Floating hardwood floors?
How to you deal with floating floors, around stairs and railings. When they are not nailed, or glued down, how do they stay pinned-down at the corners, without the help of a baseboard. Now you talking about the best hardwood floor's on the market today and they have a great warranty also your answer would be shoe molding and if there's a curve you can special order that just take your measurement go to some millwork's are somewhere they supply caseing's,baseboard's,shoemold they can fix you right up this is some type of rubber and it take's a couple of week's to get back after ordering but it carry's a good warranty also. Good Luck You need to use some form of molding, base board or at least quarter round. You can attach the molding to the wall with special drywall screws which have very small heads (little square holes in the head for the driver) and then use putty to fill the holes.
I found putty that is in powder form which you mix with your stain and it matches almost perfectly. I don't think there is such a thing as floating hardwood floors, you must mean floating laminate. Laminate is normally a clicking system, no glue required. Once it is installed you just put 1/4 round, around the base of the walls. actually, in order to be able not to use any type of trim, there is a saw called a "jamb-saw" or "undercut-saw." you actually cut your door jamb's or railing post or whatever you want the exact height of the floor and than you slide you floor underneath. other than that, you will need trim. Floating hardwood floors?