Blogs

Which stone is best for a countertop?
Discover which stone is best for your countertop — quartz, granite, quartzite, marble or porcelain. Compare durability, cost, maintenance, trends & safety.

What is the highest quality countertop?
Discover the highest quality countertops: sintered surfaces, premium quartz, quartzite and more. Compare durability, maintenance, luxury, and regulatory trends that affect selection and pricing.

How much would a labradorite countertop cost?
Labradorite countertop pricing explained: realistic material and installed ranges, buying & sourcing tips, durability, and regulatory trends that affect fabrication costs and availability.

How expensive is a labradorite countertop?
Explore labradorite countertop price ranges, slab vs installed costs, durability, sourcing tips, and how new silica regulations affect fabrication and pricing.

What is labradorite countertop?
Learn what a labradorite countertop is, real slab & installed price ranges, durability and care, where to buy slabs, fabrication rules and backlit design tips.

Countertop how to install?
Complete guide: how to install countertops on base cabinets, walls, or freestanding islands — laminate, butcher-block, granite, quartz. Costs, time, safety & pro tips.

Can granite countertop be cut after installed
Can granite countertops be cut after installation? Learn safe methods, tools (wet + diamond blades), OSHA/NIOSH silica controls, costs, warranties, and when to hire pros.

Can granite countertop be painted?
Can granite countertops be painted? Learn which paints and kits work, step-by-step prep, pros/cons, costs, regulations, and whether DIY or pro resurfacing is right.

Can quartz countertop be repaired?
Can quartz countertops be repaired? Learn when chips, cracks or edge damage can be fixed with epoxy or must be replaced, plus cost ranges, regulations, and pro tips.

How Much Should a Countertop Overhang?
How much should a countertop overhang? Learn safe, code-aware overhang rules for cabinets, islands and bars (1–1.5″ lip, 12–15″ seating, 1/3 depth/15″ limit), supports & specs.

What Is the Green Marble Called?
Learn what the green marble is called — Connemara (Irish green), Kolmården, Verde Alpi and trade Verdes. How to verify origin, buy from wholesalers and comply with safety/EPD rules.
