Crowning

Crowning

crowning-29446

Crowning

Sierra Exif JPEG

Crowning

Sierra Exif JPEG

Crowning

Hardwood flooring showing crowning distortion with raised board centers and convex surface profile

Crowning

Sierra Exif JPEG

Board edges are lower than the centers

crowning-6391

Crowning

Sierra Exif JPEG

Crowning

crowning-29443

Board centers are higher than the edges

Crowning-2150

Cupped floor sanded with high moisture crowned after drying out

crowning-29445

Crowning

crowning-69314

Crowning

crowning-29446 Sierra Exif JPEG Sierra Exif JPEG Hardwood flooring showing crowning distortion with raised board centers and convex surface profile Sierra Exif JPEG crowning-6391 Sierra Exif JPEG crowning-29443 Crowning-2150 crowning-29445 crowning-69314

Crowning (Hardwood)

Floor Detective® Claims and Conditions Guide

Summary

Crowning is a dimensional distortion in hardwood flooring in which the center of the board becomes elevated relative to the edges, creating a convex surface profile. The condition reflects moisture-related movement through the thickness of the wood rather than finish wear or surface damage. Crowning most commonly develops after a prior moisture imbalance, particularly when a previously cupped floor is sanded flat before internal moisture conditions have stabilized. As the flooring later dries and moisture equalizes within the boards, the altered geometry may become visible as center elevation. The appearance may develop gradually and sometimes becomes more noticeable weeks or months after the original moisture event. Visible severity may vary depending on board width, species, lighting conditions, finish reflectivity, prior sanding, and environmental exposure. Crowning is evaluated within the context of moisture history, refinishing sequence, environmental conditions, and flooring geometry rather than appearance alone. See also Cupping, Wood Distortion, and Hardwood Floor Problems for broader context.

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