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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jul 2015
Posts: 920
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Want to make your special lady happy?
Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/5/2016 11:51 AM, Califbill wrote:
Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/5/2016 5:58 AM, Justan Olphart wrote:
On 2/5/2016 1:17 AM, wrote:
On Thu, 4 Feb 2016 21:55:18 -0500, Justan Olphart
wrote:
On 2/4/2016 8:15 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 4 Feb 2016 19:13:40 -0500, Justan Olphart
wrote:
On 2/4/2016 11:33 AM, John H. wrote:
Just the thing for Valentine's day...and it's non-fattening!
http://www.budsgunshop.com/catalog/images/719000483.jpg
--
Ban idiots, not guns!
Does that have a genuine Corian grip?
Nahh Corian screams 90s, Women want granite these days.
Stylestone is the new granite.
That is one of the products generally referred to as "quartz". I have
about 50 square feet of it stacked next to my garage. It is basically
stone chips and other aggregate in an epoxy matrix.
It is definitely an inferior product to natural stone. It is not
particularly hard to work tho.
Actually not. It requires less maintenance than natural stone. It is
stronger than natural stone (no unseen fissures or cracks) A really nice
looking piece of stone will cost a small fortune. The more ordinary
looking pieces are at the same price point as the quartz products.
Corian ain't cheap either. We'll be picking something out next week for
the new house.
We've had both granite and Corion in houses. The Egg Harbor had all
Corion countertops as well. I've heard good things about Stylestone but
have never seen it.
Corion looks great when new but it can scratch and become marred. The
good thing is that you can refinish it by light sanding and polishing
but I think granite is much better of the two.
We have corian in the kitchen. Still looks great, and we redid the kitchen
at least 15 years ago. But ours is the dark green, with speckles, not
white.
We also have dark green Corion on the kitchen counters and the island.
It's about 18 years old now I guess. Looks ok but it has scratches here
and there, especially on the island because it gets a lot of use. I
sanded and polished it a few years ago and it helped. We were going to
replace it with granite but since we are selling the house it doesn't
make any sense although the owner of the realty company wanted us to do
it. You can't listen to them sometimes. We
also have light hardwood floors that have intricate dark mahogany inlays
in it. She wanted us to re-do the floors in a dark stain because that's
what is currently popular on HGTV. Told her fine. She can pay for it
if she thinks that is so important. Turns out, it wasn't. I mentioned
it to the people that are buying the house and
they were flabbergasted that she would even suggest such a thing.
The inlays would be hidden and they are what make the design of the
floor unique.
Dark floors might be in, but we had dark cabinets originally in the
kitchen. Much lighter with natural maple cabinets. And the floors are all
hickory.
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