Friday, June 1, 2012

WHAT TO EXPECT ON INSTALLATION DAY

By
Ben Lasslett
   When you have an appointment for our professional installers to come to your home and begin putting in your new floor, you may be a little uneasy. This is not uncommon; most people feel some reluctance when strangers are coming into their home. At Floors To Go we want to remove all forms of uneasiness before our installers ever cross your threshold.


   First of all we want to assure you of the fact that our installers work for us and we know them all personally. If we would not trust someone in our own home we would not send them to yours. All of our crews are very professional and will take the very best care of your home that you hold dear to you and your family.


   The first thing you can expect is for our installers to arrive promptly between the hours of nine and ten AM. When our installer enters the home he will look over the job and see where the best place to start and once that is decided he will start moving furniture. If there is not a place that all the furniture can be moved to he will empty one room at a time. Once the furniture is carefully removed from the room he will begin to take up the old flooring. This includes hauling it off for you to avoid any unsightliness to the outside of your home.


   You guessed it; the next step is installing your new flooring. It will be put down along with any needed trim work. Once your flooring is professionally installed, all furniture will be replaced as it was and you can carry right on with your life.


   At Floors To Go our goal is to give you the most professional looking job you can get at the speed you want it done in. We know it is not fun having your home in disarray, but we promise we will make as easy for you as possible and have you going again in no time.


   Just to give you even more confidence in shopping with us you will also receive a lifetime installation warranty on anything we install for you. You shouldn't have a problem but rest assured that if you do it will be taken care of. Come to Floors To Go today and shop with confidence!

CARPET AND VINYL SEAMS

Chuck Allen, Floors To Go Sales Professional

In an ideal flooring world every room would be either 12 or 15 feet wide, where every installation would be seamless and easy to install. Instead we live in a world where rooms come in all shapes and sizes. Just when you think you have seen them all you walk into a house or business and see something new. I have measured rooms that are in the shapes of triangles, circles, trapezoids and shapes that have no names. The idea people want their homes to be different from their neighbors has contributed to this trend. While making odd shaped and sized rooms makes your house unique it also adds a challenge. Considering that the majority of roll goods flooring such as carpet and sheet vinyl comes in 12 foot. Some carpet comes in 15 foot goods and some vinyl in 13’2” goods. This being the case like it or not there will be seams.

Take a look around your room almost every item that is made of fabric has seams, your shirt, your couch, your curtains. Some seams are more noticeable than others and this is due to how they were sewn, type of material and placement. So the same holds true for flooring. Our professional installers strive to do the best they can to make that seam invisible but this is not always possible. Let’s take a look at what helps to hide that seam.

The seaming process of carpet is done by cutting the edges of the carpet to match and then using a carpet seam iron and seam tape to adhere the carpet together. This process has taken the place of the old hand sewn seams. For vinyl again the edges are cut to match, adhesive applied to the back side and a seam sealer used on the top to complete the seam. While this sounds very simplistic that is the basis of each seam.

The material you chose will have a huge factor on if seams are visible or not. If you chose a thick plush or frieze style carpet the seams will be much easier to hide and a lot less visible due to the fibers being able to mesh and blend together to hide the seam. Short knap or loop style carpets such as berber, commercial or an economy grade plush will be very difficult to hide seams in. This is due to the lack of fibers standing up to mesh together and camouflage the seam. For vinyl if you chose a style with no pattern line, such as grout lines or wood grains, it is almost certain that you will see this seam. The key for vinyls is hiding the seam in a pattern line and this will help but does not always promise an invisible seam.

Placement is a key factor in making that pesky seam disappear. When we look at seam placement we look at several things. Furniture placement, if we can hide the seam under a bed, couch or other piece of large furniture it helps camouflage it in a room. The whole out of sight out of mind idea works here. Another thing we look for is traffic patterns; we do not want to place a seam across a major foot traffic area unless there is no other way to do so. Doing so could cause unnecessary wear and cause the seam to show up. One other consideration is lighting. Sometimes a seam will be invisible at one point of the day but show up at a different time due to either the sun highlighting it or shadowing it. Putting a seam in direct sunlight will often times expose it at certain times of the day.

Seams are a fact of life in almost all fabrics. We at Floors To Go try our best to make sure you are aware of when and where seams will be necessary for your floor installation. Hopefully this will give you the home owner an idea why you may see those seams and what we do to try and prevent that from happening. If you have any questions please feel free to ask your Floors To Go sales professionals that’s what we are here for.