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Featured Hardwood Floors Articles

What Kind of Hardwood Flooring Is Best?
Installing hardwood flooring is a very popular home improvement project. This is particularly true now that more and more people are learning that carpets can hide mildew, mold, pet dander, dust mites, and other tiny particles that can make trouble for ...

Hardwood Floor In The Bathroom
When building or remodeling a bathroom, people have shied away from using hardwood flooring in those spaces. The mantra that designers and architects have stuck to is “wood and water don’t mix”.The inevitably humid environment in a bathroom as well as ...

Bruce Hardwood Flooring Company
Bruce Hardwood Flooring is probably most well known for their oak hardwood floors. It was solid oak tables that established the reputation of Bruce Hardwood Flooring. Bruce Hardwood Flooring still has the widest variety of oak floors than most flooring ...




Hardwood Floor Refinishing - Do It Yourself Tips
 

If you're lucky enough to find hardwood floors hiding under your tired carpeting, you might feel like covering the wood back up. That's understandable because refinishing the floors yourself seems like an impossible task.

Hardwood floors were a common feature in houses until the 1960s. Before that, having wall-to-wall carpet was considered a luxury upgrade. From the 1970s on, most homes had wall-to-wall carpet in nearly every room. However, tastes change, and over the last couple decades, hardwood floors have once again become fashionable and desirable.

Oftentimes, when I'm talking with someone about fixing houses, they ask if refinishing hardwood floors is something they can do themselves. Unless the person has a physical reason why they can't do it, I generally say yes. However, I also remind them that redoing hardwood floors takes a great deal of time, sweat, and elbow grease.

As a general rule, floors of fifty square feet or less can be sanded by hand, but for any floor larger than that, rent or buy a small orbital sander. Everything necessary for doing it yourself will be available at your local hardware store. You can buy a pretty good electric sander nowadays for less than $100, which can be a good investment, especially if you're planning to work on your home on a regular basis.

The first layer to be removed is often a thick wax coating, followed by a coat of either polyurethane or varnish. A heavy duty commercial wax stripper can remove the wax, and then a lacquer thinner or acetone can be wiped on to prepare the wood for the next step.

If there are any carpet tacks or pieces of old nails in the wood, remove them first. The remnant of a nail can tear up sandpaper, damage a sanding pad, and do serious damage to the palm of your hand, so check carefully to make sure all remnants of tacks and nails are gone before you begin sanding.

Fill all nail holes with a quality wood filler, matching the color as closely as you can, and let it dry. Then you're ready to begin sanding the floor with 220-grit sandpaper, whether by hand or with a sander.

When you're done sanding, wipe the entire floor with a damp cloth to remove as much sanding dust as possible. Damp cloths work better than vacuum cleaners. Let the floor dry, and then wipe it again with a tack rag, which is a cloth impregnated with resin to pick up fine dust particles. Again, your local hardware store will have what you need.

After the floor is as clean as you can get it, apply three coats of polyurethane with a paint pad, allowing each coat to dry thoroughly, lightly sanding with 220-grit paper, and wiping the floor with a damp cloth and a tack rag between coats. If you prefer an old-fashioned finish, you can use a 50/50 mixture of linseed oil and mineral spirits and then wax the floors with beeswax or paste wax. Take caution with the chemical mixture and the rags because they can catch on fire.

You can refinish hardwood floors yourself. It just takes time and effort--and a good set of kneepads wouldn't hurt, either! Once you finish, you'll have a gorgeous floor to be proud of and ready for that next "do it yourself" project--perhaps the next room with hardwood floors.

Copyright © 2006 Jeanette J. Fisher

Author Jeanette Fisher, America's "Dream Home" Maker, teaches interior design, redesign, and home staging. You can ask her questions on her Amazon blog or see http://www.designpsych.com for free home decorating teleseminars.



Written By: Jeanette Joy Fisher



Hardwood Floors News

Be careful with hardwood floors - AZCentral.com
If you put a hardwood floor down in your home office, you need to make sure the office chairs have the right wheels on them. But as this next case shows, make sure you ask, upfront, what happens if you buy the right wheels and they still damage your ...

Keep your hardwood floor working hard and looking even better with a ... - Evansville Courier-Press
Though they never really went out of style, hardwood floors are regaining the reputation of bolstering a room from beautiful to stunning. And if you take good care of your hard-working floors, they can keep your home sparkling well into their (and ...

Hardwood Cabinets Enhance Universal Design - Pekin Daily Times
(ARA) - A comfortable yet more accessible and barrier-free home are the desired aims of universal design. A term coined in the 1980s by architect Ron Mace, universal design is defined as "the design of products and environments to be usable by all ...

Many helped with church rehabilitation - Daily Mining Gazette
St. Paul the Apostle Catholic Church in Calumet recently rehabilitated the interior of our church, just in time to celebrate the Centennial of its dedication in 1908. The church stands as a monument to the faith of its original Slovenian immigrant ...

Blue Springs homes open for holiday guests - Blue Springs Examiner
“What a perfect day for a homes tour!” Carol Journagan of Blue Springs said as visitors entered her house at 2405 S.W. 19th St. Journagan’s house was one of six homes featured on the sixth annual Blue Springs Historical Society Christmas Homes ...