Vinyl Flooring Laboratory

CREATIV' LAB : ethnic factory alchemy An invitation to travel, to recover, reinterpret and accumulate: spirit is what lies behind CREATIV' LAB. A mixed décor trend, filled with eclectic styles, local cultural objects, timeless industrial furniture, holiday souvenirs and childhood mementos. So, forage, recover, re-style, invent, go crazy and creative to come up with a world that is uniquely yours! Surprise with a new patchwork and give your interiors the spirit of a workshop loft! CREATIV' LAB is a uniquely personal experience, a subtle alchemy of retro and a touch of modernity. Designs from yesteryear reinterpreted by working and re-working materials and objects. This trend is often linked to loft décor, city chic, industrial style or functional furniture that mixes new and old and becomes integrated into large spaces, and open and light architecture. A mix of industrial design and ethnic styles, this unique trend celebrates humble materials and goes back to what's essential.
Smooth untreated walls, a concrete or stone tile floor, metal or polished concrete furniture, zinc sign letters, linen and also lots of wood that symbolises travel and handicrafts. It adopts dark colours such as grey, black or khaki that can be infused with a touch of pink and orange to break the colour palette and complement the old metal. You love objects with a soul, say goodbye to the sterile! CREATIV' LAB elegantly combines vintage decorative pieces, from 1950s' factories and schools, holiday souvenirs, contemporary design pieces that can be found at flea markets or in garage sales without breaking the bank. Black Lab Puppies Inland EmpireAn old fridge, a bistro countertop, a retro club chair, a metal locker, a cinema ad, an architect's lamp or an XXL lamp are unique pieces that add a lived-in feeling. Vinyl Plank Flooring Insulation
Overseas cultures are also used to create surprises, a new world, a touch of the exotic. Some handicraft pieces or a head of Buddha that combine into a potpourri of essential icons tinged with nostalgia: a desk or a school blackboard, an old leather trunk... There is no formula. This unlikely mix brings about a one-of-a-kind look! Men and women 30-50 year olds who love secondhand shops and travelling. In the style of a Chinese portrait, CREATIV' LAB would be: a location: a chic city loft, an old barn in the countryPug Puppies For Adoption In Fl an ambiance: a brick wall attic · furniture: a metal locker or an old converted telephone box an object: an industrial lamp, a school blackboard, an old workbench a material: wood, a living material that is such a symbol of travel, handicrafts or even old metal a fabric: linen · a colour: grey or black but also an explosive link such as pink or orange, colours washed out over time
a pattern: traditional such as crochet but re-worked with surprising contrasts clothing: an embroidered Manoush tunic a brand: Antik Batik for clothes, the MERCI boutique for its fair trade a man who personifies it: the designer Piet Hein Eek who with recovered boards invents a new style of marquetry that is environmentally friendly, modern and completely random. The singer Thomas Dutronc for his offbeat side. The sculptor Arman for his accumulations a female icon: The architect Andrée Putmann Discover all our decoration trends The quick way to select your floor, to find a retailer, to check how many m² you need to buy or to visualize our different flooring solutions in home settings. Whether you are a bricolage fan or a 'Sunday DIYer', it’s never been so easy to install and maintain your flooring.Today, flooring retailer Lumber Liquidators became the first major retailer to commit to selling vinyl flooring made without reprocessed plastic.The Mind the Store Campaign, a project of Safer Chemicals, Health Families, announced that Lumber Liquidators has committed to adopt new standards that require the company’s suppliers of vinyl flooring to: end all use of reprocessed vinyl plastic in vinyl flooring;
and limit lead in flooring to less than 100 parts per million (PPM).  As of September 1, 2015, Lumber Liquidators has also required its suppliers to eliminate the use of ortho-phthalates in all vinyl flooring purchased. Additionally, Lumber Liquidators has committed to regularly commission independent laboratory testing by Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC)-certified laboratories to monitor compliance with these policies.Lumber Liquidators worked with Safer Chemicals, Healthy Families’ Mind the Store Campaign to develop the framework for these standards, which are expected to be phased in over the next year.“We are encouraged by Lumber Liquidators’ decision to sell vinyl flooring made without reprocessed plastic,” said Mike Schade, Mind the Store campaign director of Safer Chemicals, Healthy Families.  “This is a positive step and we hope other major flooring and home improvement retailers will join Lumber Liquidators in eliminating this unnecessary plastic.”“Lumber Liquidators is committed to setting the highest standards for the sourcing of flooring products,” said Jill Witter, Chief Compliance and Legal Officer of Lumber Liquidators. 
“We are pleased to work with Safer Chemicals, Healthy Families on this initiative, as part of our ongoing efforts to lead the industry forward with responsible sourcing practices.”Testing by the Ecology Center (Michigan) found that the reprocessed vinyl plastic is often contaminated with lead, cadmium, brominated flame retardants, phthalates and other toxic chemicals.  In at least 69% of the floors’ inner layers tested from six major retailers, lead was present at elevated concentrations. Testing revealed lead levels as high as 10,000 ppm and cadmium at 20,000 ppm.   The contamination results from the global trade in plastic waste, which is often recovered from the wire and cables from old computers and other electronics, according to the recent Healthy Building Network report Post-Consumer Polyvinyl Chloride in Building Products.The Safer Chemicals, Healthy Families coalition represents more than 11 million individuals and includes parents, health professionals, advocates for people with learning and developmental disabilities