Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Big fan of Ceasarstone and it can sometimes mimick a natural stone:
Anonymous wrote:Be very careful of hones surfaces, they show every cup mark, water stain, etc.
Granite is fairly timeless, it isn't trendy now but will hold up. The solid surfaces (caeserstone, silestone, etc.) are awesome - hard as granite, no maintenance - but are not going to be trendy picks either.
Soapstone is certainly trendy and is beautiful. It is more maintenance, and like concrete (which I personally love) will eventually go "out" of style.
Bottom line is, it's your forever house, get what you want. And feel free to mix materials - soapstone for main counters and thick teak or butcher block for another surface.

Anonymous wrote:We are re-doing our kitchen (full scale overhaul and reno) in our forever home. I am reading everywhere and seeing everywhere that the hot new stone for kitchen is quartzite or something man-made (concrete or ceasarstone). Neither of these appeal to me, we live in a farmhouse (that's actually a farmhouse from the early 1900's) and we want something classic. Quartzite seems too soft, along with marble, and anything man-made seems too modern. While I agree with a lot of designers that certain types of granite are dated, the durability of granite seems to be the best choice (we'd most likely go with honed black). If you were not concerned with immediate resale value-what surface would you go with?
Anonymous wrote:Big fan of Ceasarstone and it can sometimes mimick a natural stone:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This debate is exactly why we skipped the granite and went for something non-porous. Granite is just too high-maintenance.
soapstone is porous, what did you pick, quartz?
Soapstone is non-porous. Why do you think they use it in biology and chemistry labs? We strongly considered both but ultimately went with quartz because we wanted a lighter color.
http://granite-tops.liveeditaurora.com/pages/soapstone
But soapstone scratches easily and gets water marks, see the pictures upthread. There is always a trade off.
And granite stains and scorches. See other pictures upthread.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This debate is exactly why we skipped the granite and went for something non-porous. Granite is just too high-maintenance.
soapstone is porous, what did you pick, quartz?
Soapstone is non-porous. Why do you think they use it in biology and chemistry labs? We strongly considered both but ultimately went with quartz because we wanted a lighter color.
http://granite-tops.liveeditaurora.com/pages/soapstone
But soapstone scratches easily and gets water marks, see the pictures upthread. There is always a trade off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This debate is exactly why we skipped the granite and went for something non-porous. Granite is just too high-maintenance.
soapstone is porous, what did you pick, quartz?
Soapstone is non-porous. Why do you think they use it in biology and chemistry labs? We strongly considered both but ultimately went with quartz because we wanted a lighter color.
http://granite-tops.liveeditaurora.com/pages/soapstone
