Shangas
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 6,116
- Location
- Melbourne, Australia
Dreadlocks have been around for centuries.
Or even better --
I've seen hard water etch a door. Seriously eat through the plexi-glass so that the hard water stains are actually dug into the door. However, I think it might be easier to keep clean on "real" glass doors rather than anything coated with plastic. I know fiberglass and acrylic is difficult to clean with hard water, so perhaps it is the plexiglass then that has me hating shower doors? (don't know if all shower doors are plexiglass?) Next house there is no plastic going in any shower. I'd rather have to bathe outside with a bucket in the snow right next to the road in the middle of the day than have plastic anyplace near the shower.
I have granite counters (and a granite bar, granite window sills, granite bookcases, granite fireplace hearth...) not only because it's gorgeous, but I can sanitize it with a blowtorch, if I wanted. It's pretty indestructible. The fireplace is limestone and the floors are travertine. Can you tell I love natural stone?
Don't need a microwave oven, either, do you?
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/24/garden/24granite.html
I would never in a million years have taken you for a "stoner", Mr. Hawk.
I've never seen plexiglass shower doors, mine have always been glass, so perhaps that's exacerbating your problems. If that were my choice, I think I'd take the bucket too.
Forgive my ignorance but what is new American cuisine?
the risks associated with plastic (linoleum or Formica) counter tops. Not to mention, you can turn my counter tips into my tombstone when the time comes.
Was gently kidding you there, OM.
Linoleum, by the way, is not a synthetic plastic. It is composed of a resin (linseed oil boiled with a siccative), a filler (ground cork), and a backing ( sturdy, tightly woven jute). The resin and filler are calandered together and then applied to the jute backing under great pressure.
True linoleum is, but since the 1930's, "linoleum" is PVC. It's rare to see real Linoleum.
True linoleum is, but since the 1930's, "linoleum" is PVC. It's rare to see real Linoleum.
And I still have the 70's design.No. Linoleum is Linoleum. Vinyl is vinyl. "Vinyl Linoleum" is rather akin to "Edison Victrola" or "Scott Kleenex", is it not?
Note that vinyl flooring was only introduced to the market in the post-war period, and did not dominate the market until the 1960's.
No. Linoleum is Linoleum. Vinyl is vinyl. "Vinyl Linoleum" is rather akin to "Edison Victrola" or "Scott Kleenex", is it not?
Note that vinyl flooring was only introduced to the market in the post-war period, and did not dominate the market until the 1960's.
I'll be glad when vinyl floors become obsolete. I have vinyl on my bathroom floor, where it gets direct sunlight from a window, and what was once white is now a dismal shade of yellow in the spot where the sun hits. Asphalt never did that.
Our first floor is all stone tile or wood flooring. It's a 113 year-old Victorian. Second floor is carpeted. Only linoleum is in the bathrooms. EarlWhich is why every square inch of my kitchen and bathrooms is covered in natural travertine stone. The rest of the house is covered in real wood. I don't have a stich of carpet, nor a sliver of wallpaper, anywhere in my house, and it'll be a cold day in hell before I ever do again.
Growing up, our house was wall to wall "terrazzo". I use that term liberally, as the floor was terrazzo in the academic sense of having been poured in place, but was essentially just polished concrete. It wasn't exactly "decorative".