Possibly, you should speak to the manufacturer or check their website as there might be good reasons why it is qualified as wall only.
1)The glaze might not be strong enough for flooring and could wear off.
2)Since this is a ceramic wall tile it could crack when used on the floor.
Most houses have a plywood floor 5/8" You need the floor to be 1" thick minimum and the top floor is screwed down to subfloor with 6" spaces Joint are even tighter together with the screws. Now a concrete slurry called a float is laid on top and leveled out and allowed to dry hard. 2 or 3 days. Usually the tile layer does this work as he is the one that has to put tiles down on top of it so they don't crack or lift. Normally heating wires are laid before the float so that they are immersed in the concrete and the floor is always warm...as you control it by thermostat. Ask a lot of questions at a tile store. You need a diamond saw for most floor tiles...so that is a few bucks. Let them do it. and save yourself the pain. Cost of tile is going to be the same so you are hiring the tile setter for his knowledge and equipment to do it right.
Put hardibacker over the wood and lay the tile on the hardibacker. Make sure the wood is firm and level.
Ceramic Tile Wall.
Bullnose ceramic tile trim is a trim that lines the tiles of your floor or wall. This trim has a bit of a curve to it, which is where the name bullnose comes from.
burit
Ceramic tiles come in various thickness, a 8 x 12 could be 1/8 if it's a wall tile or as much as 3/8 if a floor tile.
Having tiles untold bathrooms I always do the floor LAST this saves dropping tiles etc on to the nice new expensive tile. However, when tiling the walls first leave out the bottom row of wall tile (here you can place your straight edge datum, put in the floor tile then set that last row of wall tile and leave a 1/8" gap between the floor and wall tiles and fill with same water proof grout as the floor tiles have
wall tiles are used on walls. floor tiles are used on floors. if you want to interchange. you can make the wall tile as floor tile and vice-versa
Ceramic tile contractors install ceramic tile floors in any room of a house, and they are specialized and do a great job. They also install other types of tiles, such as ceramic wall tiles, and ceramic countertop tiles.
Not sure how exact you neeed to be, but the thickness & the density would be unknowns from your question & they will both impact the answer. A 6X6 wall tile will be less than floor tile & thick tile likely more than thinner. But if you use 8-10 ounces per 6X6 floor tile you will be very close. Add thinset & grout & still more variables crop up. That is if it is really ceramic, travertine, porcelain or Saltillo would all be different too.
There are a few uses for Ceramic art Tiles that a person could have. The first is to use them to add accent to a tile floor. The next is to use them as art work for a desk or wall.
There are many kinds of tile adhesive and you don't specify which . However most are basically of two kinds - Very fine Portland cement with additives, used mainly for stone or ceramic floor tiles and a type of modified latex for ceramic wall tiles.
Yes, you can use floor tile on the wall. It can be heavy, but if you use a high quality latex fortified thin set (NOT mastic) you should have no issues. It also should be put onto cement board for best results. In the past using floor tile on the wall was an issue because trimpieces were not easily available. With trends changing, you are seeing more with bullnose and you can always use ceramic trim like schulter. Now, you CANNOT put wall tile on the floor. They are often made with white clay and other more bridle ingredient's. Check the box, it will tell you what it is rated for.
You will need several tools. First - you need to wear safety glasses as this tile could chip and splinter. You will need a hammer and a cold (or a brick chisel). You did not mention what is the size of the tile or where is it located (wall or floor). Good look.