Home Improvement Flooring

Hardwood Flooring

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Featured Reviews
<strong>Bruce Flooring</strong> Turlington™ American Exotics 3" Engineered Cherry in Toasted Sesame Bruce Flooring
Bruce Flooring Turlington™ American Exotics 3" Engineered Cherry in Toasted Sesame

 5 stars

This is the second room we installed this floor. We like the looks and qualify of the floor. We installed it using glue to concerete. Sometimes the plank doesn't go into the lip of the other planks easily so you'll have to keep trying or just discard and try a new one. That's why it's important to add 10% more. Overall, the installation went smoothly. We'll try another room soon."..."  Read more
- Curt in Sacramento, CA

<strong>Mohawk</strong> Staunton Meadows 3" Engineered Cherry Natural Mohawk Flooring
Mohawk Staunton Meadows 3" Engineered Cherry Natural

 4 stars

I'm trying to match an existing Mohawk Cherry engineered floor. This is the closest I've been able to find to what I pourchased 5 years ago. This new version is thinner and has slightly different edges (kissed (very slightly beveled) on the new, square on the old). The The urethane finish appears to be thinner, less glossy than the orignal. Once installed, I'm hoping the differences will be too suble for anyone to notice (other than me)."..."  Read more
- Roger Davis in California, MD

Hardwood Flooring

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Both Solid Hardwood and Engineered Hardwood are real wood. The difference betweeen the two is that Solid Hardwood is one piece of wood milled from lumber where as Engineered Hardwood is three to ten layers of wood called plies that are glued together in a cross-ply construction for added stability.
  Construction
Browse by popular colors like Gunstock, Butterscotch, Antique, Natural and More!
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  Amber (5)  Antique (1)
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  Other (13)
Hardwood Flooring is available in many different surface types and finishes. Handscraped Hardwood and Distressed Hardwood are two of the most popular trends in Hardwood Flooring right now.
  Surface Type
Beveled Edges have a very distinctive, deep V-groove, where as Microbeveled or Eased Edges have a less distinctive, more shallow V-groove between planks. Kissed Edges are even subtler than Eased Edges, about 1/2 of the depth. Distressed Edges have some slight irregularity often matching the look of distressed planks. Square Edges create a smooth, uniform surface from plank to plank.
  Edge Type
From a do-it-yourself standpoint, a Floating Floor Installation is the easiest method to install a Hardwood Floor. Coming in second would be a Staple or Nail Down Installation, and a Glue Down Installation is the most difficult of the three methods. Click-Lock refers to a specific style of Floating Floors. For more information check out our Flooring Installation Guide in advice central!
  Installation
Lock and Fold: flooring is snapped together by hand, generally easier to install (DIY-friendly!)

Click: flooring is installed by lining up the connectors at the side of each board and tapping them together with a mallet and tapping block

Glue: flooring requires adhesive or glue between each seam during installation to ensure a strong seal between each board
  Tongue & Groove Type
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