
When you’re designing or renovating a luxury home, every detail counts. The scale of the ceiling beams. The curve of a custom stair railing. The metal patina on the door hardware. But one of the most impactful—yet often underestimated—design decisions lies beneath your feet: the pattern of your wood floor.
Two of the most iconic luxury flooring patterns, chevron and herringbone, have been used in palaces, estates, and modern penthouses for centuries. Both elevate interiors with rich texture and movement, but each brings its own architectural language, rhythm, and mood.
If you’re deciding between chevron and herringbone for your next high-end project, this guide will help you understand the difference—and choose the right pattern for your space.
Herringbone wood floors are created by placing rectangular planks in a staggered zigzag pattern, where each board meets at a right angle rather than a point. The result is a more woven, layered texture—subtle but rich, timeless but never dull.
Unlike chevron, herringbone adds rhythm and depth without strong directionality. It creates a sense of balance and historic elegance, perfect for spaces that need grounding or architectural softness.
Rich texture and visual interest without overpowering
Works in both classic and modern interiors
Adds sophistication to living rooms, studies, libraries, and bedrooms
Perfect for homeowners who want something iconic but versatile
Ideal for entryways, long hallways, or gallery spaces where movement and directionality enhance the architecture.
The first thing we look at in any project is not color. Not texture. Not even wood species.
We look at scale.
High ceilings. Long corridors. Great rooms that spill into open kitchens. These spaces demand proportionally scaled flooring. A standard 3″–5″ plank, which may work in a modest residence, feels almost comical in a 12-foot-ceilinged penthouse or a 10,000-square-foot estate. It chops up the space and distracts from the architecture.
That’s why we begin with wide plank wood flooring. Our standard minimum is 7″, but we often go to 10″, 12″, even 14″ widths for ultra-luxury applications. The same applies to length. Random-length boards simply don’t communicate elegance. Long-length planks—10 feet and longer—create uninterrupted sightlines and emphasize the scale of the space. They reduce seams. They amplify the feeling of flow.
When we match the scale of the floor to the scale of the architecture, the result is seamless. It’s the difference between a room that looks furnished, and a room that looks composed.
Herringbone pairs well with both light and dark stains, and can be installed at different angles to suit a space’s proportions.
Pattern Angle
Visual Flow
Design Style
Installation Complexity
Common Use Cases
45° or 60° angle cuts
90° angle placement (rectangular)
This NYC apartment hallway balances architectural rigor with rich materiality—note the custom ceiling inlay, paneled walls, and seamless wood flooring. Art and lighting details add warmth and rhythm to the corridor’s refined geometry.
This NYC apartment hallway showcases refined architectural millwork, a custom metallic ceiling, and herringbone wood flooring. A chandelier from Madison Square Tower, NYC anchors the space with sculptural elegance.
Warm toned cabinetry and rich wood floors create a timeless foundation in this meticulously designed kitchen, where refined details and vibrant accents elevate everyday living into a curated experience.
An estate floor should speak to history—whether it’s a new construction grounded in tradition or a centuries-old home undergoing a revival. These are homes where every inch is crafted, not manufactured. And the wood floor must rise to that standard.
In estates, we often work with reclaimed woods: antique oak beams re-milled into wide planks, heart pine from 19th-century textile mills, or rare American chestnut salvaged from historic barns. These materials come with irregularities, beauty marks, and stories. We stabilize them, mill them, and finish them with modern precision while honoring their imperfections.
Other clients prefer a cleaner aesthetic: rift and quartered white oak with fine straight grain, or tailored parquet patterns like Versailles panels, chevron, or herringbone with border inlays. These floors evoke European heritage, require expert craftsmanship, and add architectural gravity to formal spaces.
In either case, estate wood floors are timeless investments. They are meant to be walked on, admired, and passed down—not replaced in ten years.
Intricate parquet flooring installation in progress, showcasing precise geometric inlays and expert craftsmanship.
This transitional room showcases custom parquet flooring , arranged in a precise starburst pattern. Framed by soft lighting, the space is in final renovation stages.
Handcrafted parquet flooring features contrasting wood tones in a diamond grid pattern, aligning with hand-painted architectural panels and classical murals in this refined, historically styled corridor
A luxury floor’s color is rarely chosen from a sample. It’s created. Like paint on a canvas, finish systems are where design becomes deeply personal.
We use reactive stains, lyes, layered finishes, and natural oils to create tones that can’t be replicated in factory-applied prefinished products. And we sample directly on the actual wood being used—because every tree, every cut, absorbs pigment differently. No shortcuts.
Modern clients are also demanding cleaner air and healthier homes. That’s why we specialize in VOC-free finish systems, using plant-based oils, waterborne polyurethanes, and UV-cured technologies that protect the wood and the people living with it. These finishes don’t yellow, don’t off-gas, and don’t limit your design palette.
The goal isn’t to follow trends. It’s to develop a floor that reflects your space, your lifestyle, and your values.
When you work with New York City Wood Floors, you’re not getting a product. You’re getting a partner.
We are NWFA-certified wood flooring inspectors. That means we understand the science of wood movement. We know how adhesives behave with temperature fluctuations. We analyze vapor pressure. We test substrates. And we coordinate directly with your architect or general contractor to build the entire system—not just drop off a box of planks.
We know that in luxury homes, there is no such thing as “good enough.” There is only “flawless.” And we hold ourselves to that standard.
Joe Avila, NWFA Certified Wood Flooring Inspector with over 20 years of experience, brings unmatched expertise in sanding, refinishing, and wood floor system design. His technical knowledge and dedication to craftsmanship have made him a trusted resource for architects, interior designers, and discerning homeowners across the country.
Your wood floor is more than a finish. It’s the surface you’ll wake up to, entertain on, raise a family on. It’s where you’ll stand during toasts, holidays, and quiet Sunday mornings.
When done right, it becomes part of the soul of the home.
So don’t just pick a floor. Design one—with people who understand how to make it last.
Let us help you design a custom wood floor system tailored for your home’s architecture, performance needs, and aesthetic vision.
Shop the Look
Not a trade partner yet? Join New York City Wood Floors Trade Program for exclusive benefits, premium support, and insider access tailored for design professionals.
Sign up for our daily newsletter to get the best of design in your inbox.
New York City Wood Floors Newsletter
Indulge in luxury wood floor inspiration—exclusive insights on design, architecture, and elevated living, curated just for you.
Subscribe to receive our latest updates directly in your inbox!
NYC Showroom
Los Angeles Showroom
© 2026 All Rights Reserved.
Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.