Every MSI Wayne Parc Vinyl Color (2026): The 60-Inch Mid-Premium Line
The mid-premium tier of MSI Everlife's lineup: a 10mm SPC core, a 22 mil wear layer, and 9″ × 60″ planks. The same Wayne Parc design DNA as Reserve, built at a more accessible spec. All six colors, by family, with the rooms each one suits.
At a Glance
| Color | Color Family | Designer's Note | Shop | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | Andaz | Gray | Sophisticated mid-gray with real warmth in the undertone. Drawn from a warm-gray with brown working through the grain. Grounded, current, intentional. | View Product → |
![]() | Waldron | Gray | Deeper warm gray with richer grain and moodier depth. Reminiscent of a substantial, smoke-stained hardwood. Grounded, moody, substantial. | View Product → |
![]() | Elwood | Blonde | Warm mid-blonde with golden saturation and medium-weight grain. Resembles genuine white oak under morning light. Warm, characterful, refined. | View Product → |
![]() | Mellshire | Blonde | Light blonde with a faint taupe undertone. Echoes pale oak with the yellow pulled out of it. Easy, versatile, current. | View Product → |
![]() | Bluffview | Blonde | Soft blonde with quiet warmth and gentle, even grain. Looks like a restrained, livable oak. Calm, quiet, refined. | View Product → |
![]() | Macland | Honey | Warm honey oak with golden depth in the grain. Calls to mind a true honey-stained oak. Warm, substantial, inviting. | View Product → |
The Same Neighborhood, A Different Home
Wayne Parc is the mid-premium pick in MSI Everlife's vinyl lineup, the collection that sits above the value workhorses (Cyrus 2.0 and the rest of the bread-and-butter lines) and below Wayne Parc Reserve. It is built for homeowners who want refined, wide-plank vinyl with the same Wayne Parc design language as Reserve, but at a more accessible spec tier and a more accessible price.
The framing that helps most: same neighborhood, different home. Wayne Parc and Wayne Parc Reserve are both named for the same enclave in Calabasas, California, the kind of refined LA-suburb architecture where the floors are expected to read as genuine wood. They share the same visual language, the same color family naming, and a closely related palette. What changes between them is the build: Reserve runs a heavier 12mm core, a 30 mil commercial-grade wear layer, and longer 72″ planks. Wayne Parc runs a 10mm SPC core, a 22 mil premium-residential wear layer, and 60″ planks. Same neighborhood. Different home. Both are correct answers for different buyers.
The 22 mil wear layer is the spec that defines this tier. It is solidly premium-residential, meaningfully heavier than the 8 to 12 mil that defines mid-market vinyl, on par with most premium residential lines, and well-rated for pets, kids, rolling chairs, and high-traffic kitchens. The 9-inch plank width matches the Reserve tier. The 60-inch length is the easiest place to feel the difference from Reserve, but five feet per plank still reads closer to wide-board engineered hardwood than to standard vinyl.
Wayne Parc runs six considered colors: one honey, three blondes, and two warm-undertone grays. Below is every color in the collection, organized from warmest center out, with notes on what each plank actually looks like in a real room, the pairings it suits, and the kind of home it lives best in.
Gray · Wayne Parc
Andaz
Gray, done correctly - a warm-undertone mid-gray that still belongs in a current renovation.

Cool, blue-cast gray flooring is past its moment, but warm-gray - the kind with a touch of brown working through the grain - has aged well and still gets specified. Andaz lands squarely in that camp. It is a sophisticated mid-gray with real warmth in the undertone, the kind of plank that anchors a room without ever feeling cold or generic. Designers continue to use it because it does what gray was always supposed to do: ground a space and let saturated furniture, cabinetry, and art carry the color story above it.
Pairs especially well with charcoal and ink-blue cabinetry, warm-white walls, brass or burnished-nickel hardware, and saturated upholstery (deep greens, terracottas, rust). Avoid pure-white walls and cool-gray fabrics - Andaz wants some warmth on the surfaces above it.
Best For
Modern and contemporary interiors, transitional kitchens with dark cabinetry, and homes that want a gray floor with enough warmth to still look intentional five years from now.
Gray · Wayne Parc
Waldron
The grounded gray - a deeper, moodier plank that anchors a whole room.

Waldron runs a shade deeper and a touch moodier than Andaz. The base is still a warm gray, but the grain carries more chromatic depth - the kind of plank that pulls a room toward calm and restraint rather than brightness. In person, it reads as substantial. Waldron is the plank we recommend when a homeowner says they want gray but does not want the floor to feel safe or generic, and it is one of the colors that benefits most from the 9" plank width.
Pairs beautifully with deep-tone cabinetry (charcoal, forest green, navy), soft-white plaster walls, brass and oil-rubbed-bronze hardware, and natural-stone counters with strong veining. Also strong against creamy oat-tone upholstery and richly colored vintage rugs.
Best For
Moodier modern interiors, transitional primary suites, libraries and dens, and any room where the design direction leans toward depth and saturated color rather than light-and-airy.
Blonde · Wayne Parc
Elwood
A warm mid-blonde with real grain personality.

Elwood is the warm side of the blonde family, but with enough golden saturation in the grain to keep it from ever reading flat or sterile. The grain is medium-weight, which means the plank has real visual interest plank-to-plank without crossing into busy territory. It is the kind of blonde that looks like genuine white oak under morning light, and the kind of plank that gives a homeowner some room to layer warm-leaning palettes on top.
Pairs cleanly with warm-white and cream cabinetry, brass and bronze hardware, shaker millwork, traditional-leaning area rugs, and leathered-finish stone counters. Also strong against navy and forest-green cabinetry where the warmth of the floor balances the saturation above it.
Best For
Bedrooms, family rooms, and transitional whole-home installs where the homeowner wants the softness of a blonde but with more character in the grain. Reliable choice for Cape Cods, modern farmhouses, and Colonial-revival interiors.
Blonde · Wayne Parc
Mellshire
The most versatile blonde - a faint taupe undertone that pairs warm and cool with equal ease.

Mellshire is the floor for homeowners who want a blonde plank but cannot quite commit to a warm one. The base tone is light, but the grain carries a faint taupe cast that pulls it out of pure-yellow territory (which dates a kitchen fast) and out of pure-gray territory (which is on its way out everywhere). The result is one of the easiest planks to design around - it reads cleanly in every light and works under almost every cabinetry tone in current use.
Pairs comfortably with both warm and cool palettes - soft greige walls, off-white cabinetry, brushed-nickel or matte-black fixtures, natural-fiber rugs (jute, sisal, wool flatweaves), and lighter natural-wood furniture. The taupe undertone gives it more layering range than a purely warm or purely cool blonde.
Best For
Bedrooms, open-plan living, primary suites, and homes where the design direction is still evolving. Mellshire's neutrality gives a homeowner room to change paint, furniture, and decor over the years without the floor ever looking out of step.
Blonde · Wayne Parc
Bluffview
The quiet plank - a refined blonde that lets the rest of the room breathe.

Bluffview is the most restrained color in Wayne Parc, and that restraint is the entire point. The tone is a soft blonde with just enough warmth to keep it from reading cold or clinical, and the grain pattern stays gentle and even rather than busy. It is the kind of floor that recedes into the architecture so the cabinetry, the rugs, and the art can do their work without competing for attention. In rooms that already have a lot going on visually, Bluffview is the calmest place to start.
Pairs cleanly with painted-white millwork, natural-fiber rugs, soft-gray and warm-greige walls, and lighter natural-wood furniture. Avoid pairing with very-cool grays - Bluffview's quiet warmth makes cool tones look colder than they should.
Best For
Bedrooms, light-filled living rooms, modern-coastal interiors, and any space that needs a backdrop floor rather than a focal-point floor. Bluffview also brightens north-facing rooms without going sterile.
Honey · Wayne Parc
Macland
The warm honey oak - the floor that anchors a whole house.

Macland is the warmest, most-saturated plank in the Wayne Parc lineup - a true honey oak with golden depth in the grain rather than the flat orange that defined the worst of 1990s strip oak. It is the color most homeowners gravitate to first when a sample box hits the kitchen table, and it is the floor that most reliably reads as wood once it's installed at scale. The 9" width does a lot of the heavy lifting here, but it's the chromatic warmth that makes Macland feel substantial rather than safe.
Pairs naturally with off-white and cream cabinetry, warm-brass and unlacquered-brass hardware, quartzite or marble counters with golden veining, and the warm-neutral wall paints (Swiss Coffee, White Dove, soft greige) that are dominating current renovations. It also handles south-facing rooms beautifully - afternoon light brings out the honey without ever flattening it.
Best For
Open-plan kitchens, great rooms, and primary living spaces where the floor is meant to feel like the foundation of the whole home. Strong choice for Craftsman, transitional, and updated traditional interiors that want warmth without going dated.
The Spec That Defines Wayne Parc
Every color in the collection shares the same construction. Wayne Parc's mid-premium position comes down to four specifications.
Wear Layer
22 mil
Premium-residential. Well above the 8 to 12 mil that defines mid-market vinyl, and on par with most premium residential lines.
Core
10mm SPC
Stone-plastic composite rigid core. 100% waterproof, dimensionally stable, and rated for full residential use.
Plank Format
9″ × 60″
Wide-and-long planks, the same 9″ width as the Reserve tier, with a five-foot plank length that reads closer to wide-board engineered hardwood than to standard vinyl.
Install
Floating Click
Angle-tap click-lock SPC. No glue, no nails. Installs over most existing hard-surface floors with standard expansion gap and subfloor prep.
Wayne Parc FAQ
The questions homeowners ask when picking the right Wayne Parc tier.
What is the difference between Wayne Parc and Wayne Parc Reserve?
Wayne Parc and Wayne Parc Reserve share design DNA: the same color family naming conventions, the same MSI Everlife visual language, and the same neighborhood reference (the Wayne Parc area of Calabasas, California). Where they differ is spec tier. Wayne Parc runs a 10mm SPC core, a 22 mil wear layer, and 9″ × 60″ planks. Reserve steps up to a 12mm core, a 30 mil commercial-grade wear layer, and longer 9″ × 72″ planks with true embossed-in-register texture. Wayne Parc is the mid-premium, accessible-spec version of the design story; Reserve is the top-spec version.
Why is Wayne Parc considered mid-premium rather than top-spec?
Wayne Parc sits between MSI's value collections (like Cyrus 2.0) and the top-spec Wayne Parc Reserve. The 22 mil wear layer is solidly premium-residential, well above the 8 to 12 mil that defines mid-market vinyl and right in line with most premium residential lines, but it is one step below the 30 mil commercial-grade spec that defines the top of the range. The 9″ × 60″ plank format is also wide and long enough to read refined, but shorter than Reserve's 72″ planks. Wayne Parc is the right tier for homeowners who want the design without the top-tier premium.
What does the Wayne Parc name refer to?
Wayne Parc is a neighborhood in Calabasas, California, a refined Los Angeles County suburb known for understated luxury homes, mature landscaping, and the kind of California-traditional architecture that has aged well over time. MSI uses the name across both Wayne Parc and Wayne Parc Reserve to signal the same design intent: warm, considered, residential, and built to read like genuine engineered hardwood rather than budget vinyl. Same neighborhood, different home: Wayne Parc and Reserve share the visual language and differ on spec.
Is MSI Wayne Parc waterproof?
Yes. Wayne Parc is built on a 100% waterproof SPC (stone-plastic composite) rigid core, which means the plank itself will not absorb water, swell, or warp from spills, pet accidents, or routine kitchen and bathroom moisture. SPC vinyl is fully appropriate for kitchens, full bathrooms, mudrooms, basements, and any other room where moisture is a real consideration. Standing water for extended periods should still be cleaned up promptly, mainly to protect the subfloor underneath rather than the vinyl itself.
What is the wear layer on Wayne Parc?
22 mil. That is a solidly premium-residential wear layer - meaningfully heavier than the 8 - 12 mil that defines mid-market vinyl plank, and on par with most premium residential lines. The wear layer is the clear protective top film that handles abrasion, scratches, and traffic, so 22 mil is enough to comfortably take on pets, kids, rolling chairs, and high-traffic kitchens without scratching through to the design layer underneath.
How wide and long are Wayne Parc planks?
9" wide by 60" long, a full five feet per plank. Long-and-wide is one of the defining traits of premium vinyl in 2026, and Wayne Parc lands solidly in that category. The 9″ width matches the Reserve tier, and the 60″ length is meaningfully longer than the 36″ or 48″ planks common on standard premium vinyl. The result is fewer visible seams per room and an installed floor that reads closer to wide-board engineered hardwood than to standard vinyl.
What is the install method on Wayne Parc?
Wayne Parc is a floating click-lock SPC installation. Planks lock together edge-to-edge using an angle-tap click system, with no glue or nails required. Because SPC is dimensionally stable and waterproof, Wayne Parc can be installed over most existing hard-surface floors (sealed concrete, ceramic tile, existing vinyl) as long as the subfloor is clean, flat, and structurally sound. Carpet has to come up first. Standard expansion gap and underlayment guidance applies - always check the full MSI install instructions for subfloor flatness specs before starting.
When should I Parc to Wayne Parc Reserve?
Step up to Reserve when the home is genuinely going to see commercial-level traffic, the homeowner specifically wants the longest planks available (72″ instead of 60″), or the install needs the heaviest available residential wear layer (30 mil instead of 22 mil). Reserve also runs true embossed-in-register texture, which means the surface grain physically lines up with the print and the floor reads more convincingly as engineered hardwood under close inspection. For most premium residential renovations, Wayne Parc is the right tier. Reserve is for the projects that want the top-spec build on top of the same design language.
Order Your Samples
Samples are a smart first step on any flooring project. Order Wayne Parc samples for a flat $9.99 shipping fee (up to 10 per order), and full flooring orders over $1,999 ship free to your home.






