should i or shouldn't i? i have tile in the kitchen and absolutely hate it. the entire house is hardwood and with the exception of the living room it is all original from 1890. anyways the tile in the kitchen is solid and in good shape but i really dont feel like doing an entire tear out and putting new stuff down so i was thinking of floating hardwood on top. i know the room height will be a tad higher than the connecting room but im not too worried about that. any thoughts or suggestions?
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engineered hardwood over tile
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Originally posted by mustang_revival View PostHave the old tile removed and add wood look tile. I couldn't do hardwood in my kitchen, I spill too much stuff and feed my pets over in one corner of the tiled nook area.
Also , look into VINYL PLANK , it looks great and performs well in a kitchen.
I wouldnt do engineered IMO only because of the potential for water damage,
( Fridge, sink, spills)
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Originally posted by jewozzy View Postthe entire house is hardwood and with the exception of the living room it is all original from 1890.
Originally posted by jewozzy View PostMy house is a historic home so I want to do something to make it look like it would have originally.
Originally posted by jewozzy View Postshould i or shouldn't i?
At least you have enough sense to respect the age and style of your home. I see a lot of people that do whatever is hip these days, I guess you'd call it 'modern Tuscan meets shabby chic', in their homes regardless of whether or not it makes any fucking sense. Makes me want to scream. Stop painting brick, stop putting faux finishes on cool old furniture, and stop laying down laminate floors in 125 year old homes.When the government pays, the government controls.
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Originally posted by 46Tbird View PostThat is awesome.
Which would have been the same hardwood floors you have throughout the rest of the house.
Of course you shouldn't. It should either get hardwoods (to be correct) or leave tile in there (for durability in the kitchen). Fake wood floors are neither correct, nor durable, and they would stand out like a sore thumb in that cool old house.
At least you have enough sense to respect the age and style of your home. I see a lot of people that do whatever is hip these days, I guess you'd call it 'modern Tuscan meets shabby chic', in their homes regardless of whether or not it makes any fucking sense. Makes me want to scream. Stop painting brick, stop putting faux finishes on cool old furniture, and stop laying down laminate floors in 125 year old homes."If I asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses." - Henry Ford
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We looked at a house with wood look tile and I thought it was terrible. everything else was awesome and the house was a great deal...but the tile was so bad looking that I knew I couldn't live in it.
Our entire downstairs including the kitchen has some form of engineered hardwood or vinyl. ..I really have no clue what it actually is. But it holds up well to water, the dog, all kinds of debris I drag in from the garage...etc.
I don't know about applying over tile, but you can get a suitable hardwood alternative for a kitchen.
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I can't tell in that pic...is there a grout joint? It looks better than the stuff we saw, at least from the distance the pic is taken.
The house we were looking at wouldn't have been close to the cheap range...but grout between simulated wood planks killed it For me.
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Ruff- definitely.. it is a more modern look, AND it will always have grout lines. If you want it to trick people into thinking its wood.. it wont
Wood was not an option for me from a wear/tear stand point
baron-
Love 'em. Not much for the "fake wood" look ones they have (my wood cabinets are all real wood). But the glossy ones are nice!
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