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Wallpaper...on the Floor?

100609-floorpaper01.jpgWe've not been shy about our love of wallpaper. We've looked at many lines, we cover a single wall or frame the ones that we love that are too expensive to use in a whole room but we've never thought of this use...

 
 

100609-floorpaper02.jpgPutting wallpaper on the floor? Sounds insane at first but really, is it any different than covering the floor with a large patterned rug? A good coat of polyurethane will protect it. Fun for a hallway, a children's room, the floor of your closet or...


[image: Janelli & Volpi, via Design Buzz]

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Look!, hard flooring, rugs & carpets, inspiration, wallpaper & graphics, wallpaper, unusual uses for wallpaper

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Comments (21)

i wouldn't ruin my floors with this, but i would consider putting it on my closet doors

posted by twelve on October 6th 2009 at 10:03am
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No, it's not the same as a rug!

You have to glue wallpaper, a rug you just lay on the floor with a rugpad.

Imagine all the holes and tears if women walk around with their heels or the nails and paws of your pets?

posted by bitdot on October 6th 2009 at 10:09am
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what an extremely cool idea!!!

posted by honey living on October 6th 2009 at 10:14am
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Am kinda loving this...

posted by I Love Upstate on October 6th 2009 at 10:16am
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bitdot- if you put down enough layers of polyurethane (and the reflection pattern in the photo definitely indicates that a ton of it was used), it will protect the floor from claws and heels. Actually, to be honest, I think this is kind of a brilliant idea to use in a smaller room like a powder room. And if at the end of the day you are sick of it, you can always sand it and cover it with something else. I think I might have to try this out... The Cole and Son Fornasetti line of wallpaper may be perfect for this- creepy yet really chic in the right context. But I would assume you would have to test the paper first to make sure it doesn't do wacky things when the poly dries/cures.

posted by hejiranyc on October 6th 2009 at 10:23am
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I'm seeing this all over the 'net, too, Abby, and was wondering when it would pop up here. I'm willing to bet you could adhere it to a plain 'ol canvas dropcloth, poly it to death, and come out with a spiffy new sort of floorcloth. Floorcloths are hot right now!

posted by bfootnovellista on October 6th 2009 at 10:54am
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Hmmmm....you're giving me ideas. I was about to paint the horrid old linoleum in my pantry (no, it's too old & crappy to restore) and was worried about the rough areas. But this might work, and would be kind of fun. I'd only do it in a really small area.

posted by Charlotte on October 6th 2009 at 11:02am
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I like bfootnovellista's idea of applying the wallpaper to canvas before using the polyurethane. Brilliant!
Seems like a great alternative to painting your own floor cloth....more choice of pattern and color and less time to
achieve desired look.

I love this idea!!!

posted by zoee on October 6th 2009 at 11:05am
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i wonder how thick the polyurethane needs to be before the wallpaper is safe from scratches

posted by loverlee on October 6th 2009 at 11:26am
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Very cool idea. I imagine someone in the future wanting to remove it would curse you, but that is their problem.

posted by aj on October 6th 2009 at 11:35am
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bfootnovellista--what would you use to stick the wallpaper to the canvas?

posted by FantasticMrFaux on October 6th 2009 at 11:48am
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I was already planning on putting down plywood and painting my bedroom floor anyway. Doing wallpaper instead of painting a pattern using a stencil, then using a ton of poly, would actually cut the project time considerably.
I'm assuming if someone could do this in a retail situation it can be done in my little bedroom that doesn't get half as much traffic.

posted by dallas10086 on October 6th 2009 at 11:48am
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Cringe-Worthy.

posted by bepsf on October 6th 2009 at 12:06pm
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Cool idea, terrible execution. The above picture is hideous.

posted by mlleErica on October 6th 2009 at 12:10pm
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About 20 years ago people thought linoleum was brilliant too and look how that worked out. Have you ever tried to make linoleum look good after it starts peeling up at the corners and edges? Not to mention getting the scuffs off and cleaning the dirt that seems to actually be absorbed by the material?

I give this a big 'thumbs down' in an effort to save our children from our bad design ideas.

posted by bether on October 6th 2009 at 12:30pm
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agreed, mlleErica...the idea is cool, but the wallpapered floor in the picture is horrible. A more modern design might have sold me though...

posted by abc123 on October 6th 2009 at 12:34pm
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Oh how wonderful. Finally, one of the best lines in Flanders and Swann's Design for Living has come true! (from At the Drop of the Hat, released 1957, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flanders_and_Swann#Songs_on_At_the_Drop_of_a_Hat ). Wish I could find a performance on Youtube, but here, at any rate, are the lyrics. :)

Flanders: Now this song, "Design for Living":

Flanders: When we started making money,
Swann: When we started making friends,
Both: We found a home as soon as we were able to.

Flanders: We bought this bijou residence for about a thousand more,
Than the house our little house was once the stable to.

Swann: With charm...
Flanders: Colour values...
Swann: Wit...
Flanders: And structural alteration,
Both: Now designed for graceful living,
It has quite a reputation.

We're terribly House and Garden,
At number seven-B.
We live in a most amusing muse,
Ever so very contemporary.

We're terribly House and Garden,
The money that one spends.
To make a place that won't disgrace,
Our House and Garden friends.

We've planned an uninhibited interior decor,

Swann: Curtains made of straw...
Flanders: We've wallpapered the floor...
Both: We don't know if we like it, but at least we can be sure,
There's no place like Home Sweet Home.

It's fearfully Maison Jardin,
At number seven-B.
We've rediscovered the chandelier,
Tres tres very contemporary.

We're terribly House and Garden,
Now at last we've got the chance.

Swann: The garden's full of furniture...
Flanders: And the house is full of plants!

Both: It doesn't make for comfort,
But it simply has to be.
'Cause we're ever so terribly up-to-date,
Contemp-or-ar-or-y!

Flanders: Have you a home that cries out to your every visitor,
"Here lives someone who is exciting to know"?

No?

Well, why not... collect those little metal bottle-tops, and nail them upside-down to the floor? This will give the sensation... of walking... on little metal bottle-tops turned upside-down.

Why not... get hold of an ordinary Northumbrian spokeshaver's coracle? Paint it in contrasting stripes of, say, telephone black and white white, and hang it up in the hall for a guitar tidy for parties.

Why not... drop in one evening for a mess of pottage? Our speciality, just aubergine and carnation petals. With a six-shilling bottle of Mielle du Pap, a feast fit for a king.

I'm delirious about our new cooker fitment with the eye-level grille. This means that without my having to bend down, the hot fat can squirt straight into my eyes!

Both: We're frightfully House and Garden,
At number seven-B,
The walls are patterned with shrunken heads,
Ever so very contemporary.

Swann: Our boudoir on the open plan has been a huge success...
Flanders: Though everywhere's so open, there's nowhere safe to dress!

Both: With little screens, and bottle lamps,
And motifs here and there.
Swann: Mobiles in the air...
Flanders: Ivy everywhere!
Both: You mustn't be surprised to meet a cactus on the stair,
But we call it Home Sweet Home.

We're terribly House and Garden,
As I think we've said before.
But though seven-B is madly gay,
It wouldn't do for every day,
We actually live in seven-A,
In the house next door!

posted by Juliet on October 6th 2009 at 1:11pm
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Posted by Juliet... "from At the Drop of the Hat, released 1957."

From Wikipedia... "...in the 1950s, linoleum was considered to be an excellent, inexpensive material for high use areas."


What’s up with people in the mid-1900’s wanting to use “inexpensive” (ie: cheep) flooring? If you’re going to put cheep flooring down how about just paint the floor?

posted by bether on October 6th 2009 at 1:31pm
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No, no, a thousand times NO.

posted by marchhare on October 6th 2009 at 1:47pm
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No thanks!

posted by mei-ling on October 6th 2009 at 4:19pm
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Can someone tell me where to get the wallpaper they've used on the floor in the first image - that black with pink roses is gorgeous and jsut what i'm looking for (not for the floor though!!!)

posted by Violetsrose on October 7th 2009 at 6:58am
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