Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Fuzzy Floors

Since removing the final layer of vinyl tile from the kitchen floors, we have been living with furry floors. The tiles left a sort of brown paper backing stuck down in a lot of places, and I was afraid of gouging the wood if I scrapped too hard.

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Since there was also a good bit of water damage to the finish (the white splotches), we decided a DIY gentle screening with a buffer was not going to be sufficient. I have seen horror stories of homeowners with drum sanders mutilating their vintage wood floors, so Jeff made the executive decision on knowing our limits and we hired a lovely older man to come in and do the deed.

There is much to be said for the right equipment in the right hands! Hubert has been in the floor sanding business for almost 50 years, and his experience shows! Here is what we saw in just the first few minutes.

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He took our floors from this:
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To this:
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We will be using a modified tung oil finish to really bring out the color and grain. I can't wait to apply that final coat and see the beauty of the old growth quartersawn heart pine!

7 comments:

  1. Wow! Gorgeous! And, I love the all the gadgets you got at Ikea!

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  2. That looks really nice. We can't wait to walk on them.

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  3. Thanks Anna. I know your house has great old wood floors, so I'm sure you can appreciate the work to preserve and maintain them ;-)

    Hurray Montagues; you were able to leave a comment! Thank you for the compliment. You're welcome to come walk all over our floors any time!

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  4. I actually gasped at that last photo - beautiful! And I know you'll keep them very well maintained.
    And about your "perfect day" - The best things are worth waiting for, aren't they?!

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  5. Thanks Anita! Wait until you see what the finish does for them ;-). But the sheer beauty of even raw wood is always so lovely so see. We'll pay more per square foot to refinish these floors than we did to buy the laminate for our last house (though we did the installation, of course), but the quality is worth it!

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  6. Amazing! My first thought considering what my husband does for a living was say to just tile over that fuzzy stuff! I can see why you didn't!!

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  7. Thanks Rachel! We've considered tile in the laundry and bath, since they are on a concrete subfloor anyway. I'm glad the kitchen floors sanded so well; maybe once we're done in there I can turn my attention to finding tile that would coordinate well with the heart pine (the laundry flows off of the kitchen). If you or Mark have any suggestions, please let me know!

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