Has anyone painted their rough slate floors?
25 days ago
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- 25 days ago
- 25 days ago
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Has anyone heard of Roysol Flooring?
Comments (0)I am trying to find a flooring for my kitchen and am having a very difficult time. All of my downstairs will have Australian Cypress hardwood, but I don't want it in my kitchen because I have three young sons who will spill water on it, not clean up the spills, and destroy the floor. I don't want tile or slate, as it hurts my feet when I stand up for a long time (plus my boys will drop things like mayonnaise which will then break on the hard floor). I don't think I can handle vinyl, so I am nw looking at laminates (and still toying with the tile possibility). I don't like laminates too much either, but I found this style, which has some amazing colors- blue, green, magenta... which maybe I can find palatable. Does anyone know about the Roysol brand of floors? I think it is French, but am not sure. Here is a link that might be useful: http://www.roysol.com/english/index.htm...See MoreHas anyone ever painted concrete floors?
Comments (5)I used Muralo Quik-Tred in our utility/laundry area (concrete floor) 12 yrs ago. In the interim I did one quickie refresher coat in the walk path (which happens to be floor drain area too and yeah, our laundry sink has overflowed on occasion in that spot when someone left a rag in there and it clogged the sink drain when the washer was running.) Last year I repainted the entire floor to freshen it. There were small areas that had pulled up (pea size at most) but again, in the primary walk path. Overall I've been quite pleased with it, they have a nice color selection, and I have taken an old fashioned electric scrubber with rotating bristles to is when is was muddy from dogs and that didn't even phase it. I do keep a lot of rugs down (dogs beds are in there, and basement door to outside). If it were in my day to day living areas I probably wouldn't do it. It's very tough paint and has held very well but I don't know how well it would fly in areas that get much heavier use, such as rooms where furniture could slide around alot (a chair), table legs scrape it, etc. You might find yourself going crazy touching little spots up. I have used Muralo Super Tred (an oil-based formula for exterior). Used it on a rental concrete stoop that had ancient brown paint on it. Pressure washing just would not pull that brown paint off, so I opted to repaint over it. On sides of stoop and backs of steps it looks fresh as new, but on tops of steps and porch there are tiny (fleck size) areas where it's pulled off. (That porch is covered and someone protected from elements.) Also, the oil-based has more shine and would be more slippery than the water based Qwik Tread I used, which is a satin finish. I have seen stained concrete in person (a new local salon I've been to did it during a remodel, very fancy inside and the floors look great, a really appealing look). If you check over in Home Decorating here and ask for photos, I know some members have done it themselves. If you don't want tile, another option might be the novalis vinyl plank flooring that looks like wood. You can see a photo here. oceana did it herself and she paid .98 per sq foot at Lowe's . (It's noted further down in her post). That's about the 3rd room I've seen done in vinyl plank that mimics wood and all look very nice! (Can't beat that price, either ;)...See MoreAnyone have a gray porcelian (slate-like maybe) tile floor?
Comments (10)Hi Daicey Crossville has a bluestone tile with some nice color choices and finishes. This product is also available in "get planked" for a one of a kind look. So good to see others opting for porcelain tile. First choice for me was hardwood but just not practical with two dogs running around here. Here's the link Here is a link that might be useful: Bluestone by Crossville...See MoreHas anyone gone from a main floor master to a second floor, backwards?
Comments (37)I had completely forgotten about this being a lake home so AnnKH had a great point about how a front garage would actually be a rear garage (or something like that). So I think the point about maximizing the views and accessibility on the lakeside is definitely more important that worrying about a 'snout' garage. But, here is our first floor floor-plan. We are on a 100' wide city lot (unfortunately no lake views) and this house is 71.5' wide. The deepest part of the house, not including porches is 41'8". It was deeper than I wanted, but the rooms in the middle of the house (closets, laundry, etc) don't need windows so I'm OK with it. Our second floor has three additional bedrooms plus a bonus/loft space. We've got 2 kids, ages 11 and 13. No basements here in Texas....See MoreRelated Professionals
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