Help choosing CoreTec LVP color. Ezra Oak, Grande Lotte, Tolima Pine
2 years ago
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- 2 years ago
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I HATE my wood look tile! Don't make the same mistake!
Comments (164)I feel your pain about your faux wood floors. Unfortunately, I don't have a choice, I am an apartment dweller. 🫤 When they first put them in, I was thrilled, they seemed so "cool," "modern," and neutral (yep, in that fugly "greige" that's so popular now for some strange reason). Shortly thereafter, I discovered the awful truth: they're cold... in look, feel, and insulating properties (I'm in the Midwest). They're very hard and uncomfortable to walk on without shoes or squishy slippers (did they even put an underlayment down first?), they make me sound like an elephant when I walk on them, they have a weird rough "grit" to them that I can't seem to get rid of (is it because they're new?); there's no shine, they always look dirty (probably because they ARE); and every drop of water leaves a mark. It seems I'm constantly sweeping, Swiffering, wiping, vacuuming...and my apartment always has that weird "new car" smell from either the glue or the plastic itself (yay, health hazards). Not only that, but the installers were very haphazard: there are many areas of the floor that sound literally hollow when I walk over them. I then made the mistake of seeing the type of flooring that my next door neighbor has. Because her apartment is older, she has the "older" style of faux flooring: warm, gorgeous, honey colored, and inviting. It was such a marked difference from what I have, I was shocked...and very jealous. 😭 Even my former apt in another state had darker "wood" floors, but they were fabulous: soft underfoot, didn't show water or stains, easy to clean. But not these. So I'm stuck with these until I happen to move again....and since I just moved in, that will be awhile. Sigh. REAL WOOD RULES!...See MoreCoreTec Grande LVP
Comments (144)Love the color, it is exactly what we wanted. As for quality, it‘s our 1st experience with LVP (we are more used to engineered hardwood), and we’re glad we went with the CoreTEC Grande line. I‘m not sure we’d like a thinner LVP that doesn‘t have that super realistic surface layer or the weight to it. The CoreTEC Grande planks are super realistic, heavy and thick, more like wood would be. And they transition nicely to floor tile. Plus, they have a slightly thicker cork layer on the bottom (compared to most LVP planks) and it does feel very nice underfoot. Overall, it’s holding up very well and still looks like new. It’s a little more difficult to get rub or scuff marks off but it resists dog claws and our kids‘ toys better than wood does. One thing to note…if you plan to use rugs with a polypropylene backing on them (most on Wayfair or Amazon have this backing), you need to use a special rug pad in order to protect the floor from developing serious surface problems. Wool or cotton rugs are fine, though. We have two rugs with polypropolene backing, so we bought a couple rug pads from Rug Pad USA before laying down those rugs. So yes, so far so good for us. Good luck and make sure you hire a good installer. There are definitely some tricks to installing the Grande line as the tongue and groove mechanism is VERY fragile. Use a scrap piece of a plank as an install block instead of a regular floor install block. The scrap piece fits together with the plank you are installing and when you hammer the scrap piece (or a regular block up against a scrap piece), it pushes the plank into place without breaking the tongue and groove material, if that makes sense. A regular block just crushes the tongue and groove material once you start hammering. Anyways, sorry for the long post. Hope its hepful....See MoreAnyone Install Coretec Grande Goldin Oak
Comments (279)@jodipennington your flooring looks great! And I think that happens to the best of us! I'm thinking about re-staining or painting my island because it has an ugly purple undertone I can't seem to get used to. Keep us posted! :)...See MoreLVP to avoid (read if considering Coretec or CaliBambo) and a mystery
Comments (255)If we could just get engineered wood and not have it ruined pretty quickly by our son then we would. (I don’t want explain the details, just that we do know what our own needs are and why.) Yes, we got samples of their bamboo flooring. Even the installer we were working with at the time said don’t do bamboo because he’d seen so many problems. I’d love to get porcelain tile but it’s so cold (and we’re on the floors so much) that we’d need the heating underlay and that’s not even remotely in our budget. It wouldn’t have to be a trade off if the LVP manufacturers didn’t make the mindless and unnecessary decisions they did! I’m hoping as more people complain about the abrasiveness then it will change (and we are definitely not the only ones at this point…Flooret even even had a case brought against them partially for the abrasiveness). At any rate many other things with the house have taken our resources over these past few years so hopefully the flooring industry will have solved these issues by the time we’re back in the market to solve our flooring troubles! Thank you for taking the time to give suggestions!...See MoreRelated Professionals
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