
Travertine, slate, and marble visuals with the warmth and softness of vinyl underfoot.
50 years in Amador County · Lifetime warranty · Free in-home estimates
Rated 4.8 from 89 Google reviews
“When they came to take out the carpet at our entry way, they found the wood was wet, they quickly realized we should let it dry prior to putting in the LVP. When it dried, they were quick to squeeze us into their schedule. They completed the install, and it is beautiful!”
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Related Luxury Vinyl Plank Options
Explore other luxury vinyl plank styles and projects we handle.

Wood-Look LVP
Realistic wood-grain visuals and textures, the look of hardwood without the worry.

Kitchen LVP
Waterproof flooring that handles spills, drops, and high traffic.

Bathroom LVP
100% waterproof options that look like wood or stone in any bath.

Basement LVP
Stable, moisture-resistant flooring built for below-grade installs.
Luxury Vinyl Plank Guide
Ready to Have Stone-Look Luxury Vinyl Plank Installed in Your Amador County Home?
Stone-look luxury vinyl plank gives homeowners the visual character of travertine, slate, marble, and limestone without the cold, the cost, or the fragility of the real material. The same four-layer LVP construction that powers wood-look planks (clear urethane wear layer, photorealistic decorative print, rigid or semi-rigid core, balance backing) gets paired with high-resolution scans of natural stone surfaces and embossed textures that mimic honed travertine, cleft slate, polished marble veining, or tumbled limestone. The result is a floor that reads as stone at standing height but feels warmer and softer underfoot, recovers a dropped wine glass without shattering it, and installs in a fraction of the time of a real stone job. Amador County homeowners in Sutter Creek, Jackson, Pine Grove, and Martell choose stone-look LVP for kitchens, full bathrooms, mudrooms, and entryways where they want the stone aesthetic without the maintenance, the grout sealing, or the cracked tile risk that comes with a real installation.
Read the full luxury vinyl plank guideShow less
Stone-look LVP is sold in plank and rectangular tile formats, with rectangular formats (12 by 24 inches and 18 by 36 inches are common) producing the most convincing read at room scale. Premium lines include painted bevel grout lines that, when laid out, mimic the grout-line aesthetic of a real tile installation without the actual grout maintenance. Wear-layer thickness still matters and follows the same 12 to 22 mil residential range as wood-look LVP, with 20 mil a common premium tier. Slip resistance is the spec to ask about for bathrooms and entryways: look for a dynamic coefficient of friction (DCOF) rating of 0.42 or higher under ANSI A326.3, which is the threshold used for wet residential floors. Compared to natural stone, stone-look LVP costs significantly less per installed square foot, is warmer to the touch, never needs sealing, and forgives drops that would chip a real travertine tile. The trade-off is that the surface is printed rather than real, so the visual variation repeats across the run and the floor will not develop the authentic patina that real stone gets across decades. The choice typically comes down to which trade-off matters more for the room. Visit the parent luxury vinyl plank category for SPC and WPC core options, and stop by our Sutter Creek showroom to compare stone-look textures, bevel detail, and DCOF ratings side by side.
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