Laying the groundwork for flooring
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KAREN WIGHT
Nothing in your house takes a beating like the floor. Bare feet bring
the sand in. Boots bring the rain in. Pets bring the grass in. The
wind blows the dirt and dust in.
Mops slosh, Swiffers slide, vacuums roll and brooms bristle.
Floors see the heaviest action in the house. Floors are high
maintenance out of necessity, but they can also embrace high fashion.
Whether your choice is wood, tile, carpet, concrete, linoleum or
bamboo, the floor colors everything in your home from the ground up.
There are fan decks for your walls, and if you’re like most
people, you take hours, days, weeks or months to decide on the
perfect color. You paint samples on the walls -- and then more
samples until the walls resemble a patchwork quilt. More indecision
and meditation follow. And it’s always the walls that get the most
attention.
Then there are the floors. You grab a carpet book with a dozen
4-inch square samples and make a decision within days. The floor
literally casts a glow on everything in a room. The light reflected
off the floor can change the color of your walls, ceiling and
furniture. An example: blue carpet in a white room throws a blue tone
on every surface. It’s important to take your floor color into
careful consideration.
If you choose to use a bold color, anticipate the reaction with
the rest of the room. This might explain why most floor and carpet
samples fall into the neutral category, hence the more limited color
selections. The primary flooring question is whether to use lighter
or darker colors. A floor that’s darker than the walls helps ground
the space and throws the emphasis on other elements in the room:
furniture, artwork, lighting and accessories.
A lighter floor color reflects more light and gives the room a
brighter glow. Flooring with a similar tone value as the walls helps
create a feeling of spaciousness.
With flooring, slight hue variations can translate into large
value changes. Colors in the taupe family can run the spectrum, from
purple to brown to green. That small carpet sample might not be big
enough to get a realistic impression of the overall look. Don’t be
shy about requesting a larger sample.
If you use wood or bamboo flooring, they are particularly
susceptible to scratching. Even the sealant on concrete floors can be
damaged by furniture. Put felt pads on the legs of any sofas, tables
or chairs. Plastic disks or metal glides that are added to furniture
legs for floor protection are still going to damage floors if the
furniture is pushed from one place to another.
The hardware store stocks the peel-and-stick felt pads. If you
have light-toned floors, the thick, beige dots will work for you. But
if you have dark floors, you might not find what you need hanging on
the store rack. I can’t find felt protectors dark enough to
camouflage themselves with my floors. I buy the thick, brown felt
protectors on the Internet.
Another point to ponder -- why are there so many bright green felt
dots at the store? When was the last time you had a bright green
floor to protect, or worried about chair legs scratching the lawn, or
had a grass-green vase that needed dots to protect the table?
Clean your floors often. Less dirt on the floors minimizes
scratching. Vacuuming your carpet frequently will not wear it out. In
fact, the opposite is true. Vacuums use rollers to lift the dirt from
the bottom of the carpet: the less dirt that is embedded, the fewer
stains. Having your carpets professionally cleaned twice a year helps
the longevity. Preventive maintenance also applies to wood floors.
When the floor starts showing signs of wear, have a fresh coat of
polyurethane or sealer applied. Go ahead and walk all over your
floors -- just give them the respect they deserve.
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs
Thursdays.
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