A short pause today, to reflect upon and ogle the linoleum pattern that we believe was The Single Most Popular resilient floor pattern in midcentury American houses: Armstrong No. 5352. So far in my research, I have found No. 5352 in Armstrong catalogs as early as 1935 and reader Scott says that it was still being sold at Sears in the mid-1990s! That is quite a run!
March 2020 update: Armstrong Flooring is reintroducing the 5352 design — dubbed Heritage Brick — this year. Read the full story here.
- Also read my 2020 story on the history of this pattern — from my interview with Mark Zeamer of Armstrong.
Originally, Armstrong No. 5352 was available as real-deal “Embossed Inlaid Linoleum”. Mark Zeamer told me (in interview story listed just above, “The 5352 pattern lasted a long time in many different commodities, starting out in linoleum to Coronelle to felt-backed Imperial Solarian and then jumped to vinyl into the 1970’s. It was in the 70’s that it was revived as a Rotogravure printed product in Sheet Goods and Tile.”
I have been reading Jane Powell’s excellent book, Linoleum (affiliate link). “Inlaid” means that workers actually sifted different color mixtures — up to 38 different colors per design! — onto the linoleum-sheet-in-progress. “Embossed” means that the entire piece was then pressed to create texture — in the case of No. 5352, the divits suggesting grout. Incredible workmanship required for such a “humble” material.
Here’s more detail on how embossed inlaid linoleum was manufactured, as described by Armstrong in 1949 (above):
- WIDE COLOR RANGE: As many as 38 colors may be used in a single design of Embossed Inlaid. The use of mottled colors creates unusually rich effects. Armstrong’s Embossed Inlaid Linoleum patterns have long been famous for their wide color range and their subtle shading.
- DISTINCTIVE DESIGN: A finely granulated mix is sifted through stencils onto the backing material. The intricate stencil shapes reproduce every line of the artist’s design and make possible the beautiful patterns available…
- KEYED TO BACKING: An adhesive coat on the burlap or felt backing helps to bond the mix and backing securely together under the pressure and heat of the giant presses.
- DURABILITY: Under the repeated pressings, the granulated linoleum mix is formed into a dense, unified sheet. After the final pressing and long baking in the maturing stoves, Embossed Inlaid has the long-wearing quality for which Armstrong’s Linoleum is known.
- STREAMLINE EMBOSSING: The top face of this press has an embossing plate which depresses parts of the design, creating a textured effect…. The unique streamlining of Armstrong’s embossing assures ease of cleaning.
Precautionary Pam notes: I also want to relate that in her book, Powell says that while linoleum is known today for its use of renewable resources (cork, linseed oil, namely), heavy metals such as lead may have been used in the manufacturer of old linoleum. In particular, she points out that lead and other heavy metals such as cadmium and chromium may have been used in the pigments used for coloration. Resilient flooring made from other materials may have contained other hazardous materials such as asbestos; check adhesives, too. So — Precautionary Pam repeats: Be sure to test the materials in your old houses for vintage nastiness like lead, asbestos and more — get with your own properly licensed professional to determine what’s in your house and its layers, so that you can make informed decisions about how to handle. For more info and links see our Be Safe / Renovate Safe page.

Armstrong 5352 — why was it so popular?
Back to Armstrong 5352: Why was it so popular? I will theorize that 5352 resonated for decades because so many American kitchens were “traditional” in overall character, year in and year out. This floor design — with its warm, essentially neutral colors — and with its evocation of timeless brick flooring — would have fit into many a kitchen.
Armstrong pointed to its versatility, describing it as a “Tile effect with a warm informal look. Good choice for a small room, hall, den, kitchen, living room, or dining room.”


I am pretty sure that 5352 lasted well into the 1970s, at a minimum — see the photo below, Jon & Trixi found it in their 1960s house, covered up. By then, the material likely changed to vinyl or some sort of vinyl composite; test this old stuff and adhesives underneath for vintage nastiness such as lead and asbestos, too, please.
To be sure, I can envision it successfully complementing dark wood cabinets and avocado and harvest gold appliances, too. Armstrong No. 5352 had legs. Oh, how it wish it were still available today!

These old linoleum floors — amazingly amazing.
UPDATE: Reader Hannah sent this photo of vintage Armstrong linoleum in the 5352 pattern and left this comment on the Retro Renovation Facebook page:
I have two partial rolls down in the basement a friend gave me. It was left in HER basement when the original owners sold them the house. Not sure what I want to do with it though. It’s not enough to cover any floor we have. I just knew I WANTED IT!









Vickie Davis says
Hannah-with-the scrap pieces.
If you have not already sold your scrap pieces to Lyle, I am also looking for some of this to patch into my kitchen floor. We had water damage in our kitchen and the floor had to be cut in order to air it out. Please email me at davis5968@mediacombb.net.
Thanks so much.
Vickie Davis
Reva Spalding says
I was raised in a home with the 5352 linoleum,, and I loved it . It always looked good……IAm 65 years old and just bought my first house and the first thing I looked for was this linoleum…..does any body else make besides Armstrong???? And Armstrong if you have any old inventory of the 5352 laying around…..would you sell it to an old woman who absolutely loves it!!!! And doesn’t want any thing else on my kitchen floor…..???????
pam kueber says
Nope, not that we know of.
See our category up in the navigation: Kitchens / Flooring for various retro style flooring options available today.
Yes, we all miss 5352!
Annie says
Wish they would make the red brick pattern again! Seems a lot of people loved it.
Chuck Anderle says
In 1970 or 1971 I was working as a wholesale sales rep selling resilient flooring to dealers in north Texas. We had a going away party for 5352 when Armstrong shut down the linoleum plant. The cause was not lack of sales or profit, but a “cork blight” that killed most of the cork trees in Spain and Portugal. There was just not enough cork to operate plants for another 20 years while cork oak trees grew. The pattern was copied on Solarian and other inlaid and rotovinyls, but was never as successful as Lino.
pam kueber says
boooohoooooo, Thanks for the history!!!!
Lisa and Robb says
Better photos of our green flooring, here. We’ve been restoring our kitchen, and I think our finished room would make you smile.
Lisa and Robb says
We’ve got it in a particularly wonderful green. It isn’t in the best condition, and it will break my heart when we finally have to replace it.
Freaky fish-eye photos of our flooring (as part of our kitchen spruce-up), here:
http://howsrobb.blogspot.com/2013/11/as-paneless-as-possible.html
Susan J. Miller says
My 95 year old mother lives outside of Tyler, Tx and has this in her kitchen. We need to find someone who has one roll of this, Armstrong 5352, to replace the water damaged carpet in her bathroom. Why not redo the kitchen and the bath with a new product? She loves this floor and refuses to replace it so I am now searching the web to see if anyone knows where I might buy a roll. I will say one thing about this flooring, it is indestructible and it does look good in her vintage A frame house. Wish me luck!
Hillary says
A beige/tan colorway of 5351 was in my kitchen and laundry room when we moved in to our 1949 house. I saw the exact same floor in a 1963 ad, so I thought it was a later addition. Now I think it must have been original. It’s still there, lurking under my peel-and-stick tiles.
JudyC says
I had this floor in an apartment in 1970 and I loved it! It was so shiny when waxed, it looked wet! Thanks for the memory!
Daniel Kuczek says
Had this in the entryway of the house that I grew up in, this really brings back memories.
A little trivia… this, or something very similar, was also used in the rear compartments of many funeral cars and ambulances in the era… Restorers of these cars just go nuts over this stuff.
Wish they would start making it again.
Jason says
I had this in the side door entry of a 1901 house in Lakewood, OH. Seemingly every house in the neighborhood had it! It was getting rotted and cracked on the stairs to I tore it out, which was quite a chore…it didn’t want to go! Neat pattern and color but no amount of mopping, polishing, etc could make it look anything other than tired and dingy
Matthia Keyes says
Armstrong, please bring this pattern back.