Does Anyone Here Still Wax Floors?

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vintagekitchen

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I had mentioned this on the vacuum site, But thought I would bring it up here. Does anyone else still wax floors here? I do the wood floor in the dining room twice a year, with buffings in between, and several friends have commented that although it's pretty, it's not worth the effort when you can buy Mop and Glo.

To me, there i something relaxing and Zen about the process and the steps, and the finished look is a thing of beauty. Mop and Glo will never look as good as old fashioned Johnson Paste Wax to me. (Nor will it feed and protect the wood as well.)

What about you guys?

vintagekitchen++8-16-2012-15-44-41.jpg
 
In our last house we had that same kind of parquet all over the house. It wasn't tile, it was individually placed wood strips.

Once per year we would wash it down with Murphy's soap and then rinse and let dry for a few days. They we would wax it by hand using Johnson's Paste Floor Wax. We'd them buff it with a Hoover buffer. It would look beautiful.

But the dogs didn't enjoy this. They couldn't get traction on the floors. When they tried to walk on it their legs would lose traction and down they'd go. We finally had to add a few long runner type runs in the hall so they wouldn't hurt themselves.

In this house we have more stone floors and no wooden ones.
 
Whirlcool

You got it on the nose, it isn't tiles here either to my knowledge. I would love for it to be all through the house, (kitchen and bath are linoleum, living room hall and bedrooms are carpet), But if it was I think the twice yearly scrubbing and waxing might kill me, lol.
 
I Wonder If...

Waxing applies to Linoleum floor surfaces? The thing is, we tiled our old lino floor, because it was a "good ol' 80's Brown" and had the matching plastic skirtings, which were starting to peel off the walls. Really disgusting under there.

But I wonder if you could make Lino floors look the part with a good scrub, and some wax/polish. I certainly know they can't be doing it at school in any room, and whilst they have buffers the floors still look pretty dingy (some floors are a creamy which colour, and are pretty dirty most of the time)
 
I have red oak strip flooring throughout my house (built in 1958).  The only place that I have been waxing is in the hall where's a lot of traffic and where there is a tendency to be exposed to water due to the proximity of the bathroom and the dogs' water bowl.  As has already been noted, they are slick after they're freshly waxed and buffed, but I think the Johnson's Wax helps to protect the wood better than other options.

 

lawrence
 
Linoleum

It does come up really nicely. I dont know if you could see it, but the kitchen at the far end of the picture is 70's or 80's congoleum, but I usually just do it once a year. It seems to last longer than the wood, since the wood is more absorbant I guess.
 
All that waxing in our last house paid off. Our water heater decided to leak one year and flooded the hall with all that parquet in it. We used our Rainbow to suck it up. Fortunately the floor didn't warp or change color. We considered ourself very fortunate. We had friends who had a room with this stuff on the floor flood and all they had left was thousands of small wood strips all over the room.

It is a hard job, getting down on your hands and knees with a soft cloth applying the paste wax. But with a good pair of knee pads and a bottle of Advil ready it wasn't too bad.
 
Waxing Vinyl Tile:

Is not easy these days, because two products I used to depend on are gone.

One is Johnson Wax's Glo-Coat. I really liked the sheen it gave vinyl. Now, you can still get Future Floor Finish if you know where to look, but it's a little harder shine, a tad too glossy/glassy for my taste.

The other is the Fuller Brush wax applicator. It had an applicator pad on a long handle, and the pad put down the exact, perfect amount of wax with each pass. There are other applicators out there, and there are sponge mops, but nothing is as good as the Fuller product was.

Now, if you wanna wax yaself some wood floors, you need to get busy and find an Electrolux B-8 shampooer/polisher. Heavy and reliable, it could buff up a shine on asphalt. Johnson's Paste Wax is the wax to use, of course.

Caveat Emptor: If you're looking for a B-8, make sure it still has its brushes and pads. If they're missing, they cost a FORTUNE to replace, and your bargain B-8 won't be a bargain any more.
 
Electrolux B-8

I dont know about that. Of course, it is faster than the Hoover polisher I used to use, but the Kirby does an awesome job. ^__^
 
Yep

The "hardwood' floor in the parlor in Ogden is some kind of wood laminate that has to be waxed. I just did this about a month ago - buffed the floors up with a vintage 50s GE polisher, too!
 
Back when I was in the Army (a lifetime ago it seems) waxing the barracks floors was a routine duty, and we had a way of doing it that was handed down by generations of soldiers before us. It involved Johnson's paste wax, matches, a buffing machine, and some terry cloth towels. The idea was to light the wax on fire in the can (sounds crazy, doesn’t it) and let it burn just long enough to melt the desired quantity for the floor we were doing. Then we blew it out and let it cool off a tad so we wouldn’t scorch the floor tiles. Once properly cooled it was poured out in various strategic places on the floor and spread around using the buffer. For those places the buffer couldn’t reach, like inside corners, the wax was applied by hand. Then after the wax had a chance to dry a bit, we’d fold up an Army bath towel into a nice square shape that matched the size of the buffing brush, put the buffer on top of it, and buff the floor. Done properly the floors looked spectacular, but I have to wonder sometimes if the whole business of lighting the wax on fire wasn’t done just because soldiers like to light stuff on fire.
 
I do love my wax!

My kitchen is black and white checker pattern VCT tile. I wax it about 4 times a year, then buff with my Oreck Orbiter (a Christmas gift from friends who know how picky I am about my floors). Sandy, you wouldn't like it, though, the floor is very glassy afterwards. The rest of the house is red oak hardwood, which I only do twice a year. I agree, there's something very Zen about the entire process, and that smell! Takes me right back to childhood.
 
Not in years...

<span style="font-size: medium;">I used to use Future, (remember Future?)...</span>
 

 
<span style="font-size: medium;">When I was little, my mom used Johnson's Glo-Coat. It came in gallon cans. She'd buff it to wonderful shine with the Regina floor polisher...then...you guessed it...it was sock skating time! </span>
 
For The Wood Floors, Yes

Have an older Hoover machine that applies the wax (one set of pads), then you swap out another to take up the wax and slighly buff after letting the wax dry/harden, then finally a fine lambswool to bring up the sheen. Oh and there is a set of pads (steel wool?) one can use to "clean" and rebuff the waxed floors instead of using a mop with water or other cleaners.

Will only do that sort of thing when weather permits leaving the windows open for several days to air the place out. The petrol fumes from the paste wax are horrible and get worse if one cooks anything on the range or uses the oven.

You can test a wood waxed floor's finish by applying a few drops of water. If it beads up then the finish then the finish is fine, however it it starts to at once sink into the wood then the finish needs to be redone.

In theory you shouldn't apply paste/wax to poly coated wood flooring one is told. Rather one uses whatever cleaners the maker or local wood floor professional recommends. Indeed really the only wood flooring that should be waxed is the old fashioned kind finished with either varnish and or several coats of wax as the original finish.
 
OMG!  I think my Mom & Grandma used to buy Future by Johnson's Wax by the 55 gallon drum.  I still remember the smell when they'd do their kitchen floors.  YUCK!  The fumes used to give me headaches.
 
There WAS a Downside!

One consequence of waxing floors is something I well remember:

It used to be that if you rented a house or an apartment, you often had to deal with built-up wax left by the previous tenant. One apartment I had in Chattanooga had INCREDIBLE buildup; it was Glo-Coat laid down by that lady who'd lived there before me, and she had been there for forty years.

It wouldn't have been so problematic had she waxed all her floor area, but oh, no.... She'd waxed around the periphery of her room-size rugs for forty years, leaving a nice walnut-toned border of Glo-Coat around the edge of each room - and golden oak in the middle.

Took a LOT of work to get that straightened out, trust me. I hope that landlord appreciated it.
 

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