Cinza Évora
Granite is the most durable and impact-resistant type of stone. Always in Portuguese kitchens, and now adapted to several countries around the world, granite stands out from other types of stone by presenting a massive structure of low absorption and porosity. In the case of the Évora Grey from the city that its name indicates, it integrates a compact grain with dark greyish pigmentation. Depending on the extraction area of the city, the colour and density of the pigment may vary.
Suitable for any kind of surface as well as decorative elements, granite is one of the most coveted types of stone in terms of durability.
Granite is an igneous plutonic rock that forms when magma (molten aluminium) slowly cools to great depths in the earth’s crust, making it very hard. This then causes granite to have a high breaking strength.
Leather
Brushing the slab with a range of brushes and the result is a slightly undulating surface, very soft, warm and smooth to the touch.
Sandblasted
Blasting silica sand against the material through an air gun and generates very small craters.
Sawn
Rough and irregular surface with small furrows and undulations in a mate tone.
Bushammered
Hitting the material, with a masonry tool called a bush hammer, that generates uniformly distributed craters of different sizes over the surface of natural stone.
Flamed
Exposing the surface of the stone directly to a high-temperature flame that generates a thin roughness.
Brushed
Abrasive brushes under high pressure generate a touch-sensitive and smooth surface of natural stone.
Honed
A honed finish is identical to the polished finish, the surface is smooth but without glare or light reflections.
Polished
Abrasive treatments with repeated applications result in a shiny surface, highlights the colour and properties of the natural stone.
Splitted
Splitting stone either by hand or by machine so that the surface exhibits a natural quarry texture.
Internal Flooring
External Flooring
Internal Covering
External Covering
Masonry
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