Love it! |
| 09:58 that's the one I have which I don't like, but I feel it's too wasteful to rip it out. I think mine has a bigger grain pattern. I have minimized it in the kitchen by painting the cabinets white, putting in a white tile backsplash, and then painting all the walls a chocolate brown so that the pattern blends in more than pops out. The previous owner had picked the salmon color out of the pattern and painted the whole kitchen salmon pink. It was hideous. Kitchen looks much better now. |
I tried all that. Then one day, it all had to go. The whole kitchen had to go. It was one of those put in granite to sell the house things. Now its put in a new kitchen to sell the house
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The uniquness and work to get the granite makes it appealing. I love the fact that my counter tops are unique and took a lot of work to be put in my kitchen from across the globe. It has it's own story. If you want to be eco friendly pitch a dirt tent out in a field blah to you. |
| I like that my granite is not plastic with a patent (Corian), or resin mixed with marble chips and a patent (silestone). |
| I thought granite was dated when I redid my kitchen in 2006, but in the end, i put in honed black granite, the cheapest granite (can't remember the name of it). it looks like soapstone, but without the maintenance. i smear it with mineral oil every once in a while to get rid of that "dry" look, but that's all for maintenance. when we move i'm going to try for wood countertops from ikea. they are cheap and good looking. i think granite is wasteful, and i would not put it in again. but six years ago, i was young and impressionable!! |
Yes, this is my impression as well. Some granite looks timeless, especially black or green ones with discrete flecks or marbling. They tend to look a lot like marble. |