made from unicorns”.


The Yorkshire Tile Company, which has branches in Leeds, Sheffield, Newcastle and Doncaster, supplied tiles for the potting shed (girls toilets), the tool shed (boys toilets) and also for the large writers room.


The concept here is that people do their best thinking on the toilet so the writing room has been given a toilet theme, complete with graffiti toilet doors made into desks, seating made out of toilet seats and completed with other quirky styling to finish the look.


Yorkshire Tile have donated more than 40m2 of tiles, with BAL supplying BAL Supercover Rapidset and BAL Green Star tile adhesive, BAL Micromax2 Smoke grout, and BAL Rapid-Mat uncoupling mat.


Hannah Wild, Brand Manager from The Yorkshire Tile Company, said: “We’re thrilled to have collaborated with Grimm & Co, a charity which truly makes a difference to local children.


“The completed rooms look truly enchanting with our tiles proudly on display and we’ve absolutely no doubt that children will enjoy using the newly-revamped facilities for years to come.”


Alex Underwood, Head of Marketing at BAL, said: “We were delighted to be able to support this fantastic charity by donating all the adhesive, grout and our uncoupling mat system for this new venture.


“All the rooms look absolutely stunning and I’m sure they’ll capture the imagination of school children from across the region and inspire them to go on their own literary journeys.”


www.bal-adhesives.com www.tomorrowstileandstone.co.uk


Page 1  |  Page 2  |  Page 3  |  Page 4  |  Page 5  |  Page 6  |  Page 7  |  Page 8  |  Page 9  |  Page 10  |  Page 11  |  Page 12  |  Page 13  |  Page 14  |  Page 15  |  Page 16  |  Page 17  |  Page 18  |  Page 19  |  Page 20  |  Page 21  |  Page 22  |  Page 23  |  Page 24  |  Page 25  |  Page 26  |  Page 27  |  Page 28  |  Page 29  |  Page 30  |  Page 31  |  Page 32  |  Page 33  |  Page 34