Herringbone.
Patterned hardwood.
Herringbone hardwood flooring is no longer a parlor-trick pattern — it is one of the most-specified hardwood layouts in luxury Los Angeles residential projects right now. Mathematically precise, historically loaded, and dramatically more involved to install than straight lay, it is a pattern built for rooms that deserve intention.

The signature of serious renovation.
Herringbone is one of the oldest patterned floor layouts still in active use. Romans laid stone in herringbone for road strength, and French chateaux later used herringbone oak floors as a decorative status display. The pattern has lived through centuries of interior design because it adds movement without losing discipline.
For Los Angeles interiors, herringbone has become a clear signal of a serious renovation. It is not installed as quickly as a straight-lay floor, and it usually requires a higher installation budget. Its presence announces design intention, careful layout planning, and a floor that is meant to be noticed.
Mathematical precision
Every plank is cut to identical length and meets its neighbor at a clean 90° angle. The visual impact comes from that tolerance, which is why herringbone requires a skilled installer.
Optical room expansion
Herringbone draws the eye diagonally, making rooms feel longer and wider than a straight-lay floor in the same space. It is a well-known design effect in narrow rooms, hallways, and open-plan living areas.
The 2026 specification
Many luxury residential projects in the LA Hills now specify some form of herringbone, especially in white oak, because the pattern combines architectural movement with modern neutral finishes.
Heritage with modernity
From Roman roads to French interiors to modern Bel Air and Hollywood Hills new builds, few floor patterns carry the same cross-generational design legitimacy.
Herringbone in detail.

European Pattern. Each plank meets its neighbor at a precise 90° angle, forming the characteristic interlocking zigzag. The plank ratio is often close to 3:1, though custom sizing can change the scale of the pattern.
Wider planks compress the pattern visually, while narrower planks extend the movement across the room. National Hardwood mills, finishes, and inspects herringbone planks at our Van Nuys facility before delivery, with installation referrals available for Los Angeles-area projects.
Five tones,
one pattern.
Every herringbone layout in our inventory can be finished in our Van Nuys mill to match a specific design palette. These are the most-specified directions, though custom tones are available by project.





Herringbone in situ.






Three herringbone
signatures.
Every collection is milled, finished, and hand-selected at our Van Nuys facility. Custom widths, custom stains, and made-to-order runs are available across all three.

Classic Herringbone
Traditional herringbone in our full range of species. The default for high-end Los Angeles residential projects that want pattern without excess ornament.
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Double Herringbone
Two parallel planks per run create a more visually substantial herringbone layout, often specified for larger rooms and wider sightlines.
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French Herringbone
A refined pattern direction for homeowners and designers who want heritage character with a more tailored, architectural floor layout.
Contact UsWhere LA’s designers use herringbone.
Primary Living Areas
Living rooms, dining rooms, and entry halls are the spaces where the floor first registers. Herringbone gives those rooms instant architectural rhythm.
Long Hallways
Herringbone’s diagonal flow visually pulls a long hallway into a more intentional, processional experience. It is a favorite move for narrow circulation spaces.
Boutique Hospitality
Hotel lobbies, members’ clubs, and private dining spaces use herringbone for the immediate signal of bespoke quality.
Mediterranean & Spanish Revival
Herringbone works beautifully in early 20th-century Spanish and Mediterranean Los Angeles homes, including Hancock Park, Los Feliz, and Pasadena renovations.
Modern Statement Builds
New construction in the Bird Streets and the Hills often uses herringbone in wide-plank white oak as a signature floor moment.
Apartment & Condo Premium
High-end condo developments can use herringbone in shared spaces to add a luxury detail that residents notice immediately.
What homeowners and designers actually ask.
How much more does herringbone cost than straight-lay flooring?
Material cost can be similar, though herringbone may require more precise milling and waste planning. Installation is where the premium sits: herringbone commonly costs more than straight-lay labor because each plank must be aligned, cut, and set with tighter layout control. A typical total project premium may land around 20–30%, depending on room shape, material, subfloor, and installer skill.
What species work best for herringbone?
White oak is the most common choice because its tighter grain and neutral tone read beautifully in herringbone. Walnut is a luxury alternative, while European oak and red oak can also work well. More visually active species such as hickory or Brazilian cherry require careful finish selection so the pattern does not feel too busy.
How long does herringbone installation take?
Herringbone usually takes significantly longer than straight-lay flooring because layout, alignment, cuts, and borders require more precision. A project that takes several days in straight lay may take roughly twice as long in herringbone, depending on room size, site conditions, and pattern complexity.
Can I install herringbone over existing concrete?
Yes, engineered herringbone can often be installed over concrete with the correct adhesive system and subfloor preparation. This is common in Los Angeles residential projects, especially in new construction, condos, and slab foundation homes.
What’s the difference between herringbone and chevron?
Herringbone planks are cut square and meet at 90° angles, creating a staggered zigzag or staircase effect. Chevron planks are cut at an angle and meet point-to-point, creating clean continuous V-lines. Chevron feels more linear; herringbone feels more textural.
Will herringbone go out of style?
Herringbone is unlikely to disappear from high-end interiors because it has remained in use across many design eras. Specific colors and finish trends may change, but the underlying pattern has a long history of returning in luxury residential design.
See herringbone
in person.
Our 10,000 sq. ft. Van Nuys showroom holds full-pattern samples of herringbone layouts in real lighting, real widths, and real finishes. Catalog renders never tell the full truth about pattern scale.
Van Nuys, CA 91411
Sat 8am – 3pm
(818) 988-9663
