Anonymous wrote:That color is too much of a cool tone for a warmer cabinet color like honey maple. It will feel disjointed. Either pick a warmer tones countertop or paint or stain the cabinets a cooler tone
Anonymous wrote:Fantasy Brown does etch. Mine did. You can't seal quartzite.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is so much misinformation about this quartzite. It is quartzite btw. It's in the same family as Fantasy Brown and others with similar names.
For people who are unfamiliar, quartzite is not quartz.
It DOES etch. Marble etches can be repaired. From what I was told quartzite etches can't be repaired. It is porous like marble and will crack and chip more easily than granite. I installed it in my master bath and had some etching in the 4 years we had it. I would never put it in my kitchen but see lots of people doing that when I look online.
Oh no! I’m bummed to hear this. We are not tidy cooks. I haven’t seen much else that doesn’t have the typical mottled look granite has, includes the gray-and-tans I’m looking for, and goes well with our cabinets. What were the main things that caused etching?
Anonymous wrote:The stone is nice, but no matter what you put on those counters, the kitchen will look like garbage with those hideous honey maple cabinets. No way around that. Complete waste of money. It's like putting leather seats in an old Kia Sephia.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is so much misinformation about this quartzite. It is quartzite btw. It's in the same family as Fantasy Brown and others with similar names.
For people who are unfamiliar, quartzite is not quartz.
It DOES etch. Marble etches can be repaired. From what I was told quartzite etches can't be repaired. It is porous like marble and will crack and chip more easily than granite. I installed it in my master bath and had some etching in the 4 years we had it. I would never put it in my kitchen but see lots of people doing that when I look online.
Oh no! I’m bummed to hear this. We are not tidy cooks. I haven’t seen much else that doesn’t have the typical mottled look granite has, includes the gray-and-tans I’m looking for, and goes well with our cabinets. What were the main things that caused etching?
Anonymous wrote:There is so much misinformation about this quartzite. It is quartzite btw. It's in the same family as Fantasy Brown and others with similar names.
For people who are unfamiliar, quartzite is not quartz.
It DOES etch. Marble etches can be repaired. From what I was told quartzite etches can't be repaired. It is porous like marble and will crack and chip more easily than granite. I installed it in my master bath and had some etching in the 4 years we had it. I would never put it in my kitchen but see lots of people doing that when I look online.