I was thinking some transparent filler maybe, and grinding/polishing it down? There’s some varnish on the wood anyway.

  • janNatan@lemmy.ml
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    7 hours ago

    You sure that’s hard wood? You sure it’s not laminate designed to look like hard wood?

    Step one to fixing it would be actually finding out what it is.

        • RubberElectrons@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          Hell no, it looks terrible so quickly. The patterns to make it look like “wood” or whatever are at most a millimeter deep, so enough usage and suddenly you have a worn out blank spot in your giant piece of shit plastic floor.

          It outgasses forever, you’re funding the fossil fuel industry, it looks and feels like shit, and you’ll throw it out in 5-10yrs.

          Tldr, fuck linoleum, it is inferior in all but one metric: water resistance.

          • sping@lemmy.sdf.org
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            5 hours ago

            What? One of linoleum’s benefits is not off gassing and not being made from fossil fuels. Are you thinking of vinyl?

            • RubberElectrons@lemmy.world
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              3 hours ago

              I’ve heard & seen vinyl and linoleum used interchangeably over a lifetime, and I don’t believe the original recipe is still manufactured so far as I have seen.

              Even if it is still being manufactured, the vast majority of people talking about linoleum seem to mean vinyl. I’m going with the average vernacular, and still stand by all my original points re: vinyl.

              • sping@lemmy.sdf.org
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                27 minutes ago

                Pretty bizarre if people do this. I’ve never heard it to mean anything but linoleum.

                But a lot of people in the US use the word “turf” to specify not turf (i.e. artificial turf), so there’s no reason for words to mean things.

            • RubberElectrons@lemmy.world
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              6 hours ago

              I haven’t seen the original form of linoleum made it installed anywhere on any jobsite I’ve ever worked.

              I realize the term has been co-opted by the plastics industry, but if you’re specifying the original linseed oil recipe from the 1870s, you need to specify that.

              Vinyl and linoleum have been interchangeable terms in modern parlance for several lifetimes at this point.

              • guy@piefed.social
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                5 hours ago

                Depends on the country I suppose Vinyl is much softer than linoleum, which is why linoleum is used everywhere in public buildings like schools and hospitals etc. Vinyl is used in your bedroom