shaw flooring - 78 items found View more items
Does anyone have experience with Shaw hardwood flooring versus Bruce hardwood flooring?
Jul 20, 2007 by SmartestOne | Posted in Decorating & Remodeling
I am trying to compare differences between two similar hardwood floors (Bruce and Shaw). Does anyone have any experience or reccomendation between the two (look, wear, etc)?
Shaw is certainly a higher quality product. We carry it in our store and have never had a complaint. There are a wide variety of styles and price ranges. Find out more at www.shawfloors.com. One thing you will notice with a hard surface is the hollow sound in the room. Solve that by adding area or throw rugs.
sunrisecitycarpets | Jul 20, 2007
Has anyone had Shaw laminate flooring installed & what do you think of it? Any problems with it?
Jul 22, 2006 by JOEANN Z | Posted in Decorating & Remodeling
I sell Shaw laminate and have sold Mannington and Mohawk. The Shaw products are just as good as any other and tend to be a little cheaper. I have had no quality issues. With the others; I have had supply issues. Mannington is probably the best quality but also the most expensive. Good luck
HSFLOORING | Jul 25, 2006
Does anyone know a store in central/south Jersey that sells Shaw laminate flooring?
Mar 22, 2008 by J.O' Let's Go Devils!!! | Posted in Decorating & Remodeling
Since I don't live in that area I don't know of one but you can find out by going to google & entering (Shaw laminate flooring.)
foxi | Mar 22, 2008
Has anyone used a Swiffer Wet Jet on laminate flooring?
Mar 01, 2009 by larandpol | Posted in Cleaning & Laundry
Please don't because it leaves a residue that you can't get off. I've tried everything I can think of. If anyone has any suggestions please post it ,even called the Shaw Flooring Co. and they didn't know.
Maybe it is what you cleaned with before that is causing the problem
I use SWJ for wood floors and the floor is shiny as new.
Alexa | Mar 01, 2009
What would you do about laminate flooring in two adjoining rooms if you decide to take the wall down?
Jun 07, 2006 by elizabeth | Posted in Do It Yourself (DIY)
We have a small bedroom beside the living room.that we don't need.Would like to enlarge by knocking out wall(no problem,not load bearing) problem is we have put down laminate flooring.Would we have to take the flooring up and redo it or work pieces into the gap that will be in the floor separtating the two room.It is the shaw swiftlock flooring
It depends whether the flooring is laid so that it runs parallel or at angles to the wall you will be removing.
If it is parallel, you can probably pull up any remaining partial pieces and piece in whole pieces of flooring to fill the gap, though you may need to cut the tongue off the last row and fasten it some other way (adhesive or small countersunk nails). You may also need to rip one row to a narrower width to make it fit. But it will likely come out ok if you're careful.
If it is NOT parallel - it butts up to the wall you are removing - then you are going to have to pick up and replace a lot of flooring, otherwise the patch will be visible and unsightly.
Dwasifar K | Jun 07, 2006
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