Shop Products
Houzz Logo Print
naro_gw

Quartzite countertop

NaRo
12 years ago

Our counters-to-be, if all goes well.

Does anyone have experience with Calacatta Macaubus quartzite?

Comments (67)

  • NaRo
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    I'm not sure. Does sealing help etching? Or maybe this is staining... it's not like the surface is melted-looking.

  • NaRo
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    OK here's an update. Test 2 didn't show much of anything.

    But test three-- lemon juice left on for an hour or so-- showed a shadow afterward. The surface stayed polished, and did not get rough ( i.e. it was NOT like what happened when I tried lemon juice on honed marble and it looked "melted.") There was a slight darkening where some of the lemon juice had been, like a shadow.

    Does this sounds like etching? STaining? Will sealing help (I don't think it's sealed)? or do I have a very expensive problem on my hands?

    Thanks for any guidance you can give-- NaRo

  • 2LittleFishies
    12 years ago

    Anything darker than the normal color is a stain. If it is sealed until water beads that shouldn't happen. Why don't you try your test with plain old water and let it sit? Will water "bead" on it?

    Etching is like lemon on marble and it only takes seconds (if that) to happen. Faster than you can grab a rag it will be etched. Etching changes the finish on the stone in a certain light but otherwise you can't see it at every angle.

    I am NO expert and am only repeating what I have read on GW. Even most granites need to be sealed or else water will absorb and get darker. Sealing would probably do the trick. On my marble samples when water absorbed it in got dark but actually that would "dry up" after a few hours? and be gone so why don't you check it tomorrow? However, since you used lemon that may actually stain vs. the water. Just a guess.

    Just read your last post again. If it stayed polished, that is not etching.
    Maybe someone more experienced can chime in but I do feel somewhat confident in the info I gave. Good luck!

  • 2LittleFishies
    12 years ago

    PS- I'd talk to your stone yard. I know every piece of stone is different even from the same TYPE of stone...

  • NaRo
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Thank you.. I did quiz the stone yard vigorously, and they insisted it was bullet-proof. I'm doing the oil test and it's not absorbing so far, so that's good... I'll see what it looks like in the morning.

    All guidance appreciated...

  • mjtx2
    12 years ago

    Please keep us updated. I know water on granite dries up fairly quickly, but I'd be shocked if lemon could stain quartzite, from everything I've read. Be interested to know how this goes!

  • NaRo
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Wow-- This morning, the stains are all but gone! I think I can still see the faint outline of one patch, maybe, but I'm not even sure about that.

    I have read in passing about stains disappearing from some stone countertops, but I've never seen it in person before. Can anyone explain to me how it happens? Really slow evaporation? Or maybe some kind of quartzite monster, related to the sock monster that lives in the dryer and makes socks disappear?

  • clarygrace
    12 years ago

    NaRo, thank you for posting on quartzite, your slab is absolutely beautiful! We have just decided against marble and looking for alternates, so this is great information! Good to hear it is quasi bullet proof.
    Hopefully we can find quartzite readily here in the DC area!
    Please provide update when installed!

  • NaRo
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Clarygrace, we love the look of marble, but it would be disastrous for us from a maintenance standpoint. Seriously, I'm the world's worst housekeeper. We saw the calacatta macaubus and thought, "that's it!"

    Our inspiration kitchen had another quartzite-- mother of pearl, I think, or maybe they styled it madre de perla-- that was beautiful white and marble-y. The particular slabs of mother of pearl we found in stone yards, though, turned colors that didn't work for our space.

    It might be worth calling around to see if local yards have light-colored slabs of quartzite, making sure you're being understood, b/c people hear "quartz countertops" and they think you're asking about one of the manufactured quartz products. Some of which are great-looking, too.

  • muskokascp
    12 years ago

    Hi NaRo,
    We have had our quartzite for several months now and have had all manner of things left on it for varying periods of time. I saw no evidence of etching or staining until last weekend. I am not even sure what to call it and even more unsure if it is still there. I keep forgetting to look - I will try to remember tonight.

    Basically there was a bag containing old asparagus that someone pulled from the fridge to compost and left it in the far corner of the counter for a good 24 hrs. A bunch of the yucky liquid that forms around rotting vegetables spilled onto the counter and seeped under a container that was sitting beside it. When I finally picked this up and cleaned the liquid from the surface, there was an outline of the liquid on the counter but I could only see it at a certain angle with the light just so..much like some etching is only visible in certain light. I have to say my first panicked thought was my stone etched. However, with close inspection the polished surface was still present. I tried cleaning it but nothing changed. The next day it was much less visible and when I looked a few days ago I couldn't really see it. So - perhaps it needs more sealing or the wetness darkened the stone? Not sure but I will look again and report.

  • Jumpilotmdm
    12 years ago

    You can get a quote from the stone yard like GM will sell you a car! Try the DEALER, that's why they're there.
    Trying the lemon juice thing is like training a garden hose on a skylite. It will probably leak. Quartzite does not need to be sealed by virtue of the way it is made. It's BEAUTIFUL. Install it and use it with common sense and you'll be happy. Don't invite trouble. There is no perfect surface.

  • NaRo
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Jumpilotmdm, I know us well enough to know that we sometimes lack common sense-- or more accurately, we can get absent-minded, and I could just see me or my hubby leaving some evil counter-killing substance on the counter for a day. That's why I insisted on the lemon juice test. As long as we're spending this kind of money, we are going to get something we really like that's is also close to bulletproof. I think we've found that.

    We also lucked out on a Super White remnant from our fabricator for our master bathroom. She says it is a marble, but I wonder because it's more buletproof than the quartzite, as far as we can tell. Whatever it is, it's beautiful, and perfect for the space.

    As for stone yards-- and I'm using that term generically to cover actual yards, showrooms, tile and surface boutiques, and other vendors who have a bunch of slabs you can look at-- the experience in our city is definitely not car-dealer-like. They simply will not talk price, not to you and not to your contractor. You have to go through a fabricator to get any pricing info at all, which is annoying.

  • ferris
    12 years ago

    WOW!!! That's BEAUTIFUL!!!

  • muskokascp
    12 years ago

    I had a good look last night at the counter. There is nothing there..couldn't even see a hint of the spill. I guess the stone was discolored from the liquid and just needed to dry. So, back to my original statement - the stone ( mine anyway) appears to be bullet proof.

  • 2LittleFishies
    12 years ago

    Is anyone able to share the cost of this stone per sq. ft?

  • babs711
    12 years ago

    2LittleFishies, I posted my local pricing (pre-fabrication) above. You must have missed it. That's for the New Orleans area. It's going to vary place to place.

  • muskokascp
    12 years ago

    I would expect to pay $100-$125/sq ft or more in some places.

  • kstuy
    12 years ago

    I have criss cross white macuba quartzite and have had no problems with staining or etching. However, it is very pricey. I paid about $200 sq/ft in the NYC area.

  • Shareher
    12 years ago

    Ours was around $75 / sq ft installed in Houston.

  • rmsaustin
    12 years ago

    Shareher, can you tell me where in Houston you found this quartzite?

  • michelle16
    12 years ago

    I just bought two slabs and it cost roughly 90 sq foot

  • Shareher
    12 years ago

    Olympus marble. They had quite a lot of lab when we looked.

  • island_obsession
    11 years ago

    muscokascp - your counters are gorgeous! not just a good solution to the cararra maintainance issues, but somehow even more beautiful than marble! our supplier has it on their website so i'll be calling this morning to see if it is actually stocked. seems like it might be hard to get a piece with the beautiful veining you have, rather than the beautiful, but more linear, look i've seen. we are also looking at blanco quartzite from this dealer, but it must go by other names because i can't find it on GW anyway . . . apparently it will cost me TWICE what carrara would so i'm very glad to hear that your "stains" disappeared! sounds like you did polished - what is the advice on polished vs. honed with white quartzites? thanks!

  • carissafox
    11 years ago

    yes... please Shareher...
    would you share where you found your quartzite in Houston?

    thanks a ton!

  • carissafox
    11 years ago

    Shareher...
    read through again and saw you already answered!
    thanks!
    i rushed over to Olympus before they were closing for the weekend.
    sure enough they had white quartzite!
    very helpful too!
    and wow their new showroom is gorgeous!
    yay!
    now to make this decision.
    white quartzite or caesarstone.
    my brain might explode! :)

  • Shareher
    11 years ago

    Carissafox---They also did a great job with the installation. It looks great and seems very durable.

  • toronto331
    11 years ago

    Can someone tell me where they purchased these countertops? I'm interested in somewhere in Canada. I love these but I can't seem to find them.

  • donttakeitforgranite
    11 years ago

    NaRo......a couple things I wanted to mention....there is nothing called Calacatta White Macaubus. First, Calacatta is an extremely expensive marble. Second, White Macaubus is a quartzite which has marble "tendencies" because it is a cross between a marble & a granite. Anything acidic will etch the finish of the polished material. The Stone Yards CAN'T give you pricing. They are like Benjamen Moore (paint) they are only supply the material. It's like me asking you how much a car is? Your response would be which one? Only a fabricator will know the cost of the entire job, as that is what should concern you. Not the price per square foot of a slab of granite. You can't take it home and lean it up against your house. Also, the Stone Yard can't cut off a piece of a slab. They are not Fabricators, they don't cut. Especially with a material that expensive, they don't want to lose money.

    Quartzites will etch and stain, they are a softer stone. If you're not extremely fastidious, you could have issues.

  • islanddevil
    11 years ago

    NaRo, You sound like me. I too want bullet proof! I don't want to baby my countertops and after having indistructable granite that still looks brand new after 12 years of everything under the sun spilled on it I don't think I can change my careless ways. This time around I'd like a light color stone like the beautiful quartzite you found. Some say it's bulletproof and other have reported otherwise. It's so confusing. I've also found the local slab yards won't crack off a sample.

    Muskokascp- your counters are beautiful!! Also love your cabinets. Can you please share who manufactured your cabs? Can't wait to see your finished kitchen, but for now can you share a few pics with your backsplash and sills?
    Thanks!

  • annkathryn
    11 years ago

    The Stone Yards CAN'T give you pricing.

    This is incorrect as stone yards in California price their stone by the square foot. The fabricators pick up the stone from the yard and will give you another price for fabrication. Sometimes fabricators have arrangements with stone yards for discounts and will pass that discount on to the consumer. My designer got me a 10% discount on my Calacatto Oro.

    And sometimes stone yards will refer to quartzite as granite. The names can be somewhat random and have nothing to do with the geologic properties of the slab.

  • islanddevil
    11 years ago

    Michelle16 -Youza what a beautiful island! Can you please provide a link to pics of your completed kitchen?
    Thanks

  • heidia
    11 years ago

    What Michelle16 said!

    I wanted to piggy back on this thread with my experience so far...
    I put some $ down on this type of quartzite. Mine actually has a portion that looks like this quartzite(squiggly marble look of veining) and then the straight striations like a luce luna...

    anyhow...I threw orange, ketchup, turmeric, bar keepers friend, olive oil, balsamic vinegar, and crushed blackberry at it and...NOTHING. The only issue I had was there was some blackberry staining where the juice had migrated to the unfinished edge but guess what? It is gone. Not a trace. Everyting just wiped right off, no stains, and def no etching.

    Just for fun, I did the same test with silestone quartz sample, and the turmeric left a faint stain that I have yet to get out(I imagine it will come out with some soft scrub, but the turmeric came off the quartzite with a little soap and water).

  • sochi
    11 years ago

    Toronto331 - Ciot in Vaughan is your best bet. I got my Luci di Luna / Quartzite Bianca there.

  • NaRo
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    Update from the OP: after living with our counters for seven months plus, we love them. Nothing etches, nothing stains-- there might be an occasional temporary darkening, like a shadow, if we spill something weird, but it fades away within hours.

    Our only issue was when we first installed it, you could feel some of the deep veins-- your fingernail would catch if you swiped it across the surface. We had the fabricator polish the veins in place, and have had no problems since.

  • island_obsession
    10 years ago

    I can't believe it's been a year since I last posted on here! Our kitchen is finally happening. After a LONG search of every natural and man-made marble-looking, but durable product in the known world, I had given up on finding the elusive white quartzite I wanted and we were set to go with honed Carrara (beautiful and half the price, but sure to be a maintenance nightmare). Of course as fate would have it when I contacted the slab yard to select our slabs this weekend, they had this in stock! It's going by the name Blanco Quartzite, but I think it may be the same stone as the Macabus I fell in love with in muskokascp's and NaRo's kitchen and others. Please help with opinions on it! Is the veining too much? It was so helpful to see how it looks installed in the kitchens above so I think I'll be very happy with in on the perimeter cabinets. The bigger factor will be finding a slab in this lot that has good veining for the big island . . . Thanks for any help you can give!

  • Nananay84
    10 years ago

    Hey Babs711...where did you find your quartzite in NOLA? I'm in Baton Rouge and planning a road trip to look at slabs there. Haven't started researching NO stone yards yet. Some are the same as we have here (Triton being one) but thought you might have some suggestions. THANKS!

  • padmae
    10 years ago

    Just wanted to correct someone's post that quartzite is soft and will etch.. Everything I've read or been told is quartzite is harder than most granites. It's an odd combination of extremely dense and extremely porous...

    As to etching, it's not true that all quartzites etch. What etches is a reaction between calcite in stone (eg marble, limestone, travertine) and an acid. Since quartzite does not contain calcite it 'should not' etch.. however.. it can etch, but from a reaction between the resin used at the quarry (all stones have resin applied on them for the past decade) and acid, which explains why some people with quartzite experience etching and others with the same stone don't -- depends on the quarry and resin used.

    Sealer does not protect against etching. It only gives us enough time to mop up (wine/oil/lime juice, etc.) to prevent it from staining. Even a sealed surface can stain if something is left overnight - depending on the stone. Some granites are literally bullet-proof and you can leave anything on it for weeks and no staining.

    Lastly, the latest is a topical coating that prevents etches. What I've read is you are exchanging maintaining the stone which is easy/low cost/homeowner can do for maintaining the coating which has to be done by a professional, usually involves toxic fumes and can be quite costly if the counter has to be repaired in the future (has to be ground off). I think they are a ways off from perfecting this, but it does sound like there are some topical coatings that prevent etching that are better than others (don't make it look plasticky, won't yellow or delaminate) but they still have the same issue of a big expense if your countertop has to be repaired at some point.

    I removed the etching from our Quartzite Bianca with a poultice of baking soda and water...

  • susanlynn2012
    9 years ago

    Michelle16, I know I have told you many times in other posts but I just LOVE your calacutta quartzite counters! I also love your inset cabinets and your overall gorgeous kitchen! What is the edge called that you used on your island that is so pretty?

  • Dorrie Gagnon
    9 years ago

    Does anyone have a finished pic with macauba and updates on etch/ staining? We are doing our kitchen and have white cabinets. Is stone is the only quartzite I have found to have passed all the tests and proves to be a real quartzite.. Thoughts?!

  • karin_mt
    9 years ago

    I don't have it, but it does seem to be one of the few reliable stones that really is quartzite. There is a recent post in the Countertop Geology thread from a happy macabus owner.

  • Dorrie Gagnon
    9 years ago

    Karin_mt- thanks for following up! Any suggestions on other stones that hold up? U are a wealth of wonderful info!!!

  • karin_mt
    9 years ago

    Madre Perla, Mother of Pearl - it has beigy tones. Also Sea Pearl, which has greens and greys.

    Those are quartzites.

    Most granites hold up great, it you like the look.

  • Dorrie Gagnon
    9 years ago

    I do love granite but I haven't found many that are close to the marble look ðÂÂÂ... We are building our home after it was destroyed by Sandy so I want light and airy for the beach. River white wasn't bad but I didn't like the specks that ran through it. I love the veins that marble has. Not many granites posses that quality. fyi- 6 kids and a messy chef don't make great company for marble!

  • flysonic
    9 years ago

    I have white macaubus in my kitchen for about a year. Absolutely no problem with etching standing scratching etc. I read one of the postings above someone said "Quartzites will etch and stain, they are a softer stone. If you're not extremely fastidious, you could have issues." that person obviously does not know what quartzite is, or have even seen one in person.

    I have had all sorts of sauce left on the courter overnight and not wiped it clean until the next day. Never have problem. Lemon juice, salad dressing, tomato juice, you name it.

    Get a sample and bring home to test. That's the best way to find out what you are looking at.

  • karin_mt
    9 years ago

    Supersonic, you are exactly right! That's all great advice.

    Dgags, you might like Sea Pearl for a beachy look. If you do a search you'll find some here that have used it.

    Oh, and maybe look for Wild Sea? It's well named, it looks like waves. It's quartz sandstone, not quartzite but it's a good, durable sandstone. We have it and love it.

  • D H
    8 years ago

    What is the brand of hardware you used? (drawer pulls) LOVE it!

  • stacieleigh
    8 years ago

    Old thread I know but I've been watching this thread for months and holding onto it as hope that a marble look alike exists in the quartzite world. I've been to multiple stoneyards, am watching multiple live inventories online and I'm not seeing anything even close to what the OP and first replier have posted. The stones are very dark or they are marble... Does a really white quartzite exist??

  • hartntex
    6 years ago

    @stacieleigh. I realize that your comment was from 2016 but I'm wondering if you ever found a quartzite you liked that is really on the "white" side? thx in advance.

  • Debbie K.
    10 months ago

    I just put a down payment on a slab of Calacatta extra quartzite suede. No idea what the ”extra” means. it has a marble look with a more pale gray background and some squiggles and some soft movement. I absolutely love it and would post a picture if I knew now. so glad to have finally made the decision and I’m praying it works out. wondering how everyone is liking theirs?

Sponsored
CHC & Family Developments
Average rating: 5 out of 5 stars4 Reviews
Industry Leading General Contractors in Franklin County, Ohio