Sometimes you find yourself in a situation where you want to use more than one type of hardwood in your home.
Hardwoods in one room what to do with other flooring.
In a perfect world your flooring would flow seamlessly from room to room.
The key is to match the color of the floor with the entryway as one flows into the other.
In the real world however you cannot help but transition from one flooring type to another because different rooms need different types of flooring.
This is very difficult to do because different series of the same types of wood flooring may be slightly mismatched in their tone.
For example if you had hardwood flooring in your living room matching this flooring would mean carrying the same hardwood into the dining room and then into the kitchen and so on.
Interrupt the space where the two floor treatments meet by placing a feature or a piece of furniture right on top of it.
If you are planning to install wood floors in only one area of your home you may be tempted to try to match the floors that are installed in your other areas.
One of the reasons these examples are successful is because they have restricted their choices to just two types of flooring within view at any time.
For example if the living room is already layered with a great hardwood floor but you dislike the floor in the entrance hallway or the dining area it is logical to decide that a couple or more wood floors will be involved in re creating your house flooring.
A kitchen island chairs a sofa a table or any other furniture can bridge the gap between the kitchen tile and the hardwoods in the rest of the open floor plan.
Use one floor to create a border around the other blending the colors and styles of the two.
Off the foyer the living room flooring can be sculpted carpet wood cork bamboo laminate tile or stone.
Is it ok to have hardwood in the bedroom one color and the hardwood in the living room a different color since the two rooms border each other.
Why trying to match existing wood floors is difficult.
Coordinating floors on the other hand is different.
Other flooring trends in hardwood include wider planks the use of reclaimed wood or hand scraped wood that looks antique and exotic species of hardwood such as hickory or walnut.
If you re working with new hardwood and an existing floor rip out some of the old flooring around the perimeter of the room to add the border.
Too many types of flooring all seen at the same time makes spaces feel smaller.