Countertops that are not quartz, marble, quartzite, wood, or stainless steel

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Team granite, plenty of lighter options. Go to the granite yard and you'll see. Ours is 20+ years old and still looks great



I was going to go quartz until now. Can you recommend a granite place around DC area?
Anonymous
I faced the same exact dilemma and ended up with Corian. Which is plastic but at least it's not actively killing the people who make it. Also: no seams!
Anonymous
Is Corian and Formica the same thing and does Home Depot install?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Team granite, plenty of lighter options. Go to the granite yard and you'll see. Ours is 20+ years old and still looks great



I was going to go quartz until now. Can you recommend a granite place around DC area?


Look on first page of thread. East West Marble in Chantilly. Cosmos right across street.
Anonymous
Tile
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Tile


For a countertop? Pass.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Is Corian and Formica the same thing and does Home Depot install?


Different items. Similar but they are different.

https://nicerabode.com/corian-vs-formica/
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Team granite, plenty of lighter options. Go to the granite yard and you'll see. Ours is 20+ years old and still looks great



I was going to go quartz until now. Can you recommend a granite place around DC area?


Look on first page of thread. East West Marble in Chantilly. Cosmos right across street.


We went to Cosmos recently. It is inside a warehouse and has lots of variety. Several rows of granite slabs, also some marble or quartzite. Be sure to tell them you specifically want to look at granite. We did not happen to go to East West, mainly because we found what we wanted at Cosmos. Both happen to be on Stonecroft Blvd, just north of US-50, in Chantilly. It is just a bit west of the VA-28/US-50 interchange. Not hard to find. They supply slabs to many different stone fabricators.
Anonymous
Home Depot has many light granite countertop colors. I just verified this online. An example color visible online is "Pitaya White". HD also will sell small granite samples for the many granite countertops they carry.
Anonymous
Concrete has a super high carbon footprint
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised you don’t like quartzite. It’s beautiful and a natural stone, yet extremely durable. Is it too expensive? Is there an ethical issue? Ours looks like new 5 years in. No cracks, stains or etching. I’d do it again.


Everything I learned when replacing countertops a few years ago is that quartzite has all the weakness of marble and cant be repaired. It etches and it can't be buffed out. It will crack and shatter. The video above mislabels some of those surfaces as granite when they are quartzite.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised you don’t like quartzite. It’s beautiful and a natural stone, yet extremely durable. Is it too expensive? Is there an ethical issue? Ours looks like new 5 years in. No cracks, stains or etching. I’d do it again.


Everything I learned when replacing countertops a few years ago is that quartzite has all the weakness of marble and cant be repaired. It etches and it can't be buffed out. It will crack and shatter. The video above mislabels some of those surfaces as granite when they are quartzite.


If you learned about countertops from anyone in the countertop industry, my experience is that they are mostly very ill-informed and do not even understand how quartzite, granite, and marble were formed. Marble and dolomite are formed from limestone, which is mostly made from the shells of scallops and other creatures, which contain a lot of calcium carbonate. Marble etches because the calcium carbonate dissolves when contacted by a strong acid. Dolomite etches because it is basically the same thing as marble except there was magnesium rich water around when the limestone was compressed, causing a lot of magnesium carbonate, which also dissolved when in contact with with a strong acid. Picture yourself squeezing a lemon slice over a tums tablet.

Quartzite doesn’t etch. It’s made from sandstone that has been compressed over millennia, and consists mostly of quartz. Quartz is another name for silicon dioxide, and unfortunately has the same name as the synthetic resin and ground up quartz product that also goes by Cambria, etc. Silicon dioxide is a very tough material, resistant to chemicals, high melting point, and is resistant to almost all strong acids and bases except HF acid (the one they used in breaking bad). Picture yourself squeezing a lemon slice over some sand.

Some quartzites are problematic because they are closer to the sandstone end of the spectrum, so they are very porous (mont Blanc) and will stain unless sealed assiduously. Some are brittle and will chip along fissures because they are closer to the pure quartz end of the spectrum (crystallo). I have one that is somewhere in the middle. No stains, no fissures, no chipping, and no etching. Red wine, lemon slices, blackberries can be left overnight on the counter with no stains.

Granites are made from magma, which is also made in a large part by quartz, which is why it is so tough. Most granites are not very porous, but the lighter granites can be somewhat porous, requiring sealing. Like quartzite, they contain no calcium carbonate or magnesium carbonate, so they do not etch.

Choose wisely and test. Quartzites are not all the same. The porous ones are more likely to stain, but will not have fissure issues. The crystalline ones won’t stain, but can be brittle.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised you don’t like quartzite. It’s beautiful and a natural stone, yet extremely durable. Is it too expensive? Is there an ethical issue? Ours looks like new 5 years in. No cracks, stains or etching. I’d do it again.


Everything I learned when replacing countertops a few years ago is that quartzite has all the weakness of marble and cant be repaired. It etches and it can't be buffed out. It will crack and shatter. The video above mislabels some of those surfaces as granite when they are quartzite.


If you learned about countertops from anyone in the countertop industry, my experience is that they are mostly very ill-informed and do not even understand how quartzite, granite, and marble were formed. Marble and dolomite are formed from limestone, which is mostly made from the shells of scallops and other creatures, which contain a lot of calcium carbonate. Marble etches because the calcium carbonate dissolves when contacted by a strong acid. Dolomite etches because it is basically the same thing as marble except there was magnesium rich water around when the limestone was compressed, causing a lot of magnesium carbonate, which also dissolved when in contact with with a strong acid. Picture yourself squeezing a lemon slice over a tums tablet.

Quartzite doesn’t etch. It’s made from sandstone that has been compressed over millennia, and consists mostly of quartz. Quartz is another name for silicon dioxide, and unfortunately has the same name as the synthetic resin and ground up quartz product that also goes by Cambria, etc. Silicon dioxide is a very tough material, resistant to chemicals, high melting point, and is resistant to almost all strong acids and bases except HF acid (the one they used in breaking bad). Picture yourself squeezing a lemon slice over some sand.

Some quartzites are problematic because they are closer to the sandstone end of the spectrum, so they are very porous (mont Blanc) and will stain unless sealed assiduously. Some are brittle and will chip along fissures because they are closer to the pure quartz end of the spectrum (crystallo). I have one that is somewhere in the middle. No stains, no fissures, no chipping, and no etching. Red wine, lemon slices, blackberries can be left overnight on the counter with no stains.

Granites are made from magma, which is also made in a large part by quartz, which is why it is so tough. Most granites are not very porous, but the lighter granites can be somewhat porous, requiring sealing. Like quartzite, they contain no calcium carbonate or magnesium carbonate, so they do not etch.

Choose wisely and test. Quartzites are not all the same. The porous ones are more likely to stain, but will not have fissure issues. The crystalline ones won’t stain, but can be brittle.


amazing
Anonymous
Granite is the most practical countertop in my opinion.
Check out African Rainbow

https://www.msisurfaces.com/granite/african-rainbow/
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m surprised you don’t like quartzite. It’s beautiful and a natural stone, yet extremely durable. Is it too expensive? Is there an ethical issue? Ours looks like new 5 years in. No cracks, stains or etching. I’d do it again.


Everything I learned when replacing countertops a few years ago is that quartzite has all the weakness of marble and cant be repaired. It etches and it can't be buffed out. It will crack and shatter. The video above mislabels some of those surfaces as granite when they are quartzite.


If you learned about countertops from anyone in the countertop industry, my experience is that they are mostly very ill-informed and do not even understand how quartzite, granite, and marble were formed. Marble and dolomite are formed from limestone, which is mostly made from the shells of scallops and other creatures, which contain a lot of calcium carbonate. Marble etches because the calcium carbonate dissolves when contacted by a strong acid. Dolomite etches because it is basically the same thing as marble except there was magnesium rich water around when the limestone was compressed, causing a lot of magnesium carbonate, which also dissolved when in contact with with a strong acid. Picture yourself squeezing a lemon slice over a tums tablet.

Quartzite doesn’t etch. It’s made from sandstone that has been compressed over millennia, and consists mostly of quartz. Quartz is another name for silicon dioxide, and unfortunately has the same name as the synthetic resin and ground up quartz product that also goes by Cambria, etc. Silicon dioxide is a very tough material, resistant to chemicals, high melting point, and is resistant to almost all strong acids and bases except HF acid (the one they used in breaking bad). Picture yourself squeezing a lemon slice over some sand.

Some quartzites are problematic because they are closer to the sandstone end of the spectrum, so they are very porous (mont Blanc) and will stain unless sealed assiduously. Some are brittle and will chip along fissures because they are closer to the pure quartz end of the spectrum (crystallo). I have one that is somewhere in the middle. No stains, no fissures, no chipping, and no etching. Red wine, lemon slices, blackberries can be left overnight on the counter with no stains.

Granites are made from magma, which is also made in a large part by quartz, which is why it is so tough. Most granites are not very porous, but the lighter granites can be somewhat porous, requiring sealing. Like quartzite, they contain no calcium carbonate or magnesium carbonate, so they do not etch.

Choose wisely and test. Quartzites are not all the same. The porous ones are more likely to stain, but will not have fissure issues. The crystalline ones won’t stain, but can be brittle.


PP. And don’t let the countertop sales person tell you that since granite/quartz/quartzite is so hard, it won’t stain. A material’s tendency to stain depends on porosity, not hardness. Unsealed concrete and unglazed tile is as hard as sealed concrete and glazed tile, but stains more easily. Saran wrap isn’t hard, but stains less easily than a piece of wood.

Sorry to rant, but I got so frustrated with sales people who couldn’t bring themselves to admit that some stones can stain.
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