Posts Tagged ‘hardwood floors’
Braided Area Rugs on Hardwood Floors
Have you recently finished construction on a new home or done some remodeling that included the installation of hardwood flooring? If so, it’s probably time you started thinking about adding some rugs.
What’s the point in going through all of that effort, not to mention expense, and then turn right around and cover up your beautiful oak or walnut floor? Besides helping to coordinate the color scheme that you’ve chosen for the individual rooms in your house, certain high traffic areas will benefit from the protection afforded by some sort of floor covering.
Unless your décor is one that calls for an oriental or Turkish carpet, braided area rugs are a very popular choice. They pair well with hardwood flooring and come in patterns, styles and colors to complement any of the variations in types of wood.
In colonial times, our ancestors made these attractive and resilient rugs for the cold floors of their cabins. Passed down as family heirlooms, many of these rugs are still in use, today.
Our grandparents and theirs before them were the original recyclers. Unlike our current throw-away generation, they wasted very little. When clothing or bedding became old and worn, it was cut up and given a second life. Some of it was cut into small squares and pulled out at the next quilting bee while the rest was cut into strips used for braiding into rugs.
As with many other things, machines were invented and mass production replaced making by hand. In the late 1900’s, a wave of nostalgia swept across the country and many of these lost arts were revived. It’s now possible to find someone who does rug braiding by hand. Commissioning one in your choice of style and color is absolutely the next best thing to having one that has been passed down through your family.
Another option is to check out flea markets and second-hand retailers. Not everyone recognizes the value in these old, hand-made rugs. It just might be your lucky day.
Read Before You Remodel
The economy being what it is these days, many people who intended to sell their current home and upgrade to something more in line with their dream house have been forced to reconsider the wisdom of such a move. More than a few no longer have the option, financially, and don’t foresee that changing anytime soon.
What a lot of these people have chosen, however, is to not give up. Instead of finding their dream house and taking on considerably more debt they have decided to remodel and create it. There will still be significant cost but usually not nearly as much as mortgaging a new purchase.
Along with upgrading the kitchen and putting in Jacuzzi tubs in the master bath, many are finally ready to install the hardwood floors that they have always wanted. Right up with that new kitchen, those wood floors will greatly improve the market value should things actually turn around sooner and they get the opportunity to sell.
As long as solid wood planks or a quality engineered wood product is installed, the type of wood they choose won’t affect the future selling price of the house but it will be something they will need to spend a fair amount of time researching. Even the more common choices of oak, maple, ash or walnut flooring have all sorts of variables associated with them. Natural or stained? Simple linear pattern or something with a design, like parquet? Will there be a border or some sort of inlay? How about the cut — plain-sawn, quarter-sawn or rift-sawn?
It has been said that the process of building a new home is the first step to divorce court. Whether that has any validity or not, building or remodeling is extremely stressful and demands a huge investment of time and energy. Advance discussion, research and planning will be effort well spent.