Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're going with quartzite! Natural stone but more durable than marble.
What would you choose and why?
Careful as lots of quartzite is not labeled correctly and is pretty soft and not much different than marble.
Anonymous wrote:OP here! For the quartzite posters, how do you know if a particular slab is soft or harder? We went to Gramaco in Maryland. The quartzite was all tagged as quartzite but there was no distinction that we saw between the slabs. The marble was all in a different section and differently tagged. Gosh the marble is beautiful, but I had to walk away from it for the kitchen!
The quartzite we selected is Blanco Superiore. It is from Brazil.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am getting soapstone because i've always wanted it, but the designer is totally against it. He wants me to do marble-look quartz. This is the same quartz every flipped house gets and I am sick of looking at it.
You are right and your designer is wrong.
Quartz is awful.
Anonymous wrote:In terms of current look -- any granite is out. Quartz is in. Soapstone is great but had durability issues.
Anonymous wrote:Granite would be okay for countertops if you don't mind sealing them every year. But I would never do granite for multipurpose island. I hate the granite's icy coldness on my arms when working with laptop.
Anonymous wrote:In terms of current look -- any granite is out. Quartz is in. Soapstone is great but had durability issues.
Anonymous wrote:I am getting soapstone because i've always wanted it, but the designer is totally against it. He wants me to do marble-look quartz. This is the same quartz every flipped house gets and I am sick of looking at it.