alfa
Member
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2011
- Messages
- 53
Looking for advice re. making hardwood flooring for a ~300 sq foot space in my house. There is a manufacturer from Austria (Mafi - http://www.mafi.co.at/) which makes very unique, elegant flooring with a modern twist. Problem is customer service/getting someone to pick up at their only US location is impossible.
So, I've been batting around the idea of making it myself. Clearly a large undertaking but does allow for artistic freedom to make something pretty gnarly.
The look would be on the distressed end of the spectrum with wider planks and natural/created defects filled with contrasting colored epoxy. The space abuts white/cream toned marble so was considering either matching with a lighter wood and using contrasting colored epoxy to fill defects vs. darker wood with lighter colored epoxy vs. wood chemically greyed with darker colored epoxy. Mafi makes this and basically the look I want to reproduce.
Was wondering if anyone had any experience with creating tongue and groove flooring?
Any experience created distressed wood, specifically creating veining in wood? Without an automated apparatus to create long thing crevice, probably need to do it by hand with a modified spoke shave which begs the question which wood would be soft enough to work, but hard enough to last (anticipate lite traffic) - poplar?
What was the finishing schedule?
Any experiences using muriatic acid to grey wood?
Conflicted on how to approach the filling of defects (natural or created) with colored epoxy:
Approach #1 - (1) create defects, (2) fill with colored epoxy, (3) remove excess, (4) chemically distress.... would that not affect the filled epoxy spaces if they are not masked? Conversely, Approach #2 - (1) distress/age wood to create desired patina, (2) fill with colored epoxy....how would one remove the excess epoxy without affecting the created patina - probably with a hand plane?
Any thoughts, comments or direction are greatly appreciated, Alfa
So, I've been batting around the idea of making it myself. Clearly a large undertaking but does allow for artistic freedom to make something pretty gnarly.
The look would be on the distressed end of the spectrum with wider planks and natural/created defects filled with contrasting colored epoxy. The space abuts white/cream toned marble so was considering either matching with a lighter wood and using contrasting colored epoxy to fill defects vs. darker wood with lighter colored epoxy vs. wood chemically greyed with darker colored epoxy. Mafi makes this and basically the look I want to reproduce.
Was wondering if anyone had any experience with creating tongue and groove flooring?
Any experience created distressed wood, specifically creating veining in wood? Without an automated apparatus to create long thing crevice, probably need to do it by hand with a modified spoke shave which begs the question which wood would be soft enough to work, but hard enough to last (anticipate lite traffic) - poplar?
What was the finishing schedule?
Any experiences using muriatic acid to grey wood?
Conflicted on how to approach the filling of defects (natural or created) with colored epoxy:
Approach #1 - (1) create defects, (2) fill with colored epoxy, (3) remove excess, (4) chemically distress.... would that not affect the filled epoxy spaces if they are not masked? Conversely, Approach #2 - (1) distress/age wood to create desired patina, (2) fill with colored epoxy....how would one remove the excess epoxy without affecting the created patina - probably with a hand plane?
Any thoughts, comments or direction are greatly appreciated, Alfa