Best hardwood floor for new house
m111675
6 years ago
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Anglophilia
6 years agoRelated Discussions
Best Hardwood Flooring Contractor in Northern New Jersey?
Comments (0)We are building a traditional colonial home (new construction) in northern New Jersey. The floors have already been installed (5" red oak boards). Our contract with the general contractor permits us to source the contractor to finish the hardwood floors (we're not thrilled with the flooring contractor our builder typically uses). We have about 2,800 sf of boards to sand, stain and finish. We're considering using Bona or Loba water-based finish (which we understand to be high-end products). Can the community recommend a high-end flooring contractor in the northern New Jersey area? Thanks!...See MoreBuilding a new home. Trying to decide on hardwood flooring color
Comments (10)A neutral brown, medium tone, will be the most timeless and will go with everything. Avoid grey floors and too dark....See MoreOrientation of new hardwood floors over old hardwood floors
Comments (3)Laying the new floor in the same direction as the old floor is not the normal way to go about this. In the building industry, it is more common to see layers that are staggered or "bricked". In other words if layer #1 is laid in a North-South direction, then layer #2 (the top layer) is laid perpendicular to it in an East-West presentation. If you want to run the new flooring in the same direction as the old, you will want to use some underlayment (plywood) over top of the old floor so that you can maintain the "staggered" or "bricked" layering system. That is one way to maintain the North-South presentation. Please work with hardwood flooring professionals who have some experience renovating these old gems. They will have seen what worked....and what didn't. Their experience will be invaluable on a project like yours....See MoreWhat hardwood or engineered hardwood product best for concrete slab?
Comments (21)Leather is the most 'recognizable' pattern for cork (other than the ground up cork board look). When it is laid it looks like hardwood flooring using 'shorts'. It has a bit of a brick look to it. Ignore the 'pink' in the samples. The pink is the very first colour to fade away. It takes a few months for the pink to disappear but once it is gone the cork (Leather and Logan) will look more like oak in tone (yellowish with some hints of green and some gray). It is a 'directional pattern' which means it has a 'linear' sense to it. The Logan is the most expensive cork pattern you can get. The slices of pattern are random. They are hand cut and hand laid. It takes *roughly an hour for 1 person to arrange 10sf of the pattern. It is STUNNING. It looks more like stone. It is random...did I mention the pattern is random? Leather and Logan can have the extra 2 coats of the Loba 2K Supra AT = super tough. The Latte is a FANTASTICLY tough finish. It has the polypropylene finish on it. This is the 'non-vinyl' product Cancork sells. It is tough....right after that it is SUPER TOUGH. And then for good measure, it is TOUGH!!! For a Rental property, the Latte is a product I would recommend. It does NOT need the Loba product. That means you save $1.50/sf RIGHT AWAY. It can handle 3mm or 6mm cork underlay. If you are looking for temperature control, then I like the 6mm underneath...but CHECK your door heights, etc. All you need to do is take your floor sample and the underlay sample they sent you (their supposed to do that...sigh) and see if it 'slips' underneath the doors in your home. It is that simple. I hope that helps... As for the Tacoma...I'm guessing you are looking at KILOGRAMS (700 kg) as your weight limit = 1540 lbs. The weight of a standard skid of cork flooring = 1000sf (ish...depends on the product) = *roughly 2000 lbs. And the skid sizes are PERFECT to fit between the wheel wells of a truck bed. I've watched this stuff get loaded into pick-up trucks for 6+ years. A forklift operator can drop that baby into your truck (so long as you do NOT have a 'cap-it') and off you go. If you only have a short way to go, the 2000 lbs won't be much of a problem...I just wouldn't do a trip to Bella Coola with it. ;-)...See Morenini804
6 years agoTodd
6 years agocpartist
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6 years agolittlebug zone 5 Missouri
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6 years agoKathi Steele
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6 years agoKathi Steele
6 years agoSJ McCarthy
6 years agolast modified: 6 years agonanj
6 years agolast modified: 6 years agoKathi Steele
6 years agoDavid Cary
6 years agoArlWV
6 years agoWoodpecker Flooring
6 years agoCarolyn T
6 years agoJudyG Designs
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