Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I love the materials you posted. But I do think wood is great too. Get it if you would love it.
We have had soapstone for 3 years now and haven't had the issues like PP posted. We don't mind a little "patina" though. But no major discoloring like the photos above. We did a craftsman style kitchen in our 1920s bungalow. Oak cabinets and all.
OP here: do you have a picture of your craftsman style kitchen?
Anonymous wrote:OP again, I found some stones that I think (but not convinced yet) look less dated. White and black quartz (the most pure versions) and black soapstone (version with the least amount of dots/grey, mostly black with one streak of white here and there.
Soapstone:
http://www.houzz.com/photos/879768/Saratoga-Soapstone-shabby-chic-traditional-kitchen-countertops-indianapolis
http://www.charlottecounters.com/products/soapstone/
http://eurostonecraft.com/portfolio/soapstone-kitchen-designs
White Quartz:
http://interiordesign.country/natural-white-quartz-kitchen-countertop-materials-396/white-quartz-kitchen-countertop-978/
http://blog.cliqstudios.com/quartz-new-kitchen-countertop-trend/ (the cut is a bit bathroomy though?)
http://www.newenglandgranite.net/?attachment_id=980 (more grey/closer to granit look in a way)
Or black quartz
http://fittedkitchendesign.com/black-quartz-kitchen-countertops/
http://goumin.co/black-quartz-countertops/black-quartz-countertops-with-white-kitchen-cabinets-with-black-quartz-countertops-striped-roman-on-other/
Anonymous wrote:For those of you worried about bacteria in wooden countertops, read this:
http://faculty.vetmed.ucdavis.edu/faculty/docliver/Research/cuttingboard.htm
It it a scientific study of bacteria retention in wood vs. plastic cutting boards, not wood vs. stone countertops, but they conclude that bacteria are much less likely to adhere to wood surfaces than the supposedly non-porous plastic.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I love the materials you posted. But I do think wood is great too. Get it if you would love it.
We have had soapstone for 3 years now and haven't had the issues like PP posted. We don't mind a little "patina" though. But no major discoloring like the photos above. We did a craftsman style kitchen in our 1920s bungalow. Oak cabinets and all.
? Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again, I found some stones that I think (but not convinced yet) look less dated. White and black quartz (the most pure versions) and black soapstone (version with the least amount of dots/grey, mostly black with one streak of white here and there.
Soapstone:
http://www.houzz.com/photos/879768/Saratoga-Soapstone-shabby-chic-traditional-kitchen-countertops-indianapolis
http://www.charlottecounters.com/products/soapstone/
http://eurostonecraft.com/portfolio/soapstone-kitchen-designs
White Quartz:
http://interiordesign.country/natural-white-quartz-kitchen-countertop-materials-396/white-quartz-kitchen-countertop-978/
http://blog.cliqstudios.com/quartz-new-kitchen-countertop-trend/ (the cut is a bit bathroomy though?)
http://www.newenglandgranite.net/?attachment_id=980 (more grey/closer to granit look in a way)
Or black quartz
http://fittedkitchendesign.com/black-quartz-kitchen-countertops/
http://goumin.co/black-quartz-countertops/black-quartz-countertops-with-white-kitchen-cabinets-with-black-quartz-countertops-striped-roman-on-other/
Forget soapstone, get quartz or granite.
Not a fan of soapstone, this person oiled it and it still stained and got marks everywhere.
http://ths.gardenweb.com/discussions/2683491/life-with-soapstone-patina-pictures-galore
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are those your countertops? Just to know if you feel like you spend the time on maintenance and it really didn't work out anyway or you are not 100% sure that the person owning the countretops treated them properly?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh - don't get granite. So ugly and dated. Unless maybe you do honed black...
soapstone
marble
quartzite
But use butcher block on an island or small section.
Sorry granite is not dated, patterns are dated but it is always an option, it's a material not a syle. Skip marble and soapstone BTDT terrible wear and tear, maintenance and looks like crap after a year. Get a quartize (silestone) or granite.
lol - please post one granite - aside from absolute black - that doesn't look dated
Anonymous wrote:OP again, I found some stones that I think (but not convinced yet) look less dated. White and black quartz (the most pure versions) and black soapstone (version with the least amount of dots/grey, mostly black with one streak of white here and there.
Soapstone:
http://www.houzz.com/photos/879768/Saratoga-Soapstone-shabby-chic-traditional-kitchen-countertops-indianapolis
http://www.charlottecounters.com/products/soapstone/
http://eurostonecraft.com/portfolio/soapstone-kitchen-designs
White Quartz:
http://interiordesign.country/natural-white-quartz-kitchen-countertop-materials-396/white-quartz-kitchen-countertop-978/
http://blog.cliqstudios.com/quartz-new-kitchen-countertop-trend/ (the cut is a bit bathroomy though?)
http://www.newenglandgranite.net/?attachment_id=980 (more grey/closer to granit look in a way)
Or black quartz
http://fittedkitchendesign.com/black-quartz-kitchen-countertops/
http://goumin.co/black-quartz-countertops/black-quartz-countertops-with-white-kitchen-cabinets-with-black-quartz-countertops-striped-roman-on-other/

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would love them, but I know I'm a minority. Can you do soapstone instead?
Soapstone is the most beautiful -- very understated colors verde gris, grey, black tones -- that's it. Extremely tasteful, unobtrusive, not flashy at all.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, again thanks everyone for the thoughtful replies. I've looked into all the options suggested (only on a style perspective for the moment not practicality), the black soapstone looks interesting it seems like it could work as a rustic look. Also saw some White Quartz that looked good. Both stones didn't give me the same 90s/early 00s impersonal condo feel as granite does (no clue why but the granite countertops I have seen for the moment convey a dated depressing era to me).
If anybody has an image of a granite or other stone countertop that doesn't have that classic granite grain/look I am very interested...