There were some very odd big ones with a green glaze and impressed designs — some of 2 knights tilting (W92).  These are Early English (HOPE).
There is also a broken wall tile with an elaborate canopy design like the Malvern series;  this has an inscription dating it at 1457-8, one of a set of 5 tiles depicting symbols of the Passion.  It is a waster (C38).

WARD92 describes the tiles’ manufacture, stamps and glazes.

They are usually either 4¼” square or 5¼” square.  The body-clay is red, only slightly worked.  The lower surface is rough and sandy.  They have bevelled sides as though cut downwards by a knife or wire.  Clay first rolled on sand to about 1" thick then cut into squares?

Ornamentation: embossed (rare) or in relief.  If the hollows were not filled in, it's called incised.  In true encaustic tiles, hollows were wider, shallower (rarely exceeding 1/2")and flat-bottomed. They were usually filled with white pipe clay:  red clay allowed to dry, then covered with soft white clay, and scraped off to level. This is called inlaid. Others just had a fine slip brushed over the face and scraped off;  some remained in the very shallow hollows:  these might be called enamelled.

There are glazes of all shades from yellows and greens to browns and blacks.

The stamps were made of wood;  the grain sometimes shows in the hollows.  Sometimes the stamp cracked, leaving a line across the tile (W92).

Tiles of the nave were arranged in bands to help in drawing up processions (H80).

Several groups of uses:
(i) Where the individual tile bears a device decoratively complete in itself ( e.g. A2, 7, 9, C3, F12);  chiefly used alternately with plain tiles or as diapers, for which E10, 13 were specially adapted.
(ii). Some bilateral devices (A3, all D) were diagonally placed - designed to be laid in 4s, crosswise.  Fleur-de-lys tiles would therefore look like B5.
(iii) A device complete in itself is spread over a square of 4 or 16 - usually a circle, quatrefoil or a combination of the two. (C1, B2, 4, 8, F10).  Usually used as panels on a ground of plain or to fill in the interstices of a plain trellis.
(iv) Tiles with decoratively incomplete devices (F2, E7, 16, F5).
(v) A main pattern, continuous or interlacing e.g. lattice (E7) or intersecting circles e.g. A8, 10, 17, C2, F2, 11, A12, F14 (parallel wavy lines).
(vi) Those used for borders and bands (A13, 15, B7, E5, 18, 19) (W92).