Anonymous wrote:We bought a house that had been updated (just put in some granite!) with a wild and ugly pattern. They told us that removing it would break the cabinets. We renovated the whole kitchen with another shade of granite (white) LOVE how low maintenance it is, but understand granite pattern hatred.
Anonymous wrote:The problem with granite is that it is now standard in almost all new construction so us poors who have to live way out in rural commuter hell have this in our house. It is no longer cool so now the Richie riches have to update to something more expensive to stay one step ahead of us poors.
No. Most granite is tacky and dated, marble is beautiful and timeless... But perhaps more impractical.
I think that is hilarious because my grandmother's home had all marble countertops which she was told was "dated" and "very obviously Italian" (not even sure what this means, but we are Italian FWIW) when she went to sell a few years ago.
Anonymous wrote:My granite was stained by a professional, but it is really risky as it is difficult to predict the final product. Also, I was going from a light color to dark.
Going from granite to marble makes absolutely no sense at all. They are basically the same thing, although one is more porous (marble) than the other.
OP, I would think twice before putting marble in your entire kitchen. While it is great for baking, usually it is only a small section of a counter or an overlay.
If you are a kid-free house, don't drink red wine and rarely cook, then it might be great.
No. Most granite is tacky and dated, marble is beautiful and timeless... But perhaps more impractical.
Anonymous wrote:My granite was stained by a professional, but it is really risky as it is difficult to predict the final product. Also, I was going from a light color to dark.
Going from granite to marble makes absolutely no sense at all. They are basically the same thing, although one is more porous (marble) than the other.
OP, I would think twice before putting marble in your entire kitchen. While it is great for baking, usually it is only a small section of a counter or an overlay.
If you are a kid-free house, don't drink red wine and rarely cook, then it might be great.
No. Most granite is tacky and dated, marble is beautiful and timeless... But perhaps more impractical.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We actually passed on a few houses with ugly, cheap basic granite for this reason. We didn't want to have to toss out granite. We finally found our home with formica and gutted it to our heart's content!
So the granite is cheap and you wouldn't toss it out? WTF.
No. And I know quite a few people that feel that way. My DH would have made us live with it, even though both of us hated it. I know him.
We ended up with exotic granite that's gorgeous. People think it's marble, but it's granite and cleans up perfectly.
Anonymous wrote:My granite was stained by a professional, but it is really risky as it is difficult to predict the final product. Also, I was going from a light color to dark.
Going from granite to marble makes absolutely no sense at all. They are basically the same thing, although one is more porous (marble) than the other.
OP, I would think twice before putting marble in your entire kitchen. While it is great for baking, usually it is only a small section of a counter or an overlay.
If you are a kid-free house, don't drink red wine and rarely cook, then it might be great.
No. Most granite is tacky and dated, marble is beautiful and timeless... But perhaps more impractical.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We actually passed on a few houses with ugly, cheap basic granite for this reason. We didn't want to have to toss out granite. We finally found our home with formica and gutted it to our heart's content!
So the granite is cheap and you wouldn't toss it out? WTF.
Anonymous wrote:We actually passed on a few houses with ugly, cheap basic granite for this reason. We didn't want to have to toss out granite. We finally found our home with formica and gutted it to our heart's content!