If your design concept demands a different look for flooring, we have added some out-of-the-ordinary - and often overlooked - timber species to our collection. These floors are perfect for minimal contemporary interiors.
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Journal
For Shoreditch Design Triangle 2023, we invited designers to transform surplus timber offcuts from our flooring installations into unique objects, revealing the hidden beauty and creative potential of what’s often seen as waste.
Rustic wood floors are having a moment - and we’re all for it. In flooring, “rustic” means timber with knots, irregular grain, and colour variation. In other words, everything that makes wood feel natural, characterful, and real.
At WOW!house 2023, interior designer Christian Bense created a refined bedroom suite in collaboration with Bernie de Le Cuona—pairing rich fabrics with bespoke pieces for an effortlessly chic, eclectic space.
Mamedovaite transformed a modest former coach house into a self-contained residence, gutting, extending, and reconfiguring the space with thoughtful details, including band-sawn oak flooring, that feel true to the building’s character.
When Mata Architects' Dan Marks’ family outgrew their mid-terrace London house, they decided to refurbish, reconfigure and add a generous rear extension. Raw, earthy colours and materials, including a light, textured oak floor, are used throughout.
A Notting Hill townhouse has been restored by Michaelis Boyd and Olivia Williams from small flats back to a family home, blending Victorian grandeur with calm, contemporary living, and a rather special chevron floor.
Our West London showroom in Marylebone, 61 Paddington Street W1U 4JD, displays an extensive range of wide-plank engineered oak flooring alongside luxury parquet flooring with many bespoke options.
In this Brockley kitchen extension by Selencky Parsons, a Victorian terrace was transformed into a striking modern home, with Landmark Standon herringbone and Versailles parquet defining distinct zones across kitchen, dining, and living spaces.
The owners of a converted North London pub wanted a floor with character for their eclectic interior and chose our Tate Citadel oak, with its horizontal bandsaw marks and mixed-width planks.









