Sometimes I get a bit paralyzed between wanting our boat to look perfect (like it did the day it was new), vs. making improvements which look tidy and nice and yet utilitarian. As I look at more and more boat blogs (and your thread qualifies as one), I think I'm leaning more towards well done, utilitarian, but not necessarily glitzy improvements. In other words, I like the way your new floor looks! It's got LVT instead of teak and holly (boats get wet), it's got visible screws (because they make sense), and it's got nicely recessed polished hinges and pull tabs. It's not like a new Swan or a Hinkley. But it makes sense and looks good. Of course, most of what you've done in your refit doesn't qualify for the word "utilitarian": it's just plain fancy. So I'm talking myself into a corner here, but I hope you know what I mean.
Here's something I did last Fall that I wasn't too sure about, when I replaced our old chart plotter:
View attachment 205222
At first, I thought: well, there's these exposed stainless screws, and I had to put in a backing plate to cover the hole. But what the heck: it's a boat, and it looks pretty good! Not perfect, but nice.
I should probably stop here. Please take my comments in the spirit in which they were intended. Your boat looks great, and I wish I had half your skill.