Jeff:
Actually, I have nothing against honest VCT floors, or sheet vinyl either, so long as said sheet vinyl is not imitating something else.
My favorite sheet vinyl is Armstrong's Corlon, which used to be marketed for residential and commercial use, but which is now marketed only for commercial installations. No matter - you can still get it. Corlon is chips of vinyl in a translucent vinyl binder. Extremely durable - I know of one installation that was put down in 1966 and was still in use, undamaged, when the owner entered assisted living two years ago. She was not a housekeeper, and had five kids and any number of basset hounds over the years. Didn't faze the Corlon!
My preference in hardwood floors is flooring stained almost black. I do not like banana-yellow strip oak at all.
Carpet is also fine, so long as it is not off-white or the paler beiges. Too bloody much upkeep. In Atlanta, I had around 3000 square feet of that stuff, and to this day, I resent every damn minute I spent on taking care of it.
One pet peeve: Twelve-inch-square tiles in small spaces like bathrooms and powder rooms. They're overscale in small spaces, without enough grid to give the floor interest. They just look bland and blah used this way. If you're using large-scale tile in your house, cutting the scale in small spaces really does look better.
This isn't about floors, but I am also no fan of the spread of marble countertops. There are large, elaborate houses - as well as many historic houses - in which they look good and are appropriate. But to see them in so-called "starter homes" is ridiculous. If that's your "starter," what the hell are you aspiring to? And Formica is way kinder to dropped dishes, as well as much cheaper to change when fashions do, which they will. Some day, people will say "bronzite marble" in the same sneering tone they're using for '70s wall paneling today.
[this post was last edited: 2/21/2013-19:53]