Earlier this year, Soledad O’Brien bought a home in
Flamingo Park, a neighborhood of 1920s bungalows in
West Palm Beach, Florida.
Like many older homes — O’Brien’s was built in 1945 — hers needed work. And
like other homeowners, O’Brien, a broadcast journalist, had no desire to do the
work all at once.
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The rambling property, on a double lot with palm trees and
stone gargoyles left by the previous owner, has a four-bedroom main house in
back and a smaller guesthouse in front. All of it needed updating. O’Brien, now
CEO of a media production company, prioritized the main house and decided the
two-bedroom guesthouse would have to wait.
But then, at a neighborhood block party, O’Brien, 56, met
Tracey Alexander-Perez, a neighbor who had given up a career as a music
promoter for a new trade: painting and stenciling floors, walls, and tiles.
The two got to talking, bonding over their shared Cuban
heritage. Soon enough, they were talking floors, specifically the floors in
O’Brien’s guesthouse, which were in terrible shape with termite and water
damage. Alexander-Perez, 48, sang the praises of her new passion, suggesting
O’Brien paint and stencil her floors, rather than just covering them up with
area rugs. With a little elbow grease, she could extend the life of the tired
floors and brighten up the dark tone that O’Brien did not particularly like.
Stenciling floors is having a moment, but not everyone is a fan of the style, particularly because its durability is questionable, given all the labor involved.
O’Brien was skeptical — who stencils wood floors? “I thought
stenciling was basically doing a little vine up the wall. Think not-very-good Italian
restaurant,” she said. “I literally could not understand what she was saying.”
A few days later, Alexander-Perez showed O’Brien her own
guesthouse, where she had painted the vinyl floors white and stenciled an
ornate, Italianate-style pattern in taupe. O’Brien warmed to the idea. The
stakes were low — what was the worst that could happen? “I was game, she was
game,” O’Brien said. “Why not? It’s just paint. I think if she was bringing in
a backhoe to do some work, maybe I’d be a little more worried.”
Stenciling floors is having a moment. The technique of using
a template to paint a pattern onto a surface dates back to cave art. It was
popular in Europe for centuries and throughout the colonial era in the US,
fading out of fashion around the turn of the last century. “It was an
inexpensive way to add a high end feel to a home,” said Scott Sidler, a
preservation contractor in Orlando, Florida, who writes the Craftsman Blog.
Not everyone is a fan of the style, particularly because its
durability is questionable, given all the labor involved. These are painted
floors — wood, vinyl, and tile — often in heavily trafficked rooms. An
intricate pattern might look good on day one, but give it a few months and it
can look ragged if the paint chips.
“Are we checking in with these people after a year, after
two years, after four years to see how their floors are looking? Because I
don’t think they’re holding up as well as everybody thinks they are,” said
Kelsey MacDermaid, a co-founder of the Sorry Girls, a DIY YouTube channel with
2.1 million followers, who has no plans to stencil her own floors. “It’s a
trendy thing that people are doing, and I don’t know if it’s a timeless
design.”
O’Brien, however, is not terribly concerned about longevity.
If the new look can hold up until she is ready to renovate the guesthouse in
about three years, then she will count it as a victory. “It would definitely be
an improvement over my floors that are kind of a mess,” she said.
With the correct amount of prep work — and there is plenty
of prep involved — Alexander-Perez says a well-painted floor can last for a
decade or even longer. “There’s so much fear around painting a floor that
somehow it will fade or chip,” she said. “But most of the time, if it’s done
right, the fade over time just makes it look even better.”
Alexander-Perez started the work on O’Brien’s guesthouse in
August. In the first bedroom, she painted the floor white with a navy-blue
stencil pattern on top, an array of narrow beaded stripes. “You’re always
nervous, oh, my God, it’s a leap,” Alexander-Perez said. “Once you put the
paint down, it’s a commitment, there is no going back.”
But O’Brien was thrilled. “We painted it this beautiful blue
color and we were like, ‘Oh, my God, the floors look amazing,’” she said, adding
later, “We call that the spindle room.”
Since then, Alexander-Perez has painted sugar cookie pattern
stars in a soft, grayish blue atop an aqua beachy blue floor in the second
bedroom, which will be a children’s bunk room. She finished the guesthouse in
late October, painting the kitchen counters and tile floors in the kitchen and
both bathrooms. “If you’re going to do this, get kneepads,” Alexander-Perez
said of a job that took about two full days of labor per room.
O’Brien chronicled the progress on Twitter, gushing over
every room. A handful of followers, however, balked at the cardinal sin of
painting wood. “Congratulations. You just ruined a beautiful hardwood floor
with a linoleum looking floor from the 1980s,” wrote one.
“What a waste of hardwood. Looks like a day care center now.
The next owner is going to have a lot of work to fix that,” wrote another.
O’Brien was baffled by the random bursts of vitriol. “If it
makes you unhappy or stressed then don’t come over,” she told me. “I’ll be on
my painted floor and on my white couch watching TV and drinking wine with my
girlfriends.”
For now, O’Brien is looking forward to the holidays, when
some of her nieces and nephews come to visit — she has 18 — and make good use
of the freshly painted guesthouse.
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