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Is Quasar floor finish slip resistant?
by Answerbag Staff on June 14th, 2010
| 1 person likes this
Can you put urethane wood floor finish on tile floors?
by Answerbag Staff on June 8th, 2010
| 1 person likes this
Can cork tile be painted?
by Answerbag Staff on May 7th, 2010
| 1 person likes this
We want wooden flooring in living room & ceramic in kitchen. will it look good as r connected.
by Ophelia19 on August 4th, 2010
| 1 person likes this
How do you lay tile diagonally, starting from a wall as appose to the center.
by skill3d on December 4th, 2010
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You're reading Which type of flooring would you prefer: wooden or hard flooring?
Comments
You mean Eco friendly??? :-)
by Rony on October 28th, 2009
No, I mean 'user' friendly. It is soft and 'gives' when you walk on it; warm, not cold; it looks nice and natural -- and so on. Unlike hard flooring.
by Kat on October 28th, 2009
Sure it does Kat, But has it striked ya of the trees felled for that sake, just curious to know, thanks
by Rony on October 28th, 2009
It sure has. But how friendly has hard flooring been to the environment? Raping the land of the stone or whatever they use, using heavy machinery running on petrol or diesel or electricty or whatever to drill for it; more machinery pollution to make the tile/item, whatever; chemicals to make them; also harmful for enviro. It could be much of a muchness? I suppose we should go back to basics and live on sand floors, but it wouldn't be practical. People in SA a few hundred years ago used to actually make hard, shiny, effective flooring out of cow dung. Quite a process but it worked well. Unfortunately, civilisation brings with it pollution of the planet. Sad.
by Kat on October 28th, 2009
You always like this? Never give up types! Keep it up!
A thing or two I pick up from you today, Thanks.
by Rony on October 28th, 2009
Thank you, Rony. I can be a bit of a pain in the bum.
by Kat on October 29th, 2009
I keep my tiger balm always handy :-)
by Rony on October 29th, 2009
Hehe Rony; that would just make it worse!!
by Kat on October 30th, 2009
ha hao ha Kat, I was coming from the fact that you mentioned "bum" not the "hole (arse)"
Tiger balm helps the bum but if you implied the hole, then God save me if I use Tiger balm.
by Rony on October 30th, 2009
Why would you use Tiger Balm on the bum? I thought it was for sore muscles, joints, etc. [My, we've moved a long way away from "friendly wooden floors"]
by Kat on October 31st, 2009
We sure have moved away, but then thats the part of AB i like...to answer your comment on why would one use Tiger balm on the bum? The bum or buttocks are formed by the masses of the gluteal "muscles" or 'glutes' (the gluteus maximus "muscle").
by Rony on November 1st, 2009
Okay.
by Kat on November 2nd, 2009