Hardwood vs Porcelain Tile
Hardwood wins living areas for warmth and $3–8 per sq ft refinishing; porcelain tile wins kitchens and entries for water resistance. Decision rules inside.
Hardwood wins living areas for warmth and $3–8 per sq ft refinishing; porcelain tile wins kitchens and entries for water resistance. Decision rules inside.
Glue-down LVP gives Georgia slab homes a firm, anchored floor; floating wins on flexibility and repairs. Moisture and flatness checks decide the method.
Bullnose nosing gives stairs a rounded, traditional edge and more install tolerance; flush nosing gives a tight modern line. How to choose for LVP or hardwood.
White oak (Janka 1360) suits kitchens, open plans, and light stains; red oak (1290) wins for matching existing floors and warm traditional rooms.
Concrete changes the rules under LVP. On a Georgia slab, the choice between an attached pad and a separate underlayment depends on moisture, flatness, and the floor’s own instructions. Many homes in Alpharetta and Milton sit on slab foundations, so we can’t judge the floor by the top layer alone. A plank can look perfect … Read more
A floor can look perfect in a showroom and feel wrong after one week of family life. In Alpharetta homes, the real test comes from chairs sliding, pets running, spills sitting, and daily foot traffic that never seems to stop. When we compare SPC vs WPC vinyl for local families, we focus on what happens … Read more
A floor can make a room feel settled or slightly off, and plank width often decides which way it goes. In many Alpharetta homes, families focus on color first, yet the board width shapes the room just as much. When we choose the best hardwood plank width, we are choosing scale, rhythm, and daily function. … Read more
We rarely think about the bathroom floor until it turns one wet step into a hard fall. For older adults, that risk grows fast because water, soap, smooth finishes, and tight spaces all work against stable footing. The right slip-resistant bathroom floor tile lowers risk without making the room look clinical. When we help homeowners … Read more
A sunroom can feel calm in the morning and harsh by late afternoon. In Alpharetta, those swings put far more stress on a floor than most indoor spaces. When we choose sunroom flooring in Alpharetta, we look past color first. The best floor has to stay stable through heat, sunlight, humidity, and cool winter mornings, … Read more
A home office floor has to do more than look good. For home office flooring in Alpharetta, the right choice must hold up under chair wheels, daily traffic, pets, and Georgia humidity. We see the same pattern in many work-from-home homes. The office becomes one of the busiest rooms, yet it still needs to feel … Read more
The first surface you touch when you come home creates a lasting first impression, but the front entryway flooring also does the hardest work in the house. In Alpharetta, these areas have to withstand wet shoes, red clay, grit, pet nails, and the sharp swings in humidity that define our local climate. We often see … Read more
When families ask us about wire-brushed vs smooth hardwood, they usually want the same answer: which floor will still look good after daily life gets to it. Showroom beauty matters, but so do toy wheels, pet nails, spills, and heavy foot traffic. We have seen beautiful floors age well, and we have seen the wrong … Read more
Flooring changes how a home feels before it changes how it looks. When we carry uniform flooring through the main living areas, the house often feels larger, calmer, and easier to read. Still, opting for the same flooring throughout the house is not always the smartest choice. We usually get the best result when we … Read more
A mudroom floor takes abuse before the rest of the house even wakes up. In Alpharetta homes, we see wet cleats, muddy paws, dripping backpacks, and red clay hit that one spot every day. That is why the best choice for mudroom flooring Alpharetta is rarely the most delicate or the most dramatic. It is … Read more
A kitchen remodel can go off track before the first cabinet lands. When we hear homeowners ask about cabinets or flooring first in a kitchen renovation, our answer is simple: the floor type decides the order. Floating floors usually go in after base cabinets. Tile, nail-down hardwood, and many glue-down products often go in first. … Read more
In an open floor plan, the kitchen floor does not stay in the kitchen. It runs through your main sightlines, carries the heaviest traffic, and has to look right beside the living room, dining area, and often the stairs. That is why kitchen flooring in Alpharetta, GA homes needs more than a pretty sample board. … Read more
A laundry room can punish the wrong floor faster than almost any other space in the house. One slow hose leak, one detergent spill, or one washer that vibrates too hard, and a pretty floor can start to fail. That is why laundry room flooring in Alpharetta homes should be chosen for moisture first, style … Read more
Can you install tile over existing hardwood floors? Sometimes, yes, but only when the wood below behaves like a stable base, not a moving finish floor. That difference decides whether the job lasts or fails early. When homeowners ask us about tile over hardwood, we start with structure, not color. A floor that flexes, swells, … Read more
A kitchen can look new and still work old. In Alpharetta homes, the biggest decision often comes down to cabinet refacing vs replacing, because cabinets drive the budget, the timeline, and the room’s daily function. We see many homeowners torn between saving solid cabinet boxes and starting fresh. The right choice depends on box condition, … Read more
A small bathroom can feel tighter than it is when the shower walls are broken up by too many lines. In most cases, the best shower wall tile size is not the smallest tile on the shelf. We usually get the best result from tiles that calm the eye, reduce grout joints, and fit the … Read more
Upstairs flooring exposes weak choices fast. If boards gap, cup, or echo underfoot, we notice it every day. In Alpharetta homes, solid vs engineered hardwood is not a style-only debate. It is a practical choice about humidity, noise, stairs, and how long we want the floor to serve us well. For most second-floor rooms, engineered … Read more
Cabinet choice shapes more than the look of a remodel. It affects budget, storage, daily use, and how long the room holds up. When we compare cabinet options for kitchens and bathrooms, the first big choice is usually stock, semi-custom, or custom. After that, door style, material, and finish decide how the space feels. Many … Read more