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3 Ways to Test Your Flooring Samples

flooring samples

Choosing a new floor for your home can be an exciting experience, but actually committing can be a bit nerve wracking. It is a great idea to test flooring samples – several of them – before settling on the one. Engaging with your flooring samples while you’re at home will help you understand how the flooring will look and feel in the space, and whether it fits with your design scheme and lifestyle. We offer up to 5 free flooring samples of many of our flooring options. Whether you’re looking into laminate, hardwood, or vinyl, let’s take a look at how you can test flooring samples to decide on the floor of your dreams.

1. Discover Look and Feel

Experiment With Lighting

Put your flooring samples near a window in the room you want to redecorate. As the daylight changes, look at your flooring samples in every light. When it gets dark, use different accent lighting combinations like overhead lighting and lamps. Consider taking pictures of the floor in each type of light to help you decide. We also recommend that you move your sample around the room as the day goes on to see it in all areas and all lighting.

Use Your Hands and Feet 

Run your fingers over your flooring samples to see how they feel. Put them down and try standing on them in bare feet and in socks. Intentionally stand on them while you get ready in the morning. It’s not the same as walking across an already installed floor, but you’ll get an idea whether you like the feel of the carpet, laminate, or hardwood under your feet.

2. Test Durability

Pet Floor Choices

Spray Water

Will your hardwood or carpet react well to moisture? Spray or drip water on your sample twice. The first time, wipe it up immediately. The second time, let it sit.

Create Spills 

Repeat the water experiment with the beverages your family drinks the most, like juice, coffee, or red wine. Use the cleaning products you typically use, whether that means homemade cleaner or bleach wipes.

Drop Things 

Test flooring samples with simple, everyday actions. Drop your keys on the sample. Walk across it wearing your favorite pair of boots or heels. Try scuffing it with your tennis shoes. If you have pets, grab an old fork or a key to mimic the scratches pet claws may leave behind. Get it muddy or sandy to mimic the detritus that’ll track in on your shoes. You want to mimic the wear and tear your family will create to see which flooring holds up best.

3. Assess Style

hardwood

Compare With Your Curtains

Lay each flooring sample beneath your curtains one at a time to see if they match. Try this in different lighting to see which one matches your window dressings best. If you’re redecorating the entire room, compare the flooring samples with the curtains you’ll be hanging up. Take the samples with you to the store to see how they look with your curtain options.

Match Your Paint

Will your flooring look good with the paint on your walls? Even if you’ve got a neutral color like white or beige, you’ll find that each flooring sample has specific undertones (especially exotic hardwoods), some of which will match better. If you’ll be repainting the room, think about painting a small section of wall near the floor so you can test flooring samples with the new color.

Check Your Accessories 

How do your flooring samples look with your furniture? For example, testing hardwood samples with wooden furniture is essential because you may end up clashing, or you could decide that the room has too much wood in it. Hold your flooring samples up to your accessories, accent pieces, and artwork. You may discover a sample you thought would match clashes with one of your favorite pieces.

BONUS: Explore Your Options

Even if you have your heart set on hardwood, it’s a good idea to test similar options like laminate or engineered. Sometimes what we think we want doesn’t end up working well in a particular space. We offer up to five free flooring samples, so you can try different tones or materials to find out which works best.

The last thing you want is buyer’s remorse for such a large and long-lasting investment. You want to love your new flooring, so if your favorite sample didn’t do as well in the coffee-spill test, that doesn’t mean you have to choose something you’re not crazy about. Keep exploring until you discover the right flooring for you and can make a confident decision.

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(2) Comments

  1. BuildDirect Product Expert Team

    Hi George. Thanks for reaching out to us! Porcelain tile is definitely the best option. If your pets are on the smaller side, you could use any porcelain tile on our website. However, if your pets are on the larger side, you would probably want to go with a porcelain tile that has a PEI rating of 4 or higher. PEI is an industry standard for measuring durability. We don’t sell anything less than a 3, which is good for any kind of residential project, where a 4 is rated for residential to light commercial and 5 is the highest rating, which works for any commercial project :). Most of our porcelain tile has a coefficient of friction rating which measures skid resistance, and anything over 0.6% when wet is considered skid resistant – you can find this information on all of the products’ product pages. If you’re really concerned, you could go with a tile that has some texture to it. It really is a matter of personal preference, and samples do help you decide if a product will be skid resistant enough for your project. Please let us know if you have any other questions.
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