
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Corian. It just works. Fight me.
đź’Ż agree. My parents have it and after 25 years it looks great.
Really???
Our house has it and I hate it. Not for style reasons, but because it seems hard to keep really clean. Lots of smudges and scuffs that won’t really come out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're going with quartzite! Natural stone but more durable than marble.
What would you choose and why?
Is anyone looking at porcelain?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Corian. It just works. Fight me.
đź’Ż agree. My parents have it and after 25 years it looks great.
+2Anonymous wrote:If I didn't care about resale, laminate--ours has held up so well and it's quite affordable. I also like stainless steel or recycled aluminum for that reason.
We'll probably do eco by consentino because it looks a little more modern and it's made from recycled materials. Or maybe Paperstone.
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:I am going with heavy duty, commercial kitchen grade, stainless steel for all of my side counters and working spaces. My sister did it and it is incredible. It looks great and is so functional. It is super easy to keep clean and you cannot damage it. She kept her island in the granite that she loves, and I will do the same thing.
Anonymous wrote:We're going with quartzite! Natural stone but more durable than marble.
What would you choose and why?
Anonymous wrote:Corian. It just works. Fight me.
Anonymous wrote:Dark gray, almost black granite, matte not shiny. Looks like soapstone but none of the issues of soapstone.
Anonymous wrote: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.
I've been reading Houzz and quartzite can be a nightmare. It's all mislabeled and a lot of it is marble I think? Anyway, I would read the forums there because they suggest testing a piece of the quartzite.