How To Install Rustic Hardwood Flooring Like A Pro

By Gloria Mason


Few things bring out a warmth and beauty in a home than rustic hardwood flooring. It is also a wonderful way to increase the value of older homes and newer remodels. It generally does not take an incredible amount of time or carpentry skills. Depending on the wood you decide to use as your flooring it generally does not take a lot of special tools either.

Generally one of the first things anyone should do is get the flooring they have decided to use. Shop around so you get a good value for your dollar. When you bring it home to store, carefully stack it in a room close to where you will be installing it. This will give it time to acclimate to the temperature and humidity conditions present in your home.

While you wait for your wood floor to finish acclimating, take everything from the room the floor is going in so you can clean it. If you would like to install a sub-floor, now would be the time for it. Generally a plywood around 3/4 inch works out best. Now would also be a good time for the felt and vapor barrier to go down. Try overlapping the seams of both at least 4 inches if possible.

Now that you are ready for the actual installation, find the longest wall in the room and go to it. Snap a heavy chalk line 3/8 of an inch from the wall base. This will let the floor's wood expand and contract during the summer and winter months. Make sure the mark is dark so it does not get rubbed out while you are working.

Find a straight long board and line it up to the chalk line you made. Drill some pilot holes in it spaced 8 inches apart to secure it to your sub floor. Do not forget the plugs for the screw holes so they are covered up. Finish the first board up by face nailing its tung with 10 inch increments all the way down the board. Repeat this until the first row is done.

Remember to make your board lengths random. The seams should never line up from row to row. Begin your next row by putting the groove over the first rows tung. Face nail the next row on the tung and go onto the third row.

Continue this way till you reach the other side of the room. When you reach the other side of the room, cut the boards to fit. Make sure you always try to nail into your floor joists. When doing threshold, go through it with your flooring. Come back after you are finished with a cutoff saw and trim the boards to the doorway.

Installing rustic hardwood flooring in a house is not nearly as difficult as it is time consuming. Remember to always measure your boards twice and cut them once. If it all seems overwhelming to do yourself, there are many reasonably priced contractors that can do it for you. Just give them a call and you will be on the way to your new hardwood floor.




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