Anonymous wrote:So, if I go with a non-installed bound carpet, should I run it all the way to the walls and cut out spots for the registers/vents? Or should I leave a 2-3 inch border of hardwood around the room (and still cut out spots for the vents).
You should do neither of these, and get an area rug that fits JUST the seating arrangement, as long as all the rugs are under the front legs of each piece of furniture.
Better yet, you might be better off with an interior designer at an hourly rate to help with furniture arrangement. sounds like, even though you may have a huge room, you have a layout problem and maybe you need to get a shorter sofa and arrange it differently so the back is not to the kitchen (I agree, that doesn't sound ideal).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hardwood is not cold.
Agreed. That's the dumbest thing I have ever heard.
Unless it's in a basement. Then it might be cold, but carpet would be too.
Anonymous wrote:Hardwood is not cold.
Anonymous wrote:Don't listen to these morons. High grade, high end carpet is definitely ok to do in a family room. From Houzz:
This one is made of a linen and wool mixture. Gotta go with taupe! Warm, luxurious and classic…
<div></div><div style='color:#444;'><small>Traditional Bedroom by Minneapolis Interior Designers & Decorators Billy Beson Company</small></div>
Anonymous wrote:For those of us who live in the north where winters are very cold, hardwood floors are beautiful but hard to live with. Unless you run heaters under the floor, walking on them during the cold months -- which here far exceed several months of warm -- is unbearable. You'll need to get out of bed and immediately put on socks and shoes and keep them on. That's the temperature side. Personally, I have walked into many homes in many areas with wide expanses of uncovered floor and the homes do not feel inviting, cozy, or like you want to settle in. Sterile comes to mind. Contemporary and cold in feeling, not temperature. Plus there is no noise reduction possible from those bare floors. Even throw rugs don't accomplish noise reduction and they break up a large room. A friend put in berber in her large living room. That looks really nice and does help with the noise reduction. It buts up to a walkway area that they tiled with a dark stone. Looks great.
There's a reason, folks, that people of yesteryear opted to move away from their wood floors used for decades and decades.
Personally, I'd never live in a modernistic, contemporary home filled with wood floors and tiles. I'd also never buy a new modern home. Ugh. Doesn't feel like a nest at all.
Anonymous wrote:Um... Area rugs can cost thousands of dollars to get large enough ones to cover the desired area. My whole living room is hardwood and I have babies that are crawling and learning to walk and we looked into pre padded carpeting that we could lay on the hardwood and it would only cost a few hundred to cover the whole room but an area rug the size we needed was $1,200 so no area rugs are not the cheaper option if you need it for a large space. We haven't figured out a solution yet to the issue of the hardwood. As for the cold hardwood floors are cold on the feet even if you have the best insulated house on the planet. The only way hardwood wouldn't be cold is if your floors were heated. If you can find a safe way to carpet with minimal or no damage than I say do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd never, ever put carpet over hardwoods. Carpet just looks cheap. I'd do an area rug instead.
Absolutely agree.
Anonymous wrote:I'd never, ever put carpet over hardwoods. Carpet just looks cheap. I'd do an area rug instead.