hall floor colour
Sam Potter
3 years ago
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Victoria
3 years agoVictoria
3 years agoRelated Discussions
Kitchen and hall flooring
Comments (6)I think concrete floors may well date and possibly in the future people will rue the day it became popular lol. Given that they both look like oak (albeit one lighter) you'll be fine. It's only if you're trying to mix different species of wood it can look off. Wood is a natural material with natural tone variations and everything being too 'matchy matchy' can actually end up looking quite fake and cheap....See MoreHallway flooring/design/paint colours in Victorian home
Comments (6)Hi there! I quite like the purple, reminds me a bit of the hallway in this property: As for decoration, you could nab some ideas from above - a patterned rug in muted/pastel colours, an statement ceiling light, hooks for coats. The bench looks nice, but if you wanted something more practical you could maybe go for either a shoe rack or a combination shoe rack/side-table with a few drawers in it for keys and general storage space: If you don't have the room for that because of the radiator, you could cover the radiator and use the top as a surface to put things on (a vase, to leave your keys etc). You could hang a mirror above this, or a some artwork on any bare wall space: Hope this has been of some help, best of luck!...See MoreQuickstep or Amtico flooring for Kitchen/Hall/Playroom floor
Comments (12)We had Polyflor installed in all bathrooms and have taken the decision to do the whole of downstairs in it also. I have 3 small children with lots of energy that like to run round the new open space. The thing that swung it for me having paid for a number of full size samples in Karndean and Polyflor was how slippy the Karndean was compared to the Polyflor. Also the Polyflor doesn't catch the light and reflect the same as the Karndean....See Morehallway flooring
Comments (4)Depending on your budget, i can highly recommend a tile shop in Derby called Alternative Tiles. They specialise in these floors and have a second website just for them: http://www.periodfloors.co.uk/. They have a special computer programme, so once you send in your dimensions, they will draw up designs until you get one that you’re happy with. (They have lots of colours and patterned tiles too!). I say it’s budget dependent - we found that the tiles themselves weren’t massively expensive, but the laying of them is more due to it being a fiddly time consuming job....See MoreVictoria
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Sam PotterOriginal Author