Jump to content
Find Professionals    Deals    Get Quotations   Portfolios
Sign in to follow this  
sgdstuff

Kitchen Table Tops - What Material Is Best?

Recommended Posts


Join 46,923 satisfied homeowners who used renotalk quotation service to find interior designers. Get an estimated quotation

Hi all,

Granite is a naturally formed stone, therefore, to be used as a worktop especially in the kitchen it should be coated with a sealant every year to protect the porosity barrier.

Natural stone needs a bit more maintenance.

As for solid surface, all the whites will actually yellow over time, whether it's top end Corian or low-end brands. As for blacks, carpenters always advise not to take solid black as the scratches and marks will show up very clearly; better to take the ones with aggregates in them to 'mask' the imperfection.

For the sake of my pocket, I will be considering solid surface.

 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Oh, as for Caesarstone, this is actually a compressed quartz.

You can get compressed quartz below $200 at rice-fields; better to go to their showroom.

Solid surface - better to get Corian, Cresto, Samsung etc... some other brands are really cheap but because there is more polyester than acrylic in them.

Hope this helps.

 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I intend to do granite for my home because we do a lot of cooking and baking and solid surface isn't exactly very heat resistent. Got a quote for $110/ft run for black galaxy which I think is a very good price. Quartz is way out of budget.

 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I am looking for kitchen table tops for my new house.

Came across "Stone Italiana" when watching Channel 8.

The owner used it for 10 years and his wife cut ingredients on the table top itself.

and it's scratch proof. still look pretty white.

Have anyone use this and any comments or thoughts?

I am looking for pure white kitchen tops :P

 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I have just resawn and planed some solid cherry for a new kitchen table top.

I, too, plan on breadboard ends.

I’m making it 5/8” thick to save on some weight.

Fortunately I have access to a 36” sander. But you might try a local cabinet shop. Sometimes if pays to pay a little money to get the job done right. And you might find another source of inexpensive lumber. Or a kindred soul.

 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
i would suggest to go for plywood postform. cheap and good and wider choices. and its scratch resistance.

this is the most understated. but contractor don recommend any more because not must money to make from it.

 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

As my co and myself prefer light coloured top, we ops for caesarstone.

While we have yet to officially move in, I see that the caesarstone top is not as shiny smooth as solid surface top.

 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

For long-term usage, granite or quartz is best.

Solid surface, no matter what brand, they are still the same - acrylic or polyester are still the same.

For Granite, best is India Granite, choose the better quality like Blue Pearl or Emerald Pearl.

I am thinking to do Blue Pearl for my living room flooring, but cost more than marble.

I think you could see luster or spark effect if you had spotlight on Blue Pearl, Emerald Pearl & selected Quartz color kitchen top.

Edited by gurustyle
 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
For long-term usage, granite or quartz is best.

Solid surface, no matter what brand, they are still the same - acrylic or polyester are still the same.

For Granite, best is India Granite, choose the better quality like Blue Pearl or Emerald Pearl.

I am thinking to do Blue Pearl for my living room flooring, but cost more than marble.

I think you could see luster or spark effect if you had spotlight on Blue Pearl, Emerald Pearl & selected Quartz color kitchen top.

do you know how much india granite sells for?

 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
I have just resawn and planed some solid cherry for a new kitchen table top.

I, too, plan on breadboard ends.

I’m making it 5/8” thick to save on some weight.

Fortunately I have access to a 36” sander. But you might try a local cabinet shop. Sometimes if pays to pay a little money to get the job done right. And you might find another source of inexpensive lumber. Or a kindred soul.

Hi Chanel26,

How's yr solid cherry tabletop? Care to post some photos?

I completed my reno and installed my kitchen worktop abt 3 yrs ago. I chose an acrylic worktop:

DSC_7934.jpg

If I have to do it again, I probably won't choose acrylic, esp not from the subcon or factory my ID got the worktop from.

Who's the supplier? Well, find out from my blog. Posting the name now 3 yrs later could be misconstrued as 'intentional' defamatory. But not if it was posted at the time my ID/Contractor did the reno. Also, I blogged about my worktop installation, how to choose and maintain work-tops (e.g. granite, Silestone, Corian, etc) and lessons learnt.

I think if I have to re-do my kitchen worktop again I will probably go for solid cherry or beech available from Ikea. Or solid glass top. Which unfortunately is still not available locally but is very popular in the US. So knowing how your cherry top turned out will be very interesting for me.

I can still live with my acrylic worktop for now. But in future if I get the itch I may redo the worktop again, as I ensured at the time my worktop was installed that it could easily be replaced in future - just lift up in one whole piece from the kitchen cabinet base and replace with a new worktop cut-to-measure!! That was an idea to rectify my choice "just-in-case". In retrospect turns out to be good foresight! :P

Single solid acrylic worktop piece measured to fit exactly my counter-top

DSC_7835.jpg

Edited by BlueFly
 

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
Sign in to follow this  

×