MAKmom said:
DH says Corian is for familys who use the kitchen. Granite is for grown-ups that eat out alot. It look wonderfuls but is unforgiving. It needs to be sealed every year or so & if you knock a glass over its going to break. But if your not eating at an island like we do I would go for it.
THere is another thread from 2 weeks ago about this.
I don't think so...
I don't know of too many countertops that let you take a hot pan and set it down directly on top of it, nor do I know of any others that let you cut with sharp knives directly on top of it - without developing issues.
If what you're saying is true, then I really screwed up when I was cooking last night! Having the ability to be rough on my counters, was one of the biggest selling points of granite. And no, a granite fabricator didn't tell me that was true, I researched it myself.
While I wouldn't take a hammer to it (or to Corian for that matter), I stand on my counters (when I can't reach something, of course), I sanitize and use my island as a prep area, without the need for a cutting board, and I cook and serve without the use of trivets. It's wonderful!
As far as sealing goes (To the OP who PM'd me - I told you this would come up), you spray the sealant on and wipe it off! If someone can't commit to doing that once a year, then they aren't prepared for countertops, period.
My granite actually came pre-sealed and like OP said, mine doesn't take the maintanence that others do - again, research, research. I do plan on using a lighter granite in my bathroom (I'm thinking Santa Cecilia) when we start that remodel this summer and it's no biggie - no more so than the Travertine I have in a portion of my house. Wipe it on, wipe it off.
OP mentioned that you wouldn't have conformity in granite, like you would in man-made counter material. That's not true. I went to a stone yard and I picked my two slabs from the same "sandwich" of granite. The chunks are cut and then sliced and bound together. I checked the two slices for inclusions, found none and have beautiful matching counters. I have only one seam and you have to get within inches of the counters to even see it.
To each his own, but let me tell you, when the sun shines in my kitchen and it hits the granite, it is unbelievably beautiful - you won't find that in any other manmade material. Some have tried to come close (Silestone and their counterparts), but nothing has the flowing motion, or the depth of the quartz flecks that true granite does.
