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Posts Tagged ‘granite’

Using Granite in your Kitchen

Wednesday, October 12th, 2011

Modern kitchen design trends tend towards a more minimalist outlook, with muted, natural palettes that allow the designer to use functional appliances as accent pieces. Granite is ideal because it can be quickly and easily laid down as a countertop, or on the wall. The fact that granite is relatively easy to manipulate means that you can create large, slab-based designs, traditional tiles, or unusual inlay designs in your kitchen.

Modern kitchen design trends tend towards a more minimalist outlook, with muted, natural palettes that allow the designer to use functional appliances as accent pieces. Granite is ideal because it can be quickly and easily laid down as a countertop, or on the wall. The fact that granite is relatively easy to manipulate means that you can create large, slab-based designs, traditional tiles, or unusual inlay designs in your kitchen.

Your kitchen is the hub of your home. How often do you find yourself on the phone to your best friend with your kids at your feet while you cook up a storm? This bastion of homeliness and comfort is a very personal space, and you need it to reflect your diverse personality while still maintaining its functionality. Traditionally, homemakers would choose kitchen furnishings and finishes that were made to withstand the harsh hygiene demands of the kitchen, and as a result, your choices were limited to wood, linoleum, or marble. But nowadays, design conscious home owners are turning to granite as a stylish solution to their kitchen needs.

Unlike marble which can seem cold and elitist, granite is a warm, versatile material that reveals hidden depths of colour, texture and warmth throughout your home. It is great in the kitchen because it is easy to clean, sturdy and solid, but with the added design benefit that it comes in a range of colours and styles that will accentuate this central room.

Modern kitchen design trends tend towards a more minimalist outlook, with muted, natural palettes that allow the designer to use functional appliances as accent pieces. Granite is ideal because it can be quickly and easily laid down as a countertop, or on the wall. The fact that granite is relatively easy to manipulate means that you can create large, slab-based designs, traditional tiles, or unusual inlay designs in your kitchen. The smoky hues, which vary from black to grey and purple and blue, are an ideal backdrop on which you can base your whole kitchen layout.

With many designers and home owners alike becoming drawn to a more naturalistic, uncomplicated feel, granite is becoming the material of choice in kitchens, particularly for countertops. The sturdy material is durable enough to handle all of the punishment that it inevitably receives in the kitchen, and in many cases people even feel comfortable using the granite countertop to roll dough, cut meat and prepare food. The hard, warm, earthy feel of the stone is calming and solid, and with the ever-increasing interest in the material within the design world, the price of this wonderful material is becoming more and more suited to the average family’s budget.

Granite is a great choice for the kitchen – stylish, homely, comfortable, durable, and easy to clean. Whatever your kitchen preferences, consider granite as a very real contender for sprucing up the most important room in your home.

Granite in Britain’s Royal City

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011
Londons Tower Bridge

London's Tower Bridge

With the wedding of the century nearly upon us, all attention has turned to the royal motherland we left behind three centuries ago. Beyond just Beefeaters and blood pudding, England has a rich culture based largely on their historical architecture.

In the 19th century, quarries, especially those in Aberdeen, produced huge amounts of granite which were used domestically as well as shipped across Europe, America and Australia. A wide variety of colors found in British granite were the result of distinctive geological compositions unique to that region. While many of London’s main attractions, including Buckingham Palace and Westminster Abbey were constructed using traditional limestone, local and imported granite pieces can be seen across the royal city.

Straddling the Thames in London’s East End, the Tower Bridge, commonly mistaken for the London Bridge, spans more than 800 feet. After 70,000 tons of concrete were poured to form the bridge’s two piers, Cornish granite and Portland stone were used to reinforce the structure while providing a distinguished final look. The bridge officially opened in June of 1894 and has become one of London’s most recognizable landmarks, earning a feature role in movies like Sherlock Holmes.

Farther down the Thames, the less extravagant London Bridge was constructed in 1176. This iteration of the bridge served to replace a wooden crossing over the river which was destroyed by fire in 1136. The doomed bridge was destroyed once again in 1756, this time by an Act of Parliament so a wider bridge could be built to accommodate swelling traffic. The “New” London Bridge emerged in 1824, touting Haytor granite pillars for optimum strength. As fate would have it, the bridge lasted only a hundred years before officials realized it was sinking into the Thames and decided to put it up for sale. It now spans the Bridgewater Channel in Arizona.

Flanked by faux-Egyptian sphinxes, Cleopatra’s Needle sits along the Victoria Embankment of the Thames. One of three ancient Egyptian obelisks now dispersed around the globe, the London version is made of red granite mined from quarries near the Nile. At nearly three times the height of Cleopatra’s Needle, Nelson’s Column reaches a height of almost 170 feet from its pedestal in Trafalgar Square. Built to commemorate Admiral Nelson, the monument boasts a Corinthian column made of Dartmoor granite.

In the southwest corner of London’s Hyde Park, 545 individual pieces of Cornish granite were assembled to create the Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Fountain. Constructed in 2003, the fountain features a granite oval streambed through which water flows. Another memorial, this one commemorating Prince Albert features internal and external mosaics made of granite. Queen Victoria demanded that a grand memorial be constructed after Albert, her husband, died in 1861, despite recommendations from the government to instead establish a university or scholarship in his honor.

Also drawing huge annual crowds is the ubiquitous Harrods. A granite ceiling overlooks the visitors as they shop through one million square feet of displays. On peak days the store’s five thousand employees will host as many as 300,000 shoppers.

Breaking Out of the Winter Funk

Thursday, March 17th, 2011

April showers are just around the corner now, but in most places it is still feeling like winter has a firm hold on the weather. What better way to break out of a winter funk than by getting together plans for an updated patio or outdoor space? Nothing says spring has arrived like a classic barbecue with neighbors and friends. Make sure your backyard is looking up to par now so you will be free to enjoy it all summer long.

Could use a little more pruning, but the idea is there.

Could use a little more pruning, but the idea is there.

If your patio has seen better days, spruce it up with new granite surfacing or mosaic tile work. Sleek stone tiles provide a modern utilitarian look to outdoor spaces whether they’re used as flooring or on countertops. There’s nothing like flipping burgers on a new grill built into a tiled outdoor kitchen to make you the talk of the town. For a more natural look, flank your barbecue with granite counters that provide durable and lasting work space to prep everything from hotdogs to kebabs. Because of granite’s natural hardness, it will resist deterioration in outdoor spaces, ensuring a beautiful surface for years to come.
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Choosing the Best Patio Materials for Your Home

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011

Picking the right kind of patio materials for your home is as important as choosing a bed for your bedroom (especially if you like sleeping under the stars). In the quest for the perfect house, you should always look for an enjoyable, cozy, and reliable patio that will compliment your surroundings.

With so many great patio materials to choose from, deciding on one or two of them can pose as a big dilemma. If you already have an idea on the specific layout you want, the budget you are willing to spend, and the needs you want to meet the patio of your dreams is just a few steps away.

Large and lavish patio.

Large and lavish patio.

During a sunny day, or when you feel like enjoying the night air while gazing up at the stars after a long day, very few things can beat the comfort of your own outdoor area. And to achieve the coziness, durability, and beauty you are looking for, choosing the right patio materials is, perhaps, the most important step of all. You also need to think about which patio materials will last longer and what kind of maintenance each type will need.

Your choices:
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Kitchen Remodeling – Celebrity Style

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

Remodeling your kitchen takes time, effort, and money. In some cases a lot of money. The best bet is to choose a mix of countertop materials, cabinetry, backsplash and wall covering options, and appliance brands to work together as a cohesive unit and to blend well within a set budget.

For others, however, spending on kitchen remodeling takes place with no expense spared. Many celebrities, who likely don’t even cook in these grandiose kitchens, have setups that would make a chef blush.

Without further ado, here are some kitchens from the celebrity set:

30 Rock star Tracey Morgan boasts a kitchen that looks able to tackle any cooking request thrown at it. We wonder how adept in in the kitchen Mr. Morgan really is.

Tracey Morgan's heavy duty kitchen.

Tracey Morgan's heavy duty kitchen.


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Hartford Mayor Accepts Bribes; New Countertops for Everyone!

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

If you’re a city contractor in Hartford, Connecticut you better charge full price for countertops you install or you might have to pay with your freedom. Recently, Hartford city contractor Carlos Costa was brought in to court to take the stand regarding bribery charges leveled against Mayor Eddie A. Perez. The topic at hand was Costa offering free and discounted services to several council members and the Mayor himself.

Under-the-table deals with countertops involved.

Under-the-table deals with countertops involved.

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Radiation? Not This Time.

Monday, May 10th, 2010

When someone installs a deluxe home fixture they probably don’t think it can slowly act as a promoter of cancer, but they should know before continuing that all Granite Transformations granite is 100% radon free.

That being said, back in 2008 the New York Times threw just about everyone who owned, was about to own, or was thinking of installing granite in their homes into a widespread tizzy. On July 24, 2008 the New York Times ran an article by columnist Kate Murphy titled “What’s Lurking in Your Countertop?”. In it, an anecdotal tale of a routine radiation inspection in a home in Teaneck, New Jersey laid the framework for ongoing finger pointing directed firmly at countertops. In that Teaneck home, it was found that radiation levels were so high, ten times higher in the granite-infused kitchen than anywhere else in the home, that it was tantamount to smoking cigarettes, in terms of detriment to health.
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