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Upgrade Your Home with the Natural Look of Wood-Look Vinyl Flooring

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Mattcook
Upgrade Your Home with the Natural Look of Wood-Look Vinyl Flooring

There are many reasons to adore hardwood flooring, but occasionally vinyl might be a better option. Discover why wood-look vinyl flooring might be the best option for your job and what choices you have if you select this option.


What Is Vinyl Wood Look Flooring?


The appearance of wood Vinyl flooring is made to closely resemble the wood grains, hues, and even textures of real hardwood flooring. You can buy it in the form of long planks that approximate individual hardwood boards, single vinyl sheets that mimic multiple boards, or even parquet-style tiles.


There are two kinds of vinyl flooring with a hardwood appearance worth considering if you're planning a project: luxury vinyl tiles or planks also known as LVT or LVP, and vinyl sheet. Both provide a variety of wood styles and various performance goods.


When Does It Make Sense To Opt For Vinyl That Looks Like Wood?


When people opt for vinyl that mimics hardwood, it's frequently because they adore the classic design of hardwood or how beautifully wood flooring blends with virtually any interior design. However, for whatever reason, hardwood isn't the best choice for their particular project.

 


Challenging Installation Locations


You may choose a vinyl floor that replicates the appearance of hardwood since hardwood is not suggested for moist areas like bathrooms and laundry rooms. Because it has almost no seams and a very resilient surface, a vinyl sheet is a perfect option for these areas. When subjected to water, luxury vinyl tiles and planks, whether conventional LVT or rigid core, will not swell, buckle, or lose integrity.

Luxury vinyl tiles, luxury vinyl planks, or vinyl sheets are appropriate substitutes for solid hardwood in basements if you want to create a wood appearance.


High Traffic Areas


For rooms with high foot traffic as well as homes with active families and pets, luxury vinyl and non-slip vinyl flooring are ideal because they are made to withstand scratches, stains, spills, and daily wear.


Practical Budget


When a wood look is wanted but natural hardwood is out of the budget, vinyl flooring can be the ideal substitute, depending on the style and performance level you select.


Ease Of Maintainance


Both sheet vinyl and luxury vinyl are extremely simple to maintain. You typically only need to do a quick wipe-down or a quick sweep and mop because these surfaces repel dirt and spills.

               

Ease Of Installation


Wood-look vinyl flooring can be quite DIY-friendly, even if you'd never consider laying a hardwood floor yourself. With our FasTak installation, self-adhering luxury vinyl tile and planks use a repositionable, pressure-sensitive adhesive, and the majority of other vinyl floorings can be floated with boards that lock to each other and require no glue. Using luxury vinyl flooring over subfloors with slight irregularities is another excellent use for it.

 

What Kinds Of Wood Styles Are Available In Vinyl Flooring?


The newest styles in hardwood flooring can frequently be accomplished with many different types of vinyl, which is always a pleasant surprise for floor shoppers.


·Variety Of Species


Every type of wood, from the traditional American Oak, Maple, and Hickory to the unusual Acacia and Tigerwood, is available in vinyl form. Additionally, unlike hardwood flooring, restrictions like a species' scarcity or a wood's hardness won't apply to wood-look vinyl. For instance, some exotic woods are so hard that they are challenging to manufacture into hardwood boards and difficult to install. This might also affect the cost. Vinyl can be a great option for someone who desires the distinctive style of a rare exotic species.


 

·Weathered And Rustic Textured


With wood-look vinyl that simulates years of aging or exposure to the elements, you can capture a vintage feel. Only a few of the cutting-edge designs offered in luxury vinyl and a vinyl sheet include weather-worn driftwood boards, reclaimed timber, or craftsman hand-scraped planks.


There are many choices available that have embossed textures, so what you see on the floor and what you feel match. Knots and filled splits, which are features of natural wood, are amazingly realistically replicated on these floors.


· Variety Of Sizes


Many different sizes and forms of planks and tiles mimic wood. The most common tile shape is a plank, particularly fashionable wide-width planks 5" and higher. For a more realistic general appearance, some designs, particularly more expensive ones that imitate the look of reclaimed hardwood, also come in mixed widths.

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