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Choose Custom Built Countertops For Any Room
When it comes to custom cabinetry, what you can
have is limited only by your budget. A custom built cabinet is not
constructed until it is ordered. The assumption is that custom work
will be the most expensive this is not the case. Upper end semi-stock
and basic custom cabinetry often price-out same. Should the only
issue be that of width, a custom piece can readily be built using
engineered wood, but to the homeowner's specs. If expense is not
an issue, custom-built cabinets provide the best to the homeowner.
Choices include everything from hand-selected wood to exotic woods
like mahogany. Cabinetmakers will even match the paint or finish
of an existing corner cupboard. Homeowners can select from glass
doors inset doors with decorative beading. Pie-cut corner cabinets,
full extension glides on drawers, and Super-Susans, provide convenience.
Custom cabinetmakers vary in delivery time. Depending on the complexity,
a homeowner should allow six to 12 weeks for construction and delivery,
although some jobs may require six months.
When turning your dream kitchen into reality, work
with a professional. Once you have hired a professional he/she will
produce a drawing, to show the area that already exists. After talking
you should agree upon style, function, and budget. This agreement
becomes the basis for the drawings. These drawings show how the
kitchen will look, which parts of the house the builders may use
and how. Once changes that have been made are incorporated into
the drawings, the designer gets the costs from the builders. The
expert must recommend a builder and a price.
Kitchen Design Services
Most retailers and manufacturers of kitchen cabinets
offer free design service. Kitchen designers spend their lives planning
kitchens and they know exactly what their products can do. Professional
designers are skilled at making the most of your available space
and dollars.
Kitchen Budget
Keep on budget by using luxury material sparingly.
Reserve the island for an expensive granite countertop, for example,
while using more affordable materials elsewhere. Don't overlook
butcher block and stainless steel.
Custom Built Countertops
When it comes to purchasing countertops you have
all kinds of options from plastic laminate to marble, tile, and
butcher block. You also can customize the edge for a different look.
Combining form with function, countertops set a tone and a standard.
Be it the elegance of granite, a colorful surface or laminate countertop
options abound.
Countertops 101
Dealers price counter surfaces by lineal or square
foot, with template, delivery, and installation (TDI) quoted in
the total price. Prices vary depending on texture, color, pattern,
and intricacy of edging, sink type, and seams. Seams lead to water
seepage. A qualified, certified kitchen designer can help research
qualified manufacturers and fabricators. Heavy countertops, like
cement, natural, and engineered stones, are held in place with fixatives.
Prices range from $16 per lineal foot to $100 per square foot. Since
countertop pricing ranges from the economical to the astronomical,
it's important to consider, durability, maintenance, and price installed.
Concrete
Concrete is a more dynamic product.
It boasts texture and detailing unlike any solid product. It is
porous, absorbs stains and must be sealed regularly. Concrete weighs
the same as a granite countertop. But, since it must be poured and
cured it's important to get it right. Every fabricator has a different
formula. The fabricators should first template then create from
a pre-cast mold in a controlled factory setting. Concrete runs about
$100 per square foot installed.
Engineered Stone
Engineered stone is a quartz-composite product
mixed with colored pebbles, polymers and epoxy. It has more color
options than natural stone. Engineered stone is one-and-a-quarter
inches thick, and is installed using epoxy. At $50 to $100 per square
foot, engineered stone is as costly as granite.
Stainless Steel
Stainless steel is chic and associated with professional
kitchens. It is stain resistant. Newer applications include brushed
or textured finishes. Welded stainless-steel sinks create an integrated
look, while corrugated patterns create dimension. Stainless steel,
when attached to a wood substrate, becomes sound resistant. Regular
rolled edges, bullnose, or Marine edges are standard. Stainless
steel runs anywhere from $100 to $200 per square foot.
Stone
Natural stone needs to be seamed and sells for
anywhere from $50 to $100 per square foot. The colors and patterns
reveal the region and the geological conditions that created it.
With granite, each slab is unique. Buyers may visit the fabricator
to select their own slabs. Granite is graded for density, strength,
water absorption, and acid resistance. A 3/4-inch granite sheet
can be purchased and applied to a wood substrate for the same look
at less cost and weight.
Marble is less stain-resistant and more porous,
so it may be damaged by acidic foods. New England slate, from New
York, Vermont, and Maine, is durable and requires no sealing. Some
designers prefer Slate for breakfast bars. The beauty of slate is
that it comes to room temperature. Natural stone runs from $50 to
$100 per square foot, with black slate, followed by red slate as
the most expensive.
Wood
Wood has luminous appeal for countertops and kitchens.
Oak, maple, cherry, red beech, walnut, teak, and mahogany are all
hardwoods favored for countertop applications. Wood is one of the
more sanitary products for the kitchen, with inherent properties
to protect from bacteria build-up. Prices for wood countertops range
from $50 to $100 per square foot installed.
Solid Surfacing
In solid surface countertops seams are only visible
from the underside. With solid surfacing, sink and counter materials
can be integrated to create a graceful line. Solid surfaces come
in a rainbow of colors, patterns, and styles, including stone and
glass look-alikes. They are stain and heat resistant. Scratches
are easily softened with a non-abrasive scrubbing pad.
Laminate
Laminate countertops come in a host of colors and
patterns. Laminate is not scratch or heat resistant, but stain resistant.
Laminate is glued onto an inch-and-a-half particleboard base and
can be constructed using a home store's standard blank. For cosmetic
revamps, sheets of laminate can be glued to the existing particleboard
substrate.
Ceramic Tile
Ceramic tile is a popular and economical option.
It is scratch and heat resistant, but high maintenance. Ceramic
tile runs from $11 to $30 per square foot. Keep in mind that undertaking
a laminate or tile installation can be a nightmare, so its best
to do the homework first.
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