I recently bought a hundred year old two family in Greenpoint. I am looking to have the floors redone. Due to furniture color and circumstance I am looking to have the floors redone. My initial summation of the situation was, “I want grey”. Is this a really deviant (uhhh) choice? I have been doing my due diligence, or whatever, on the Internet, and have come to the conclusion that this might be and (unknowingly) unpopular choice. At least on this side of the pond. All the examples that are in line with my desires seem to emanate from the ream of the .uk. I’,m nobodies fool, so I’d prefer to stay away from dollars v. sterling. My question is is there anyone who produces such wood locally? I’m no stickler for the absolute perfection in production. Apparently, the Brits are doing a white ash with some sort of black oil staining. Its beautiful, but I’m not really trying to absorb $20+ a sqft in materials alone. BTW way whats an acceptable rate for labor on such a job? I had one contractor over who quoted me $3000 labor + materials on what is a 750 sqft job. Is this reasonable? Does anyone know of a local shop that could approximate such an aesthetic? I understand with a drop in price comes a drop in quality, but can someone recommend an alternative that is affordable and approaches this “look”?


Comments

  1. Just wanted to point out that a grey oak floor isn’t necessarily stained. During the Arts & Crafts movement there was another common method for greying oak called fuming. The raw but well-seasoned lumber is placed inside an air-tight tent with a very strong solution of ammonia and left for a day/days, or however long it takes to get the right color.

    The ammonia fumes react with the tannic acid in oak to produce a grey color. Stickley was a proponent of fuming oak. The trick is to keep it grey because UV light (over many years) will gradually turn it brown.

  2. you have to be really careful–most light stains (like anything that would give you a pickled white or grey effect) can have strange reactions w/ poly finishes and end up looking yellow or green. This is a specialty finish that requires an experienced pro. But it’s a great look in the end. Check this out–best example of the look that I’ve seen: http://www.marthastewart.com/portal/site/mslo/menuitem.3a0656639de62ad593598e10d373a0a0/?vgnextoid=12a9809dc732f010VgnVCM1000003d370a0aRCRD&vgnextfmt=default&rsc=header_6&autonomy_kw=going+gray

  3. I’ve seen grey stained floors before. I don’t know if it’s unpopular, but I agree with you that it is gorgeous. It’s not the same as pickled or whitewashed as some seem to be saying. My friends who had it done said the color was called “driftwood” which seems to be what it looks like. Have you looked for stain colors like this? Can’t you just sand off whatever typical brown color is on your floors and stain them grey?

  4. White ash is not considered to be a “premium” hardwood. By premium I mean it is inexpensive (less than $2/bf). White ash is harder than red oak and softer than white oak.

    I had a similar color custom made in a water-based stain last week. A water borne stain will open the pores of the wood so that the pigments penetrate the surface. Problems with finish adhering occur when the wood is not stained properly, such as when it is sanded too fine, brushed on heavily, not dried long enough or allowed to remain on the surface of the wood.

    If you take a sample of the color and a piece of the wood to Abbott paint they will make the exact stain for you.

  5. The look above is, i believe, referred to as ‘pickled’. That is almost certainly white oak. Shouldn’t be too outrageous; I believe the look can be achieved with a white stain coat and a rub of a darker stain that’s wiped off before setting.

  6. Are you laying a new floor or just sanding/refinishing the existing one? If the former, check online for prefinished solid plank flooring.

    It looks like a wash stain. I did wainscot in my bathroom that was kinda close to that color and translucency:

    http://images.magpie.com/house/photos/bathroom/bathbuild8.jpg

    I mixed a whitewash stain, which is basically a very thinned paint, with a tube of burnt umber until I got the color I wanted.

    Couple of things to bear in mind about staining floors though, especially if you have dogs or are rough on floors. The finish on a stained floor is never as durable as one which hasn’t been stained. This is because the stain also seals and there’s a never a perfect bonding between the stain and the finish sealer. It’s also more difficult to spot repair a stained floor. With a urethane or Waterlox sealed floor you can screen (“scuff up”) the floor and reapply finish. You can’t do this if there’s a stain.

  7. A few years back, my friends had their floors bleached. I believe it was just regular white oak. Their floors are white, but I suppose you can give it a greyish hue. In any case, my regular floor guy did it for them. You can give him a shout and ask: Desmond, 917-642-2752.

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