Choose Your Stone
Every stone has a personality. Before you fall in love with a color, understand the material behind it — how it was formed, what it can handle, and what kind of home it belongs in.





Engineered for the way you actually live.
Quartz is the stone that doesn't ask anything of you. Non-porous by design, it resists staining, bacteria, and etching without annual sealing. The veining is consistent — no surprises, no weak spots — which makes it the choice for families who want drama without maintenance. If you want Calacatta-level beauty with zero anxiety, this is where you start.
“The stone that earns its place in a working kitchen.”





The stone that has defined luxury for three thousand years.
Marble is the original luxury material — the one Michelangelo chose, the one the Romans built their empire with. Every slab is unique, formed under heat and pressure over tens of millions of years in the mountains of Tuscany, Greece, and Turkey. It etches. It patinas. It develops a story over time. Designers call this character. If you want a surface that looks better at ten years than it did at installation, marble rewards that patience.
“The stone that gets more beautiful as it ages.”





The rarest material in the room.
Quartzite begins as sandstone and spends hundreds of millions of years under the desert floor, compressed and recrystallized into something harder than granite. The result is a natural stone with the dramatic veining of marble and the durability to back it up. Taj Mahal, Sea Pearl, Fantasy Brown — these are names that mean something in design circles because no engineered material can replicate what geology produces at this scale.
“The stone that took 500 million years to become what it is.”





Forged in the earth's core. Built for your kitchen.
Granite cooled slowly from magma miles below the earth's surface, which is why it's one of the hardest natural stones on the planet. It handles heat, resists scratching, and comes in a color range that no other natural stone can match — from deep black to electric blue to warm gold. Each slab is pulled from a specific quarry in Brazil, Norway, India, or South Africa, and the variation between slabs is part of what makes it irreplaceable.
“The stone that cooled from magma and ended up in your kitchen.”




The modern surface for the demanding space.
Large-format porcelain slab is the newest material category in the industry, and it solves problems the others can't. UV stable — it won't fade outdoors. Virtually zero porosity — nothing gets in. Available in formats up to 126 inches — seamless coverage on large islands with no visible joints. Brands like Dekton and Neolith have pushed the category into territory that looks indistinguishable from natural stone at a fraction of the maintenance.
“The surface that performs where natural stone can't.”





For projects where ordinary is not an option.
Our Exotic Stone collection is for clients who have seen the standard options and want something genuinely rare. Labradorite that erupts with iridescent aurora borealis color. Lapis Lazuli from the same Afghan mines that supplied Renaissance painters. Backlit onyx that transforms a kitchen island into a light source. Brazilian quartzites with explosive mineral movement in colors — deep blue, forest green, stormy teal — that don't exist in any other natural stone. These are not countertop materials. They are geological events.
“The stones that took 500 million years to become extraordinary.”
Let the Quiz Decide
Answer five questions about your kitchen, lifestyle, and design preferences. We'll tell you exactly which material fits your life — and show you the colors that match your vision.