Flooring
18th Century French Louis XVI Antique Flooring
Terracotta
1770s French Louis XVI Antique Flooring
Limestone
17th Century European Louis XVI Antique Flooring
Stone
16th Century French Antique Flooring
Terracotta
Mid-17th Century French Louis XVI Antique Flooring
Terracotta
1620s French Louis XVI Antique Flooring
Stone
1790s French Louis XVI Antique Flooring
Stone
18th Century French Louis XVI Antique Flooring
Stone
19th Century Antique Flooring
Cement
19th Century Antique Flooring
Cement
20th Century Flooring
Cement
20th Century Flooring
Cement
20th Century Flooring
Cement
20th Century Flooring
Cement
Late 18th Century French Antique Flooring
Limestone, Belgian Black Marble
1810s European Antique Flooring
Reclaimed Wood
1840s French Louis XVI Antique Flooring
Marble, Stone
Early 20th Century Flooring
Cement
19th Century Antique Flooring
Cement
Late 19th Century Antique Flooring
Cement
15th Century and Earlier English Medieval Antique Flooring
Clay, Terracotta
15th Century and Earlier French Greco Roman Antique Flooring
Limestone
Early 18th Century British Louis XIV Antique Flooring
Oak
16th Century French Antique Flooring
Terracotta
Late 18th Century European Louis XIV Antique Flooring
Terracotta
Mid-18th Century French Antique Flooring
Terracotta
Mid-18th Century French Antique Flooring
Terracotta
Mid-18th Century French Antique Flooring
Terracotta
17th Century European Louis XVI Antique Flooring
Terracotta
1790s French Louis XVI Antique Flooring
16th Century French Louis XVI Antique Flooring
Stone
1680s French Louis XV Antique Flooring
Stone
Antique, New and Vintage Flooring
Carefully chosen antique, new and vintage flooring, while not usually considered a focal point, can play a huge role in designing how a space should look and feel.
Archaeologists have identified glazed brick tiles and polished stones on historic floors and other surfaces around the world. Some of the earliest known glazed bricks date to a 12th-century B.C. facade in Susa, in today’s Iran.
Whether you choose wide planks to contrast with your modern appliances in your farmhouse-style space or understated oak for a clean contemporary look, humble wood can play a starring role when it comes to flooring. Alternately, vintage tiles can be the “it” factor in your kitchen, bathroom, patio or bedroom. Gapless mosaics forming tessellations or complicated geometric patterns can provide a bold statement, and one doesn’t have to be polymath designer Gio Ponti, for example, to create dramatic floors with these tiles. (Ponti was arguably the most important figure in 20th-century Italian architecture and design, and diagonally patterned floors, meant to make rooms more dynamic, were a signature of his.)
Modern 21st-century flooring and new and made-to-order flooring come in many styles. However, choosing antique or vintage flooring or a unique pattern from innovative designers like Aimee Wilder can add an extra layer of charm and sophistication to an interior or other space.
On 1stDibs, find flooring to match a range of styles and tastes.