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    All About Hardwood Floors

    To ensure that you have good floors in your house, just knock on wood. Nothing rivals the way wood warms up a room, its classic good looks, or how long it lasts — qualities that earn it the distinction of being This Old House's favorite flooring. READ: Home Bloggers' Crafty Ways to Save Whether you're laying a wood floor in a new house or replacing one that's damaged beyond repair, there are dozens of species to pick from, including trusty domestics, such as oak and maple, and intriguing exotics, such as tamarind and acacia. You also have a choice of widths — be it rustic wide planks or traditional narrow strips — and stain colors, which allows you to tailor your floors to your house's style and decor. And thanks to modern adhesives, a wide variety of species are available as "engineered" boards. Made from a stable sandwich of veneers, rather than solid stock, engineered floors can go places where it wasn't practical to install wood before: over radiant-floor heating systems and concrete and in basements.

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  • Floor FAQs
    What it costs: From $1.50 to $8 per square foot depending on wood thickness, species, and grade. Some prefinished solid-wood and engineered wood floors are DIY-friendly, but if you plan to hire a pro installer, tack on $2 per square foot, minimum. How it will hold up:Some prefinished solid-wood boards come with a 50-year warranty. With regular care, though, any solid-wood floor can easily last twice that long. Warranties on the finish for engineered wood range from 10 to 30 years. How to maintain it: Fight a finish's biggest enemy — abrasive dirt— by vacuuming regularly and laying runners and doormats near entries. Where to install it:Just about anywhere, except in areas prone to extreme humidity and standing water. Shown:Its hardness makes oak ideal for high-traffic foyers. Clear-coated white oak works with cream wall paint and a peach stair runner for a serene color palette.
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  • What to Know Before You Buy
    Ask yourself these questions to narrow your search for the right wood floor: Where do you plan to use it? Kitchen and entryway: Choose a hard wood, such as oak or hickory, which can handle heavy foot traffic better than a soft pine.  Bedroom and home office: Rooms off the beaten path are good locations for softer woods, such as black cherry or black walnut.  Basement: Avoid using solid-wood flooring below grade, where high humidity prevails. An engineered wood floor is a better option here because it's more stable.  Bathroom: Water can warp wood, making it a poor choice for baths with tubs and showers. What's it going over? Plywood subfloor: As long as it's solid and flat, you can install any type of nail-or glue-down hardwood, as well as click-together engineered strip or cork plank floating floors.  Existing wood floor: Thinner boards with long-wearing factory-applied finishes are better here to ensure safe, no-trip transitions to adjacent rooms, hallways, and stairways.  Concrete slab or tile: Nails aren't an option. Consider a click-together floating floor or one that can be glued down.  Radiant floor: Engineered flooring is ideal because it's thinner and more stable than most solid wood. READ: 13 Thrifty Ways to Give Your House Vintage Charm
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  • Add It Up
    To figure out how much your floor will cost, calculate the room's square footage, then add five to 10 percent for cuts and waste. Multiply this figure by the board's square-foot price to get your cost. Don't forget to add on a few extra bucks for door thresholds, shoe moldings, and any nails or staples you might need. READ: 8 Easy Flooring Upgrades
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  • Hardwood Basics
    Thickness: Solid ¾-inch boards can be refinished up to 10 times. Thinner ones can't be sanded as much,but when topped with durable factory-applied coatings, they shouldn't require frequent refinishing.  Length: Longer strips mean fewer distracting end joints. To make a small room appear bigger, use shorter strips.  Width: Six-inch planks have a rustic appeal, but the joints open wide during dry spells; 2¼-inch strips look busier but stay tighter. Mix widths for the best of both.  Hardness: The harder the wood, the less prone it is to dents and gouges. The table shown shows how various species stack up.
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  • Hardwood Cuts
    Flatsawn boards are cut so that the growth rings are roughly parallel with the face, leaving a distinctive flame-like grain pattern.  Quartersawn boards, which are more expensive, have a straight grain and growth rings perpendicular to the face.
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  • Published
    6 Images

    All About Hardwood Floors

    To ensure that you have good floors in your house, just knock on wood. Nothing rivals the way wood warms up a room, its classic good looks, or how long it lasts — qualities that earn it the distinction of being This Old House's favorite flooring. READ: Home Bloggers' Crafty Ways to Save Whether you're laying a wood floor in a new house or replacing one that's damaged beyond repair, there are dozens of species to pick from, including trusty domestics, such as oak and maple, and intriguing exotics, such as tamarind and acacia. You also have a choice of widths — be it rustic wide planks or traditional narrow strips — and stain colors, which allows you to tailor your floors to your house's style and decor. And thanks to modern adhesives, a wide variety of species are available as "engineered" boards. Made from a stable sandwich of veneers, rather than solid stock, engineered floors can go places where it wasn't practical to install wood before: over radiant-floor heating systems and concrete and in basements.

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  • All About Hardwood Floors
  • 1
  • Floor FAQs
  • What to Know Before You Buy
  • Add It Up
  • Hardwood Basics
  • Hardwood Cuts