Natural Stone & Marble
What This Material is Best For
Ideal for Master Baths, Entries, Fireplaces
Real Veining and Depth
Multiples Finishes: Honed/Polished/Tumbled
Needs Sealing and Simple Care
Creates a Timeless and Upscale Look
Where It Works
-
Indoors
Primary baths & powder rooms
Formal entries & foyers
Fireplace surrounds & mantels
Accent walls & vanity tops (stone tile/slab)
-
Outdoors
Covered verandas (sealed, honed)
Courtyards & breezeways (tumbled finishes)
Columns/caps & exterior accents
Not for splash-heavy pool decks unless specified
-
Commercial
Boutique lobbies & reception desks
Hotel/personal service restrooms (sealed)
Feature walls in showrooms
Low-traffic executive offices
-

Is Natural Stone Right for Your Home
Natural stone is a good fit for homeowners who want a one-of-a-kind look and don’t mind a little extra care. Because it’s a real material, not printed, every tile has its own veining, shade, and texture. That makes it a strong choice for primary baths, entries, fireplaces, and feature walls where you actually see and feel the surface every day.
Stone tile does need proper sealing and basic maintenance to protect it from stains and moisture. We help you choose the right finish (honed, polished, or tumbled), how often to reseal, and which cleaners to avoid so you don’t etch or dull the surface. Installed on a flat, prepared substrate with the right setting materials, natural stone can last for decades and age well instead of going out of style. If you’re after a timeless, upscale finish and are willing to follow a simple care routine, natural stone is usually a strong fit.
-

Is Marble the Right Choice for Your Space
Marble is the right choice when you want a classic, high-end look and are okay treating the surface with a little extra care. It’s a favorite for master bathrooms, powder rooms, fireplace surrounds, and feature walls because the veining and soft movement are hard to copy with man-made tile.
Marble is a softer, more porous stone, so it also needs proper sealing and the right cleaners to keep it from staining or etching. It makes sense in vanity walls, shower walls, low-traffic floors, and where a porcelain look-alike might be smarter, especially in heavy-use kitchens or commercial spaces. We can also pair it with matching trims and niches so the details feel intentional, not pieced together. Installed on a sound, prepared base with good waterproofing and grout, marble tile delivers that luxury feel people notice as soon as they walk in, without the discoloration, or patchy grout lines you see in rushed installs.