No matter how detailed the decoration plan is, there will inevitably be some leftover materials in the end. The general way to deal with these leftovers is to discard them, but of course, some people think differently. There is a young man named Alexey Steshak abroad who, with his own hands, has turned these leftover materials into one work after another. Next, we will share the DIY floor that the young man spent five months making.
Alexey Steshak collected 40 bags of small wood chips. Some were given by friends, and some were cut from his own orchard. There is a wide variety of woods, including oak, walnut, apple tree, pear tree, caragana, coal ash, birch, ash, maple, cherry tree, larch, rowan, etc., filling up an entire corner space.
At the construction site, he drew lines and made layouts, arranging the small wooden blocks in the positions according to the pattern conceived in his mind. It's not as easy as laying floor tiles or wooden floors. After the pattern outline is formed, the work is not yet complete. There will be gaps between the wood materials, and tools are needed to cut the wood into small blocks to fill the gaps and make the whole more compact. In order to increase the three-dimensional sense of the floor pattern, the unfilled parts will be filled with light-colored wood later. Just looking at it makes people feel overwhelmed. This job really isn't something an ordinary person can handle.
After the light-colored wood is filled, basically ninety percent of the work is completed, and the remaining part is to fill the bird pattern. Alexey Steshak chose to fill the bird pattern with broken tiles, maximizing the value of the leftover tile materials.
After five months, the result is stunning. Compared with conventional floor tiles and wooden floors, it has a sense of freshness, giving people a different visual experience. At the same time, the leftover decoration materials have also maximized their value.