Casual visitor: I really like your bedroom flooring. What kind of wood is that?
Us: Um, the paper kind.
Paper floors?
Mm
 hmm. Our bedroom flooring is paper. A while ago, when construction was 
just a pipe dream Erin and I smoked every now and then, he brought up 
the idea of paper floors. He'd seen something obscure about it on the 
internet, and he thought I would love the idea because it's so cheap. I 
hated it.
Fast
 forward like 5 years... we're out of money, we still need a bedroom 
floor, and all of a sudden I love the idea! We found an online instruction video
 which was really helpful, and brainstormed ways to make it our own. We 
decided we didn't like the "patchwork" pieces look, and wanted to create
 something that could be mistaken for wood. We decided to go with 
planks.
1 gallon of Varathane Water-Based Poleurethane, a roll of brown kraft paper, and a gallon of Elmer's Glue later, we were ready to begin. We cut the paper into long-length-planks
 and short-length-planks that together would span our whole room. We 
also made three different plank widths - 8", 10" and 12" - to give the 
floor some variation. Each plank was individually crumpled, flattened, 
and re-crumpled three times to get the grooves we wanted. 
| Our kraft paper floor | 
Once
 we'd glued all the "planks" down according to the video, we ended up 
with a few spots that needed to be cut out and re-planked. This was a 
pain, but pretty easy. When the whole thing dried we stained the floor 
with a dark (almost black) wood stain to make the grooves and crinkles 
stand out. Most of the stain was rubbed off, but it added a lot of 
character to the overall floor. We put on 6 (?) coats of the 
polyurethane and called it good.
| Kraft paper floor next to dark stained English oak | 
| We love this floor - it looks great with our lime green bedroom wall (Benjamin Moore's "Feel the Energy", in case you were wondering.) | 
As
 far as yurt floors go, I think this would work swimmingly. If you don't
 want to spend much money on real flooring, but you want to avoid the 
plywood floor look, I say do it. Our bedroom is around 200 sq. 
ft., so pretty big, and we used a 100' roll of paper. The subfloor here 
is plywood, and before papering the floor we went around and filled 
every screw hole, nail hole and crack with putty so the paper wouldn't 
have mini-divots throughout.
I have to say, I was skeptical in the beginning, but this turned out quite nice, and I would recommend it to anyone trying to put in a unique floor on a very tight budget.
 
 
