What Is Tannin Pull and Why Does It Happen on White Oak? You’ve just completed a white oak floor with a water‑based finish. A week later the homeowner calls—the floor has developed an ugly yellow‑bro...
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White Oak 90 Brushed Solid Wood Flooring, featuring a gloss level of 15-20°, offers a subtle matte finish that enhances the wood's natural texture and grain. The brushed surface treatment adds depth and character, making it good for creating a sophisticated, rustic look in any space. With its 90mm width, this flooring is ideal for both residential and commercial applications, such as living rooms, kitchens, and hallways. The durable White Oak ensures long-lasting performance, while the low gloss finish provides a refined, understated appearance. This flooring is a good choice for those seeking a balance of elegance, durability, and easy maintenance.
Made of natural wood and does not contain any harmful substances such as formaldehyde, which is harmless to human health.
Each floor is unique, adding natural beauty and warmth to the home, and can be matched with various decoration styles.
Solid flooring provides a comfortable feel and thermal insulation performance, and its good elasticity makes it comfortable to walk.
Solid wood floors can last a long time and are relatively easy to maintain, requiring only regular cleaning and waxing.
Wood can be sawed, planed, cut, diced, and even nailed. So wood flooring has a reprocessability better than other materials.
Wooden floors have a sound-absorbing effect, which can reduce the noise generated by walking and objects falling, and provide a quieter living environment.
What Is Tannin Pull and Why Does It Happen on White Oak? You’ve just completed a white oak floor with a water‑based finish. A week later the homeowner calls—the floor has developed an ugly yellow‑bro...
READ MOREWhy Subfloor Matters for Engineered Hardwood A buckled engineered floor rarely starts with the planks themselves. It almost always traces back to the subfloor—the layer you stand on before the finish...
READ MOREMost flooring failures trace back to one thing: the wrong product in the wrong environment. A floor that looks perfect in the showroom starts gapping in winter, cupping near the bathroom, or creaking...
READ MOREMost first-time importers don't fail because they chose the wrong wood species or miscalculated freight costs. They fail because they skipped a step — or didn't know the step existed. Sourcing wood f...
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