Hardwood Flooring With Red Oak Cabinets

Hand-scraped Hardwood FlooringHand-scraped hardwood is a unique way to display your personal style. American Scrape™ HardwoodProduct manager, Chuck, shows off the richly textured floors in our new American Scrape hardwood collection. These rustic floors highlight the trees' natural imperfections, including inherent characteristics such as knots and mineral streaks. The collection is available in domestic hickory, oak, walnut, and cherry and made in the USA. Hand-scraped floors are a popular flooring choice these days. Homeowners love the distressed wood look, combined with rich colors, that produce floors of incredible beauty. Hand-scraped refers to the surface texture. The boards for this floor style are individually scraped to create a rustic or refined texture on the surface. The scraping process shows off the unique graining and natural character marks of each wood Love the look of my new floor We just finished installing the Gunstock Oak American Scrape hardwood flooring in our Great-room.

I didn't know if I wanted Oak but I loved the color and it is so rich looking. I just love, love, love this floor. The color is beautiful, not too dark and not too light. It also compliments our wood ceiling. The hand scraping is going to be very forgiving and it adds a great look to our lake-house. As you can tell I'm very happy I chose this floor from Armstrong. Why Choose Hand-scraped Flooring Hand-scraped flooring holds wide appeal for homeowners all over the country. The variety of scraped visuals, wood species, and colors available means there's a hand-scraped floor for every type of interior decorating style. Deeper hand-scraping for more rustic looks is popular. You could choose either or something in the middle. Hand-scraped floors work well in rooms with high traffic, where the textured surface is more forgiving of small scratches or dents than completely smooth floors. American Scrape™: individually hand-scraped wide planks in rich, authentic colors

Rustic Accents™: acacia and walnut hardwoods with a slightly rustic hand scrape Artesian Hand-Tooled™: deep, hand-scraped looks and random width boards Century Estate™: subtle scraping on extra-wide planks that look hand-crafted Rural Living™: deeply textured rustic looks Gatsby™: solid oak and birch with hand-scraped looks You may be wondering: do hand-scraped hardwood floors require special care and maintenance? The short answer is NO. or refined scraped texture of these hardwood floors does not call for any complicated cleaning procedures. Actually, caring for your hand-scraped wood floor is just as easy as caring for any other hardwood floor. A dry mop, vacuum, or broom are all you need. Remember to promptly clean up any spilled liquids right away and sweep regularly to enjoy your beautiful floor for many years to come.The cabinets for the upstairs space are designed and ready to be made, but we skidded to a slight halt when it came time to select the variety of wood.

The old window trim and baseboards, which we’ve stripped, are made of heart pine (I know this thanks to you guys!) The grain is really beautiful, but heart pine is no longer widely available—and the more I look into it, the more I’m learning how prohibitively expensive this wood might be. We don’t have a huge amount of cabinets we’re having to build, but we do want them to look like they belong in the Building—not like slick new pieces of furniture.
Outdoor Furniture Store North Vancouver(And later, when we do the downstairs space, we’ll face the same decision about what wood to use.)
Best Knife For Chopped Salad So I wanted to ask you what you think of quarter sawn oak.
Digital Camera Child Mode(Note: Don’t look at the stain color or finish; just the wood.)

Quarter sawn oak is the wood used for most mission-style furniture and cabinetry from the arts and crafts period, and is known for its distinctive grain and durability. While the grain isn’t identical to that of the heart pine window trim, it has more of an old, classic look than lots of woods widely used for cabinets today. Here’s an example of quarter sawn white oak in a kitchen. Of course, our cabinets won’t be Mission style, and they won’t be designed for a kitchen…but you get the idea of what quarter sawn white oak looks like. This is a really helpful glimpse at the difference between quarter sawn oak (cabinets) and flat sawn oak (door trim.) I think the grain of the flat sawn oak (this is the oak widely used for cabinets, furniture, and trim) would be too strong and distracting to use for the cabinets throughout the office, but I also think using a wood that doesn’t have much grain (alder, for example) might be like when Richard reaches into his vest pocket in “Somewhere in Time” and pulls out a penny from 1979.

I don’t want the cabinets to look sleek and modern, like they were made in this era. I want ’em to look like they’ve been in the building forever. Do any of you have any experience using quarter sawn oak for furniture or cabinets? Do you like it? Do you love it? Do you hate it? How about the price? Do you prefer quarter sawn white oak or quarter sawn red oak? And everyone else, would love to hear your thoughts, or even suggestions for other wood that might work. The cabinet guy will get started next week. Hope you’re having a wonderful week! Strand Woven Bamboo Harvest 3/4 in. Thick x 3/4 in. Wide x 94 in. Length Hardwood Quarter Round Molding Strand Woven Bamboo Harvest 3/8 in. Thick x 1-3/4 in. Thick x 2-3/4 in. Length Hardwood Stair Nose Molding Strand Woven Bamboo Natural Tigerstripe 3/8 in. Length Hardwood Multi-Purpose Reducer Molding Strand Woven Bamboo Brown 3/4 in. Red Oak Natural/Wilston/Raymore Red Oak Natural Solid 3/8 in. Height x 1-3/4 in.