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Kitchen Flooring Cottage Style

Cottage style kitchen floors are an overlooked way of completing your decorating scheme. You can go with wood, especially wide-plank wood flooring, porcelain or ceramic flooring tiles, and even vinyl or linoleum flooring tiles. Kitchen flooring cottage style is more informal and tends to look old. If casual and vintage is the look you are after, cottage style kitchen floors may be just the ticket to complete your home.

Do you enjoy a home filled with things you love and enjoy looking at, rather than a home that is perfectly matched? Then your home most likely fits into the cottage style. Cottage style is not really a decorating style, rather it is a feeling that your home has. Cottage style homes make you feel welcome and comfortable as soon as you walk into the home. That is why so many people love this carefree and simple decorating style. And to complete the look, go with kitchen flooring -- cottage style.

If you love the cottage style look, then you will also want to incorporate it into your kitchen. Since the kitchen floor can make such a huge impact on the feel of the kitchen, you will want to find some cottage style kitchen flooring. Common choices include bare wood floors., tile -- ceramic, porcelain, linoleum or vinyl.

The look of imperfect boards, different width boards, and blemished wood gives the home a character and warmth all its own. If your wood floors are not perfect, embrace them and create the look of the entire room around the floors. If you don't have existing wood floors, even new wood can be treated to make it look old. Painting wood floors and then treating them to make them look old is another option. Using vintage throw rugs thrown around the room can help to add some color and character to the room as well.

Using different colored tiles to create a checkerboard effect makes the room feel vintage and old, which is what the cottage style is all about. Many tile options can work in the cottage style. Just see which ones remind you of the vintage look you are after, and go with them. Porcelain flooring tiles may give the look you seek, but then again it could be a linoleum flooring tile that creates the right effect. If you can't afford porcelain, ceramic flooring tiles may be as effective in creating the look you seek and giving you the durability and ease of cleaning. Vinyl and linoleum tiles are also durable and easy to clean, and generally more affordable.

Decorating your kitchen in the cottage style is very simple. Take things that make you feel relaxed, such as what you would find in a vacation cottage and use them. Once you find what makes you happy and peaceful, then you will have found the beginning of your own personal cottage style.

Most homeowners that embrace cottage style like to furnish their home with finds from flea markets and rummage sales. The look of old furniture gives the home that lived-in feeling and comfort level that people enjoy. Even a new piece of furniture can be made to feel old and given a feeling of history. Vintage items are very important in cottage style decorating. Finding a new use for a cast-off vintage item gives the entire home a loved and lived-in feeling. Use of vintage fabrics also helps to reinforce the feeling of simpler times.

Spending a lot of money is not necessary in achieving the cottage style feel. Cottage style decorating will help to make your kitchen feel more inviting and warm. And the cottage style kitchen flooring will complete the look. Don't you want to try this style for yourself -- kitchen flooring, cottage style?

Comments

I WANT 5 TO 6 INCH PLANKED FLOORING, THAT I CAN PAINT WHITE . I WANT THE COTTAGE LOOK. WHERE DO I FIND IT ? SHOULD I USE JUST PINE PLANKS AND PAINT THEM WHITE ? THANKS PENNY

PENNY at April 10, 2008 08:08 PM


I don't see why you can't just by pine 6" flooring and paint it white. Look online and at a flooring store to find the best price and availability.

My recommendation is to use a low VOC paint (Sherwin Williams has a great one) and then seal it with several coats of water-based Urethane Diamond Coat Polyurethane. You'll have a durable flooring that won't harm the air you breathe.

The Flooring Lady at April 11, 2008 09:19 AM


We used 1x8 pine boards. We primed all sides, nailed the boards to the floor with a large air gun nailer set to sink the nails in below the surface of the boards and then painted the boards with porch floor paint. The nail gun left these wonderful nail holes that look like the floor was nailed down with square nails. We did all this during a remodeling project that ended up costing more than expected. We thought it would be temporary. 12 years later, we still love the painted floors better than any other floors in the house. They are easy to care for. We let the wood acclimate to the space for about 2 weeks before nailing. In one room we used wood fill between the boards for even easier clean up, but in the bedrooms it has not been necessary. My sister put the same flooring in her house and used Elmer's glue to fill the gaps between the boards in her kitchen.

Kathy at July 18, 2008 07:20 PM


Thanks for chiming in Kathy - always makes me happy when somebody else has good ideas too!

The Flooring Lady at July 19, 2008 12:14 AM


Hi Flooring Lady, We plan to renovate a cottage on the beach. Tracking sand into the house is an inevitable problem. I am intrigued by the health friendly attributes of linoleum versus vinyl sheet flooring. Will sand or other dirt pose a potential problem with linoleum flooring? What flooring materials would you suggest for the main living areas?

Thanks for your help, Steve in Michigan

Steve at July 22, 2008 11:41 AM


Just about any kind of flooring will work, the key is the finish - it has to be very hard, very durable so that the sand doesn't scratch it. Face it, if sand gets tracked in the house (a certainty!), it's going to get stepped on, which means it'll move underfoot, leading to scratching.

The Flooring Lady at July 22, 2008 05:02 PM


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