Decorative Flake

Flake Floor Systems

Decorative flake systems are reviewed around blend direction, prep needs, texture expectations, topcoat, and care language.

Estimate after square footage, prep, blend direction, and topcoat expectations are reviewed.

Garage useConcrete conditionPhotos and access
Flake Floor Systems project example

The experience

A project path shaped around the slab, the space, and the use.

A flake floor path should clarify concrete prep, crack/joint handling, finish blend, topcoat expectations, traction language, and how the space will be cleaned and used.

Estimate readiness

What to send for this floor.

For Flake Floor Systems, the most useful first request connects the surface condition to how the space is used. These details help the next reply focus on the real project instead of guessing.

Garage use

Share parking, storage, workshop, gym, water, road treatment, and cleaning expectations for the space.

Concrete condition

Mention cracks, pitting, stains, old coatings, joints, drains, transitions, and areas that already concern you.

Photos and access

Send wide garage photos, close-ups of problem areas, rough size, stored-item notes, and timing needs.

Best for

When property owners request this.

  • Garage floors
  • Utility and storage areas
  • Decorative but practical floor finishes

Includes

What may be part of the project review.

  • Flake blend direction
  • Topcoat and texture conversation
  • Photo and prep review
  • Care expectations

Scope signals

What changes the scope before pricing.

The estimate form is designed to collect these details before anyone promises a coating system, schedule, or return-to-use timeline.

01

Garage use

Parking, storage, workshops, gym equipment, snow, water, and road treatment can affect texture and cleaning expectations.

02

Current floor condition

Cracks, pitting, stains, old paint, old coatings, patching, and uneven areas can all change the conversation.

03

Approximate size and access

Square footage, room shape, doors, transitions, stored items, and access limits help shape the first review.

04

Photos before a site visit

Wide room views plus close-ups of problem areas help decide whether the next step is photos, a call, or an in-person visit.

Estimate-first workflow

Tell us about the floor, and we will shape the next step around it.

Share the location, rough size, current concrete condition, timing, and any photos you have. The estimate flow is designed to qualify the project before overpromising a system or schedule.

Start an Estimate

Good to know

A few details before you request an estimate.

Is Flake Floor Systems available in my area?

Use the estimate form with your project location. Liquid Stone Solutions is starting with St. Charles County and St. Louis County service-area pages, then qualifying nearby requests case by case.

What information helps with an estimate?

Share the approximate square footage, project type, current concrete condition, timing, location, and whether you have photos. Cracks, old coatings, pitting, stains, and moisture history are worth mentioning early.

Can concrete prep affect the final scope?

Yes. Flake Floor Systems depends on the condition of the existing concrete, so prep and repair needs should be reviewed before final pricing or scheduling.

Related services

Other experiences to consider.