Well, after a seemingly endless period of preparation, last week was
moving day. After 20 years in the same location, T&G Flooring moved
operations and warehouses to one location - and our showroom to an
entirely different location (788 W. 8th Avenue Denver, CO 80204). While
we're excited about the new digs, I have to say that if I ever consider
moving a business again, I hope all of you will collectively put me out
of my would-be misery before I act on that impulse.
One of the
fun parts of the moving drill was going through racks of old materials
left by the former owners. It was a bit of a time trip though the world
of hardwood flooring, kinda like finding Dad's ancient madras sport
coat. You see, we had boxes and boxes of remnants from prior projects.
Not sure what we were ever going to do with a 1/2 box of orange
bamboo... but someone somewhere figured we might need it some day.
So
what was trendy back sometime ago? We had lots of solid bamboo (again,
lots of 1/2 boxes of solid bamboo). We haven't sold solid bamboo in
more than 4 years now. We have industrial maple parquet (used to be big
in school gymnasiums). These 1" x 6 inch sticks form a block about 6
inches square, all loosely joined and ready for glue down. The blocks
are installed one by one in alternating direction. It's a great visual
look - but again, something we haven't done in more than 7 years. We
have an awful lot of unfinished herring bone (walnut, oak) - which is
beautiful, but pattern projects are few and far between these days as
people tend to the classic straight lay projects. We have glossy
prefinished woods - something we almost never sell these days - as
glossy floor products are not in vogue
.
Three things to conclude from this exercise:
1.
Wood flooring, like all home design disciplines, its subject to fads.
We focus on the classics, but there will always be changes in style.
2.
If you're looking for a real deal, we do have some remnants of classic
products that could be combined for a very budget friendly killer
multi-species floor. Just an idea...
3. If you'd like to take
your very own time trip down hardwood flooring design lane, stop by the
local Denver Habitat for Humanity outlet store. Many of the items that we had
that were realistically usable ended up there. Less in the dumpster =
better for us all. Think of Habitat next time you have excess
inventory. These gracious folks do great work with things you and I may
no longer value.
Now... back to setting up the showroom (sigh)...
An open discussion about small business, flooring, and home improvement. A place to debunk misconceptions and share design ideas!
11/05/2012
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