Dear Alice | Interior Design

Overlooked Design Details: Front Doors & Flooring

34 min
Apr 16, 2026about 1 month ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Dear Alice hosts discuss overlooked exterior and interior design details that significantly impact home aesthetics and value. The episode covers window grids, front door systems with sidelights and transoms, entryway tile flooring, and hardwood floor direction planning, emphasizing how thoughtful design details create homes that feel expensive and well-built rather than relying on excessive material combinations.

Insights
  • Limiting exterior finishes to 1-3 materials applied across the entire home perimeter creates a more expensive appearance than using multiple finishes only on the front facade
  • Window grids are essential architectural details that enhance residential character without significantly blocking views, yet many builders omit them to reduce costs
  • Front door systems should be integrated units (door, sidelights, transom) delivered as one piece rather than constructed from separate wall components
  • Entryway tile with borders creates a signature design moment that sets the tone for the entire home and lasts longer than hardwood in high-traffic areas
  • Flooring direction planning requires visual floor schedules and strategic use of borders and patterns to create intentional transitions between rooms
Trends
Builders increasingly omitting window grids from residential designs to reduce costs, creating commercial-looking exteriorsTrend of applying exterior finishes only to home facades while using different materials on sides and back, creating disjointed appearanceGrowing use of fake sidelights (windows framed into walls separate from door systems) instead of integrated door systemsShift toward minimalist glazing without grids in contemporary homes, despite residential preference for gridded windowsIncreased focus on entryway tile as signature design element differentiating custom homes from builder-spec homesRising awareness among homeowners of flooring direction impact on spatial perception and design cohesionEmphasis on design documentation (flooring schedules, tile drawings) to prevent installation surprises and ensure design intentGrowing preference for natural stone tile in entryways over hardwood for durability and design statement
Topics
Exterior Material Selection and CoordinationWindow Grid Design and Architectural StyleFront Door Systems and SidelightsTransom WindowsArt Glass and Textured Glass DetailsEntryway Tile Flooring PatternsTile Border DesignHardwood Floor Direction PlanningHerringbone Flooring PatternsFloor Thresholds and TransitionsFlooring Schedules and DocumentationBuilder Specifications vs. Custom DesignArchitectural Communication and Design IntentHardware Selection for DoorsVestibule Design
Companies
Alice Lane Interiors (ALID)
Interior design firm hosting the podcast and showcasing their project examples throughout the episode
People
Suzanne Hall
Co-host discussing overlooked design details and sharing project examples from her firm's work
Corey
Co-host discussing exterior finishes, front doors, and flooring direction planning with expertise from door business ...
Rachel Parcell
Featured in entryway tile flooring example with traditional design aesthetic and European-inspired floor patterns
Karen
Submitted listener question about hardwood flooring direction decisions in adjacent rooms and upstairs layouts
Quotes
"You can't use that many finishes and that many direction changes on the face of your house. It's too much. You want to create a monolith of one solid looking thing."
Suzanne HallEarly in episode
"The house looks like home. It looks like that picture in your mind of what home looks like. And when someone's spending the most money they're ever going to spend in their entire life, they want it to feel like home."
CoreyWindow grids discussion
"If you think it in your head and you're like, should I say this? Just say it. Get it out on the table. Because I think sometimes as humans we're like, should I, oh they're probably thinking about it. If you have that thought, honestly, most of the time, the other person was not thinking about it."
CoreyFront door section
"The tile floor in the entryways has become a signature of all of our work at ALID. We don't use the same pattern, but we always take a moment to do some sort of beautiful natural stone using variations of multiple stones."
Suzanne HallEntryway flooring section
"If you're going to be doing a pattern like that, you can't run that herringbone all the way to the wall. You've got to set that off with a double border. It's just going to be so handsome and give you really nice termination points."
CoreyFlooring patterns discussion
Full Transcript
Up next is Bread Flare and his new band. Oh my god, I'm back again. On that vacation, oh everybody spin. Gonna bring new games, gonna show you now. New game party, find new games. Dropping hits every week, find the new slots. On that vacation tonight. 18 plus be gambler wear total. That's right. Hello everyone, welcome to Dear Alice. Today we are starting a new series. This was a series that Suzanne Hall was something that just gets her goat on every project that we're doing is these little overlooked design details. And we're constantly adding them into the projects that we're doing. And we thought, should we just tell everybody? Should we just give away the keys to the kingdom? Our closest friends. Yes. That's you. So we're doing it. So this new series is called Overlook Design Details. And today we're going to be starting outside. Yeah, just a couple of little things as I've noticed on exteriors. Again, we're interior designers. We're consulting on the exterior finishes, window grids, things like that. But there are sometimes we're brought in a little bit too late, but then we can't correct some of these details that should have been thought about. So we're just going to give you high level exterior on a couple of things that should be always considered, especially if you're embarking on a new build or remodeling, and then we'll get most of the series is just going to be on interior details. And so we're just going to take off little bite sized portions and share it with our friends. Yes. So we'll be hitting window grids, the front door, and we're going to talk about your thresholds and flooring. We've got a question that came in that goes perfectly with questions about flooring directions and hardwood floors and how to lay them. So we're going to be addressing all of that in this episode. Guys, this is going to be such a fun series. I think so too. I'm so excited to be sharing all this information with you, especially if you're embarking on a new build or a remodel, just getting these little details in there just makes it feel like a well built home. Before we jump into today's episode, we want to remind you that we have our free design service available called home furnishing design. Our designers are available to help you find new furniture, get that perfect rug, know what size to get, and so much more. And since the service is free, you can spend your entire budget on furnishing your room. We also have our very best sale going on right now. So if you hurry, you can get in with a designer and get up to 25% off the items you purchase for your room. All you have to do is go to our website, go to the design services tab, fill out the form, and a designer will reach out to you within 24 hours. And we all want to know what not to do. It's probably like a top Google of what not to wear, what not to do in the house. So we're going to be sharing those things that will naturally come up because we've seen them and we don't want you to do it. Yes. Anyway, so what not to do. Exactly. Okay. Just that we're going to start on the exterior. We're going to talk about grids. Wait, so before we get into grids, can I just talk about something that makes me a little bit crazy on it, just an exterior overall finish? It's when people use too many finishes off the exterior of the home, especially when there's a two story above ground home that you're starting to see usually some sort of masonry around the bottom, whether it be brick or rock. Yeah. And then there's some sort of stucco component and then there starts to be siding details and they go ahead and take that siding in different directions. Sometimes it's horizontal, sometimes it's vertical and it's usually both on the all on the face of the house. Everyone's heading double that. And then they're going to throw some shakes on there too. You guys, you've got to just be chic. We cannot do that. You can't use that many finishes and that many direction changes on the face of your house. It's too much. It's too much. You want to create a monolith of one solid looking thing. I do love masonry around the bottom. It, it feels heavy. So using a stone on the base of the house. And then if you're stucco, then you're using stucco up top, or if you're going to get into a shake detail, you've got to use just the same shape, shake detail. We can't be doing all of the different directions and all the different shakes. I totally agree with you. Yeah. 100% because honestly, and I know that this is like a builder's spec idea that they do. They're just like, we're going to add perceived value to this exterior. And so we're going to go ahead and put just the front. It's like the accent wall of the exterior guys. Oh my gosh. Where they put just like a little stick of it and it's not full brick. And we know that because we can see the side sticker. If you are going to embark on, you're finally getting to buy a home. You're building this home. I'd rather have you go all stucco. Honestly, than having a thin little sticker of brick or rock on the front face of that, that I know doesn't continue onto the sides because I can see it's side profile. Yeah. You know, I want you to run your masonry around the entire perimeter of your house. I want it on the percent. If you're using it on the base of your home, I want it on the sides and the back. You're not doing the entire home stone. You're just hitting that base to give it really heavy. Don't just stop on the facade. And that way you can appreciate when you are enjoying your backyard and your side journeys and all those things. Everybody can see the sides of your house when they drive by it. We can all see when you only hit the front with the finish and then stucco the rest of the way around. Yeah. You know who you are. I'm going to say this. I totally agree. It's a worse offender when it's on a smaller spec home because there's just too much going on for such a small, you know, space. Yes. I'm going to say this about myself. This is a, I wish I would have. Yeah. So everybody listen up. When I was building my home, I was told it would be $35,000 extra to just break the entire thing. What I wouldn't give to just take that $35,000 and add it onto my mortgage right now be like 25 bucks a month. Amortize that 35 K over 30 years. Yeah. Hey, extra 25 bucks a month. You wish you had a full break house. Exactly. Yeah. If you're in the process right now, just do it. That's when it's easiest, least expensive. Honestly, come from a remodeling, new build that mortgage right in. Yeah. For sure. Yes. So do it while you can. It's too many exterior finishes and then they look like add-ons, you know, when there's like running like one gable with some, you know, shake on or something. It's like, did they add onto that home that was built last year? It's the weirdest thing to me. This is so good because often homeowners just don't know. They're just like, well, surely if I have more things, it makes it look more fancy. It makes it more, more interesting. There's more perceived value there. But really it is about just a well-built home has one material, not more than like two to three, you know, in the right proportions, but covering the entirety of the house. Yeah. Not just on a plane. I think they're trusting the builder as the expert builders, you know, there's a lot of them out there that are experts in building, but they're not the experts in the design, especially the decision making in the design. Most of the time when that happens, I'm going to say they're paying more attention to budget than they are to the design, unfortunately. So this goes out to the builders and the developers. Go ahead and save yourself some money instead of putting that little sticker on the front face of that, make it more solid, just use one material and it'll look more expensive and you'll be able to get a higher dollar on it. It's going to look way better. Way better. And all those homeowners are going to be so happy. That's probably for like all of the average homes out there, right? Getting into that first home or maybe it's your first new build. I think that advice is good for that. This advice, this next advice, we're going to talk about window grids. We're taking you inside of a project that we're working on right now in Texas. And this is a dream home. So this is not your starter home, but this advice is good for any home. Yes. This could be your first home. This could be a remodel. So we just wanted to pay this forward as we were working on this project before we got, we forgot to say it out loud. So Sue, show them the difference that window grids can make in a project. Yes. Kate, grids are important, especially if architecturally your style of home should have a grid, right? We're working on this home. And the client, the architect was just like, we're going to forego the grids just because we don't want to block the views. And when we got brought onto the project, we're just like, oh, no, no, no. We need grids. Okay. And so the client, the style that the client wants to want to talk about what style the home is. It's traditional. It's aren't you, Bo? So you do have a lot of details. And so to have no grids would be a real disruption to what's happening on the interior, but it needed grids and the house, the scale of it, the client, often I think people don't understand the scale of a home, of their home when they're building. So when you understand the scale of the grid, even taking a tape measure and saying, I still see my view, you can add the detail. These are the details that matter. So for these were some of the exterior, the North stars for this kind of what they wanted the home to look like. All of these have grids. If there's any way for you guys to watch this podcast, this is, this is so dramatic. So you can see this on Spotify and YouTube. Anyway, I just think the visuals here. We'll absolutely. It'll convert the way you think. And the way you look at other exteriors, I can't not look at grids anymore. Cause I'm like the proportion of that grid's fantastic or darn it. They didn't do a study. Guys, there's a pandemic going around in neighborhoods all around me. They don't have grids. There's something happening. It must be a trend or something's happening where all the builders are talking all the clients into losing the grids for the view. Wait till you guys see the difference grids will make. Have you guys ever lost a view through a grid? Never. To me, that argument is just invalid because I've seen plenty of views through gridded windows and it's totally fine. And absolutely. And even if you're a contemporary home, like there's certain grids that work for a contemporary home, all those things. The house, a divide that can like really accentuate the architecture. Yep. The house just looks so much more expensive, charming. It looks rooted in history. Finished. Finished. Yeah. Thoughtful. Thoughtful. Exactly. Okay. So show them the visuals. This is the backyard overlooking the pool. You can see this gallery of window sliding doors that have zero grid. When I saw this and even the Prelevations guys, I couldn't find it, but it looks commercial when you see these large pieces of glazing without a grid. And so we were, we went ahead and objected and really fought for this. And so we started to show them, okay, can we start to throw a grid in there? And you can see how much better this looks. Again, if you're listening, the first image has this entire wall of just glass, glass doors, no grids. The second one starts to show you how we break it up. And then we took just to really teach the client. We did some elevation studies that you can see on the screen, showing the scale and height of this room. It's very, very large. And this is the height of our client. And so you can see when you start to lay out these different grids and these different ratios, you're not losing a view. And it's been one of the things that the client said, I'm so glad we fought for that because now that the house is framed, we're like really rolling, we're about to drywall, you can, the windows are in, you can really feel that detail. And it feels so much more expensive. It feels so much more in tune with what they want the stream home to feel like. Yeah. And charming too. Yes. It doesn't look, it doesn't look commercial. I'm not beating up on builders here. Are we? Maybe we are. Might be. Yeah. Keep going. But just put, add grids. It's not that much more expensive. And you know what? I honestly think you're going to find a buyer quicker if you do. Yeah. Because you know why? The house looks like home. It looks like that picture in your mind of what home looks like. And when someone's spending the most money they're ever going to spend in their entire life, they want it to, they want it to feel like home. They want to feel something. Yeah. It's weird how much grids give you a feeling of home. The clear story window gives you the feeling of a commercial space. Right? The grid gives you the feeling of a residential space. 100%. Amen. Okay. All right. So grids make sure you include that design detail. Okay. Next up, front door. Again, builders. Come on guys. This is something I've been noticing a lot lately and this was not a thing when I was in the door business. Noticing in my neighborhood, they're building all these new homes. So it's a little frustrating when I drive past it. Everyone knows what a side light is. It is a like a glazed window that is next to your door. It's inside your door system, meaning it is in sits inside of your brick mold or your casing. I'm noticing a lot of builders that are just taking the wall next to a door and then they're just framing that out to add a window there and calling that a side light. And that is, I mean, to me, it might be the worst offender we're talking about all day on this podcast. If you're looking on your screen right now, this is what not to do. Yes. Nobody's proud of this image. We just found this on the internet to help illustrate what it is that Corey's talking about, which is this long skinny window that is framed in next to the door, not connected, not touching the door. The casings aren't touching. It's just this hanging Chad. The thing that's not connected. Floating out on its own doing who knows what. The cricket punch. Exactly. And did that on the house. The way that tells you can see the exterior finish in between the two and side lights. We love a side. Yes. Yes. First of all, okay, let's talk about that's a bird testimony of side lights. Yeah. That is an overlooked design detail. The side light. Also, we love a transom. A transom. If you guys don't know what a transom is, it's that window that goes above the door system and side lights. And so you're really getting all this light pouring into your entryway, but you still can have a solid front door and you can have the privacy of having a front door. This first slide that's on the page, this is actually my house. That's me. That's me. And I just always dreamed of having a side light that was art glass. I don't want to say stained glass because then you conjure up certain images that, you know, feel like a church or something like that. So I'm going to call it art glass. Most of which is clear and textured. And then I have a couple little jewels, circular jewels in there. But I wanted to do that because I wanted the privacy, but I wanted to let light in. Oftentimes, if you have a side light, you're going to just have windows and anybody can stick their head in there and just see right into your house. And so I felt private enough that I wanted to do an art glass and I loved the charm that this added. So, but Corey, back over to you, talk about the door system that we want to create in the overlooked design details. The side lights are next to her door and there's a mole post in between. So that whole thing is delivered on site as one. And then it stood up into the hole and installed that way. It's not the doors installed. And then the side lights are vice versa. It's all one system that goes in and that's how it needs to be. Again, they are saving some money just building it into the wall because they have to build the wall anyway. Might as well throw a window in it, right? That's what they're thinking. Looks horrible. Yeah. We're all pro side lights here. Needs to be in the door system. So encompassed in again, the casing or the brick mold and divided by divided from your door by a mole post. I love that. And what I'm also going to say, because I was pulling images, images of side lights, art glass and all the things. If you're not watching, make sure you go and just like zoom in and pay attention to what Jess did. It is so beautiful and it is very, very rare to see a more modern take on this art glass. You can find a lot of bohemian glass or gypsy glass or stained glass. And these things are like arts and crafts, you know, where they'll start to deliver that stained glass. Look, if you want that colored glass that moment, I think that hers is a really great one to study if you want to embark on this. Oh, thanks. Yeah, it's really nice. Oh, hi. Yeah. And speaking of art glass, we're going to be showing you one of Suze's favorite entries, but first we want to show you one more image that includes a transom. That's this whole door system that Corey's talking about. This has a Dutch door. So, so cute guys. This is just from, you grow this from online. I don't know whose work this is. It kind of looks like Steven Gambrill or something, but it's fantastic example of what to do in a beautiful two story entry. You can see the staircase coming down, but love, love, love this Dutch door. Love the hardware. Love the side lights. Love the transom. The transom is going to be a part of that door system. It's not just going to be a hole in the wall above the door. It's a part of that. So it all feels cohesive together and not like broken apart in bits. Yeah. One fun thing like looking at your door versus this other door is this other door has grids in it. How's like a little thing. It's like, again, makes it feel like home. Yours has natural leaded breaks in it because it's art glass. You do need some break up in it. You need rhythm. And just having just, again, it'll start to look commercial if you just have a panel of glass that's just solid. Yeah. Think about it. Those are the details we're talking about. Also, let me just say this. If you're going to be embarking into building a home, I think it's very important to research front doors and figure out what you want. Like if you were to save an image like this and bring this as your slide deck to your architect and say, I've always wanted a transom, I brought to my architect and said, I've always wanted art glass side lights. And I brought different doors that I loved and we made sure and incorporate this into the drawing so that I got the right type of door. Cause otherwise left to your own devices, the architect might have just given me double doors or might have given me a single door. Maybe he didn't give me a side light. Maybe he did. It's all just like rolling the dice with whatever your architect thinks. I mean, hopefully you're getting a really, really charming, highly skilled art. You know, just somebody that has all of these charming details in them, but maybe you don't. And so I just think of the front door as the face of the house. This is your first contact with it. You want to pay attention to this detail. This is another advice about working with an architect or even a builder. If you think it in your head and you're like, should I say this? Just say it. Get it out on the table. Cause I think sometimes as humans were like, should, oh, they're probably thinking about it. If you have that thought, honestly, I would say most of the time, the other person was not thinking about it when I've had that thought. And I've been like, oh, I should have said something when I had the chance. Because you're going to be paying the architect to drop the wrong door for you anyway, and then you're going to have to do a change order to drop that, oh, I should have given you this door. I'm so sorry you drove that one. Exactly. Might as well just do it right the first time. Yeah. Just go in fully loaded. Yeah. Our architecture professor at USU. And he's like, I'm not saying this in an arrogant asshole way. I'm just saying when you're talking to anybody and this is how you deliver information in your drawings is how you talk to the builder, to the architect. Just talk like you're talking to the dumbest person. Yes. Explain everything. That doesn't mean they're dumb. That doesn't mean you're a jerk. It's just like really like communications. What is the clarity is kindness. Communications, everything. Yeah. Don't drop anything. So I love that we're saying this out loud. Also, the design is the details. Yeah. And so we're in the details, every single detail of getting it right for the client or for ourselves in this instance with mine. And so every single little tiny detail that lights you up inside, that's what you're giving to the architect because he's going to be like, okay, this girl loves the details. I should probably show her this little thing that I can do under the stairs or I should show her that, you know what I mean? Yeah. I also feel like the level of care will go up inside of him because he sees how much you care. He or she, right? Yeah. Yeah. And they'll ask you if you know that you are that particular, they're going to ask you, hey, before I do this thing, do you have any thoughts on this? That hopefully is the kind of builder you have that is asking for those things. If you haven't delivered it to him. Yeah. Again, speaking up is going to set the precedent of everyone speaking up. Yep. So this next slide is one that I've had on my board for years and I want to do this, I were to do art glass and transom. This is what it would be. It's not a lot in the South. It's, I feel like they call it their gypsy glass or Bohemian glass. Anyways, kind of like where they used to old depression where create these things. It reminds me of quilt blocks. So colorful. So pretty, that extra tall transom because you've got that probably like 16 or 16 foot ceiling. Yeah, buddy. So you can do that really tall transom. That's so charming. So that's so you someday. Your transom needs to be wider or taller. How are you depending on how you're talking about it, then your sideline as wide or wider than your sidelines. Yes. Don't do the teeny sliver up there. Yeah. Yeah. Equal width. Yes. Yeah. Okay. Good call out. Not to mention get a good handset. Your hardware should be great. Yes. All the door hardware, you're going to get the door knocker. I have a mail slot in my door, even though the mailman doesn't bring me my mail. I just wanted all the hardware. Just in case though. I have the brass handset. Well, you know what people like to open it and scream into my entryway. Because she doesn't have a doorbell guys. I don't have a doorbell because I want them to use the knocker. I know. I'm like, talk about authentic. So charming. I'm using the mail slot next time I come. That's how you get her attention. It's right. Use the knocker. Yeah. Anyway, do all of that. That is definitely an overlooked design detail is door hardware. We'll get into that and maybe a future series. Now we've entered, we've gone through the front door. We're in the entry. We want to talk a little bit about that landing spot. What is the flooring there? Cause you can oftentimes, architects are saying, do you want to run the hardwood floor through or do you want to do something different? When able, we're always going to want to do a funky little tile layout just because it can say so much about what the client, what their friends, what their family are going to experience throughout the rest of the house. Like it can dictate so much style, so many style points. I think by that tile, I will say this, the tile floor in the entryways become a signature of all of our work at ALID. We don't use the same pattern, but we always take a moment to do some sort of beautiful natural stone using variations of multiple stones. We come up with patterns in CAD that we can make simple cuts to for the installer to give our client their own custom marble entryway. And the entry's not huge, but something about being able to click onto a stone entry just sets that space apart as being special. The rest of the main floor is probably going to be hardwood. Don't bring that hardwood into the entry. This is your moment to shine, ladies and gentlemen. Let's get it right. And so we wanted to show you a couple of four entryways that we've done. The show stone floors. And then we're going to talk about thresholds. I'm going to say this with a function of it. That's going to last longer than your hardwood floor is going to. I mean, water and mud and all of that stuff. Yes. We're in Utah, but even in Lake California, any of those spots rain happens. Yeah. Kids happen. It's a lot easier to wipe up a tile than it is too, as far as like scrub the grout between your planks. All right. This first one is from Rachel Parcell's house. This is in her entry and she's very traditional, but I love this combination. It feels rooted in history. We've seen this floor pattern when we've gone to Europe and that was what she wanted. We'll kind of like really dug into her north star of what was her spirit animal via tile. This was it. Yeah. So I'll say this too. This isn't always. We'll usually throw these floor patterns on the diagonal on the 45 degree diagonal lines or space expanding. So if you have a small entry and you want to do a stone tile, throwing that on a 45 degree angle is going to pull those diagonal lines and make it feel bigger, but also it's going to make it feel special from the hardwood floors that are going to start after, and they're all going to be straights, right? So consider that or do a pattern that has some diagonal lines in it. Yeah. One thing I just want to point out when able, we usually will always try and do a border. So this one has a really good example of that border that's really, and especially when you have case openings into other larger rooms, a border identifies it, kind of creates like a rug moment for that tile gives you a good like starting stop. So also the gate, the border key note here. This is often what separates the goods from the greats is if they forget borders on their tile moments, then it feels like maybe it's the designer's first job and they didn't know to set it off with a border. It's just one of those defining details of great work to me. Yeah. So as a charming detail, since that's what this podcast is all about, borders, use them in your bathrooms, use them in your entryway. Whenever you're doing a tile moment, get that border in there. I think they help to find a stopping point too. Yeah. You know, it's that doesn't feel like it's just water falling into whatever the next, you know, flooring finishes of the adjacent room. Yeah. It's like the threshold in the doorway. Exactly. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. I love that. Speaking of borders transitions in this next one, this is from our Manchester home, which they didn't have a huge entry, but we did want to make it a moment. It almost feels more like a vestibule. It was. Which this is kind of an English home. And so that vestibule would make sense. So just the vestibule portion is tiled with this beautiful marble. And it's so fun because this is a quite a tall vestibule when you go in there. So it just kind of feels special and you have like the entry door and then you have another set of doors all with grids. And then you have this like darling pattern happening below. I just think I thought that this was a really, really fun one. If you go to that project in our portfolio, go peek at that and zoom in because the pattern of it, the client, there's green tile, there's dark tile. There's just so many good tones in here. And the pattern really did fill almost like a quilt. So beautiful. This next one, if you haven't listened to our master class on our Highland Manor project, go listen because we show some befores of this entry. It was the Yellowbrick Road. A weirdness. Okay. But we were able to really define the space and give her an entry because we added the tile with a border. Yes. Just really define that space and those columns all hit. And it's just the before and afters are so dramatic. But really beautiful. And on design motifs, this circle, if you go listen to that master class and if you kind of stare at little details throughout that project, that circular motif is a detail that you'll see throughout. So this final one is a project on the portfolio called Coastal Contemporary. This was something we've talked about this project and the client, the husband actually had always wanted black and white checkered floors. His aunt had black and white checkered floors and he look up to her and she had fake eyelashes and he just thought she was the most sophisticated thing. And so he'd always wanted them. And now in this new build was finally his chance to get them. So we took a spin on a black and white check, but we didn't want it to be so on the nose and we came up with this. And I think it turned out really, really fashionable and really set off the entry way. It's a moment. This is over a decade old too. Yeah. This is probably 12 years old and it's just so cool. Yeah. Such a great project. So don't forget the tile. Now we're going to go into a question. Listener question. I'm from Karen. Yeah. Karen wanted to know how do you decide which direction to run the hardwood flooring? Do you ever change direction in adjacent rooms or hallways, like running the kitchen one way and then the hallway another? This was a great, great question, Karen. And I thought it'd be best to show you via a plan. Usually when I look at a plan, there's obvious things. I don't want it to look like railroad tracks be running short distances. I'm always going to try and make it go the long way. That doesn't always work depending on like the adjacent rooms. And so really kind of understanding what is happening in each room will help you identify what and where that direction should lay. So in this home that we're going to show you right here, this is just the entry portion of a home that we did probably about 10 years ago. And it shows you coming through the entry right here. Actually, Susan, I'm just going to really quick call something out. So if you're able to see the screen, this is an example of what we're going to do on every project. We're going to give them what we call a flooring schedule so that you can see that the builder can see everybody working on the project can see whether it be the tile layer, whether it be the hardwood floor installer, that they can see the direction that we intend for the hardwood floor to go. You want to have a flooring schedule. You want to have tile drawings. You don't want to have this be a surprise to you ever, but you can also see just how thoughtful this is. And you can see overall that the hardwood flooring runs one direction throughout the whole house, right? Except for when we do a special herringbone pattern in the family room back over to you, Sue. Okay. Yep. You can kind of see just like just was saying, you come in on this entry tile. So we get that moment. And there's like real, real clear definition points with the doorways, but we do call that out with a border. And that's like what the wood thresholds. Then you can see on there's rooms to the right and left, we have just hardwood. Those are both running the same direction. And then in front of you, we have a herringbone. So because it's a specialty flooring, a hardwood flooring, we did border that out. So it kind of called it some attention to that detail. That's really important on all your thresholds. You make sure that there's some type of border, a start and start from what's happening in one room to the next room. And so this is just a great example of, you know, those thresholds. Another great example in this floor plan that I think is really, really fun caring that if you have these moments, I would suggest this is a great detail. Is you have the opportunity to do little details in festivals with your hardwood. Okay. So you can see in two of these spots on this floor plan, we have almost this quarter turned concentric rectangle, but the room is quartered. And then each quarter is the hardwood floors around on a bias. Look at that. I'm going to show you a picture of it right here. This is a picture of this tile flooring installed in the entry. And then it shows again, some of these details with the hardwood on these like little moments that become the most memorable. You could have ran that straight to just follow the direction that was happening in the next room, but this makes it so much more interesting. It's pattern on pattern. It is pattern on pattern. Yeah. Corey. Anyway, but it's, it, they do become just like the highlights. So there are details that should not go missed. If you have a pocket where you can identify something cool, do it. Try to find those moments in your like aerial view of your plans where you can create little things like that. And if you do, they're really going to become some of your favorite parts of your home. I think I remember that in my home, I had you guys look at it and you're like, Oh, you should run that tile for your powder out to here and really looking at it. That's my, one of my favorite things. And people remark on it all the time when they come into my home. That's awesome. So these flooring details, they're not going to go unnoticed. They're attached to the house. They make it feel really well built and it's really worth just staring at the floor plans and seeing where you can get those moments where you can make a threshold, right? Double down on a border so that you can really feel the difference between different rooms. This is really all up to you or the designer that's working on your project to get these little tiny things in that will absolutely delight you. If you don't have a designer that's creating a floor schedule for you, your architect can do that as well. Yeah, you just need to push them to do it. And images like these, you know, and so anything that like makes you light up, show your architect and say, I want to create these. And then that's going to change the way he frames in like journeys from one term to the next. Yeah. Your corridors will change based on these design details that you want in your home. So yeah, Karen says, um, this was the rest of her question. When should you consider using a border with hardwood flooring? And that goes back to the herringbone floor. If you're going to be doing a pattern like that, you can't run that herringbone all the way to the wall. You guys, you've got to set that off with a double border is what we did here. It's just going to be so handsome and give you really nice termination points. And you can see that on the herringbone. And then also in all these vestibules, there is that same border, just making sure you define what's happening there. Yeah. So, I love that. And then her last question is, do you ever run hardwood one way on the first floor and on another on the second floor based on different architectural features and needs, do you run the flooring a different direction at the top of this? Well, not just the top of the stairs, but the whole upstairs. Yeah, I have just depending on if the different plane, I think it's all subjective to your actual floor plan and where it makes the most sense how it lays. Yeah, cause walls aren't going to be the same upstairs. They are downstairs. It's different layouts. So just consider the layout itself. You'll create rules where you like to see that wood going, running, you know, lengthwise and then, but don't, I wouldn't like ground yourself to be in like, it's this way downstairs. So I have to have it this way upstairs. Give yourself a little bit of flexibility to make the room look as good as it can. So, yep. I think that concludes overlooked design details. Guys, I hope that's helpful. I want to know all these things. If I was about to embark on a build, just getting in those little last things is going to really make a difference for you. I want to let you guys know our very best sale is on right now. We only have two of these in a year. This is it for the very first half of the year. So you're going to want to definitely go. The whole website is up to 25% off, which is really amazing. So that's the very best sale. And then make sure and follow us on Instagram. The store is at Alice Lane home. And then the interior design side is at Alice Lane interiors. 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