It sure wasn't beachy but we knew prior to making an offer on the house that there was
hardwood underneath the carpet on the stairs and I saw definite potential.
Second we will rip out the cheap linoleum and probably paint
the hardwood underneath, or lay tile.
If you are selling your home, and you have carpet on the steps, but
hardwood underneath, my advice to you is to rip up the carpet and refinish.
(BTW, this is usually LESS expensive than replacing it with carpet)... you can read more here: If you have
hardwood underneath the carpet, is it better to refinish the wood or re-carpet?
If you have
hardwood underneath the carpet, rip up the carpet and refinish the hardwood.
We were going to rip it up and replace it with tile, but when we tore off the linoleum we found
the hardwood underneath.
It did the trick for the past (almost) four years, but little by little we've uninstalled it, donated to other folks, and we've slowly but surely been refinishing all
the hardwood underneath.
* I ripped up the blue shag carpet and revealed the beautiful
hardwood underneath.
In fact, most of them were built with hardwood, and if there is currently carpet, there is usually
hardwood underneath.
So lucky there was
hardwood underneath!
Our current home has all carpet with beautiful
hardwoods underneath!
There is currently carpet, but
the hardwoods underneath just need a little love!
I have to replace the old wall - to - wall carpet in my super tiny craft room / office (
no hardwoods underneath... boo hoo) and I was literally JUST drooling over «Suit Yourself»!
Done: Painted SW sea salt Changed fixture from standard grade to this Removed slate floors (and found the original
hardwoods underneath!)
Not exact matches
We pulled up a portion of the floor hoping it had real
hardwood floors
underneath like the rest of our house, but found nothing but sub-floor.
Yellow and green framed art hang on a shiplap wall adjacent to a toilet positioned on European white oak
hardwood floors
underneath a polished nickel towel rack.
While laminate does a bit better than
hardwood when it comes to moisture tests — primarily because there is so much glue holding the product together — it's the layer
underneath the laminate that essentially self - destructs as soon as water touches it.
Walking up the
Hardwood Stairway (which has a storage room
underneath) one will find 3 Air Conditioned Bedrooms with a shared Bath as well as the Master Bedroom that has its own Master Bath, Walk - In Closet and Private Balcony.
The introduction of felt pads, which are traditionally placed
underneath the bottoms of furniture pieces, such as chairs and stools to protect
hardwood floors from unsightly marks and scratches, enables me to conceptually transfer this idea in application to my bare skin speaking to illustrating intimacy in the ritual.
Other helpful tips: choose neutral colors for fixtures, appliances and laminates and avoid the need for a new floor by sanding and refinishing a
hardwood floor that may be
underneath the existing vinyl flooring.
Hardwoods are
underneath the carpets.
* fab pentrm — fabulous pentroom, a room on top,
underneath the roof, that sometimes has views * FDR — formal dining room (not the former president) * frplc, fplc, FP — fireplace * grmet kit — gourmet kitchen * HDW, HWF, Hdwd —
hardwood floors * hi ceils — high ceilings * In - law potential — potential for a separate apartment.
Examples of claims that are often overlooked can include: * Accidental holes in walls from moving furniture, trips and falls, etc * Accidental spills, stains, tears in carpeting or gouges in laminate or
hardwood flooring * Broken windows from flying objects * Puff - back from natural gas furnaces and water heaters * Undetected water damage from
underneath cabinets, dishwashers, refrigerators, washing machines * Water pipes that are frozen, cracked, leaking, or have burst * Smoke stained kitchen walls and ceilings from a dinner gone wrong * Bathroom water damage from an overflowing bathtub, sink, or toilet * Damaged stone, carpet, or tile from a popping fireplace * Damaged decks and siding due to flying play objects or having the bbq grill a little too close * Vandalism of any kind caused by disgruntled former occupants or random strangers * Major damages from fire, wind, hail — yes, we do that too!
Pull up old carpets — especially if they show
hardwood floors
underneath.
We just removed two walls, need to patch / cover up the patch of
hardwood flooring
underneath.
Within the next year or so, we plan to remove the laminate flooring, and to refinish and patch the
hardwood flooring that lies
underneath.
-- Mirrors on the inside - backs of the upper cabinets — We created taller cabinets by adding extra molding on top of upper cabinets — Corbels
underneath the upper cabinets — Salvaged cabinets on the right side of the room — Butcherblock countertop — Stainless steel shelves — Chalkboard paint — Cabinet paint: Mourning Dove (Martha Stewart by Sherwin Williams) and Alabaster (Sherwin Williams)-- Ceramic tile removal — Ceramic tile removal (part 2)--
Hardwood floor installation and staining — Wall color: November Rain, by Benjamin Moore
... but Lee removed the 2 × 4 with the nails sticking out of it, and now I really can't wait to expose and refinish the original
hardwood floor that's
underneath the laminate.
We assumed there was
hardwood flooring, because we saw some
underneath the carpet in other parts of the room, but unfortunately, that wasn't the case...
Unfortunately most of the house has been carpeted, BUT, the good news is -
underneath all that carpet are the original
hardwood floors!
Compared to the
hardwood floors in the rest of the house, the brick floor is warmer in winter since there's no crawl space
underneath.
Whether I win or not (I never win anything, so I'm going with NOT), I'm going to use these in my living room when we rip up the carpet and refinish our
hardwood floors that are lying
underneath.
I would rip up all the carpet because you know
hardwoods have to be
underneath.
So, if you have
hardwood flooring and if it's hiding
underneath your carpet, by all means, rip up the carpet and refinish the
hardwood floors.
Rip up all that carpet & hopefully it has
hardwood floors
underneath to sand.
Rip up carpeting to put in
hardwood if it's not
underneath.
Engineered
hardwood is composed of a face, or a top decorative layer of the species you've chosen, and multiple layers of perpendicularly stacked wood veneer
underneath.