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Countertop Education
Learn what to look for, and what to avoid.
Granite Mountain-Range
The Full Story
Oklahoma Granite and Stone has a wealth of knowledge about counter-top production. Scroll down to view key points and industry terminology.
Suppliers sell us 15+, 3cm, 1.2" granites, the "thicker" ones, at $9.95 SF or less. We sell at our WHOLESALE.
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Popular stones seen on TV home-shows, in house-design magazines, or viewed online.
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Well-know slabs from quarries around the world
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Stones that bring kitchens and baths to life. The multi-hued "Designer" slabs start at $15.95, WHOLESALE.
Granite is a bargain.
Cost-pricing lets stone compete with laminate!
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Quartz, quartzite, and marble cost more than granite. Nice stones, but with some limits.
We'll help you compare.
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Whatever stone you choose, it's always WHOLESALE.
Click icons below to see more beautiful stones, many UNDER $10 SF, WHOLESALE.
70% OF OUR CLIENTS PICK STONE UNDER $20 SF AT WHOLESALE.
Some people like the look of man-made quartz. 2-3x the cost of Level-1 granite. SMALLER SLABS.
Quartzite is a real-stone version of quartz. Bold striations and design colors. Very costly. Damages Easily.
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Granite at our wholesale is very affordable. The slabs are like snowflakes; no two exactly alike!
Whatever stone you like, we'll FABRICATE AND INSTALL AT JUST $28 SF.
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No up-charge for complex patterns, round corners, busy stones, high-iron, or extra seams. $28 SF, PERIOD.
CHOICE OF 4 FREE EDGES TOO
See something you like? Our Designer will help you pick the perfect stone at cost.*
* Stone yards sell to the trade only. NO customer pricing, to protect other shops who buy from them, then do markup. We sell at cost. You'll always hear wholesale prices from us.
Yards open Mon-Fri 8-5, Saturday 9/9:30-12/1:00, one until 2pm. Call/text for an appointment. 918-747-7893
When you choose slabs with us, you get an invoice-copy at the yard to show our cost.
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OUR PRICE IS YOUR PRICE.
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We fabricate GRANITE, QUARTZ, MARBLE, QUARTZITE, AND ALL STONE MATERIALS.
Stone Countertop Trade Terminology
Alphabetized Homeowner-Knowledge:
1.2 CM - 1/2" synthetic marble used to line showers or cover walls, where strength and thickness is not as critically important.​
2 CM - Two centimeter thickness = .8", or "three-quarter inch". Good for vanities. Only very slightly cheaper than 3 CM.
3 CM - Three centimeter slab thickness = 1.2", often said "inch and a quarter". First choice in kitchen countertops.
Bonding - Installation of under-mounted sinks or double-height countertop edges, using special high-strength epoxy mixes.
Corbels - L-shaped or flat iron brackets, used on overhangs of 8" or more, to reduce the possibility of developing stress cracks.
Dimension Stone - Stone quarried into blocks for end-use, such as stone-countertop slabs.
Drop-In - Sink mounted on a counter from the top. Flange covers the edges of a rough-cut hole.
Edging - Counter edges are shaped and smoothed with various profiles of diamond grinding-bits.
Engineered - Any synthetically-manufactured countertops, such as quartz or cultured marble. Different from those found in nature.
Fab - Labor to transport slabs, template patterns, cut counters to size, grind edge-profiles, cut and drill holes, polish and seal.
Granite - Hard, natural, igneous rock, composed of quartz, mica, and feldspar. Quarried from mountains around the world.
Granite Backsplashes - 4" rear-counter risers, normally done on vanities, but rarely in kitchens anymore (Think tile!).
Honed/Brushed/Leathered - Most stoneyard-slabs are polished. Honed = matte, brushed = bumpy, & leathered even bumpier!
Laminate - A thin, plastic veneer on 2 layers of 3/4"fiberboard. The most common name is Formica.
Lead-Time - Number of days from the time Clients choose their material to the installation of a job.
LF - Linear foot/feet. Also called RF or running feet. Straight-line distance, as opposed to SF.
Marble - Natural limestone crystalized as calcite or dolomite. A much softer stone.​
Mohs Scale - 1-10 mineral-hardness scale. Friedrich Mohs, 1822. Diamonds are 10, granite/quartzite 8 or 9, quartz 6-8, marble 4-6.
Polishing - Wet-sanding with grades of abrasives creates a smooth and shiny countertop surface.
Quarry - A deep-earth excavation that brings raw stone to the surface.​
Quartz - Material man-made from silicon-dioxide poly-resins under pressure. Much higher cost than most natural stones!​
Quartzite - Metamorphic sandstone baked by tectonic heat-pressure within the earth’s deepest crust. Priciest stone material.
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Remnants (fall-off) - Pieces remaining after stone fabrication. Remnants measuring less than 2x2 feet are usually discarded.
Rodding - The insertion of tubular rods (stainless or fiberglass), sometimes needed to strengthen certain countertop areas.
Sandstone - Natural stone equal in hardness to granite, but very porous, harder to source, and needing specialized sealants.​
Seal - Application of a chemical countertop-sealant to further increase the spill resistance.
SF (Square Feet) - Width x depth (wall to front edge), in inches, divided by 144 = SF.
Sink-Setters - Brace-brackets for adding more strength to an under-mount kitchen sink.
Slabs - Flat pieces of natural or synthetic stone, typically quarried or molded to about 100-140" wide, and from 60-82" high.​
Soapstone - Natural stone with a high talc-content. Fractures easily. Frequent oiling needed to maintain the original look.
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Solid Surface - Resin-based (plastic!) counters that can look like stone. Common names are Corian, Wilsonart, and Swanstone.
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Template - Detail-drawing of cabinets, sometimes with paper sheets or foam strips, to create a final counter-cutting layout.
Under-mount - Sink installed beneath a counter, bonded (and braced!) in place. Finished-stone edges overlap 1/4" into the bowl.
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Vessels - Vanity sinks that sit entirely on the counter surface. The countertop is not hole-cut, just drilled for faucet and drain holes.
Shop Lingo:
A-Frame - A-shaped frame on a trailer. Transports stone counters.
Bridge Saw - A huge, diamond-blade overhead saw, which is used to cut raw slabs into countertops.​
CNC - A bridge-type saw with Computer Numerical Control, that can do automated-cuts, without any hands-on operation.
Cuts - Slices done with diamond blades and bits, to create counters or to "mount" sinks, cooktops, etc.
Dolly - A U-shaped cart with pads and clamps, used to move counter tops from a trailer into a building.​
Fab Table - A big, often tilting ("tilt-table") steel platform, used to cut and fabricate stone slabs.​
Rail Saw - A much smaller type of hand-guided granite saw, also used for cutting slabs to countertop size.
Shims - Composite or cedar wedges, used to level the top edges of sloping cabinets, allowing for flatter countertop-installation.
Tooling - Specialized diamond-edge cutters, grinders, polishers, etc., used to fabricate raw-stone slabs into finished countertops.​
We hope this helps you to understand the stone-counter trade. We try to educate; so you can choose the perfect material, color, pattern, edge, sink, etc. Sometimes it's good to know THE BUZZ WORDS!
Please call or text with questions? We're happy to advise on everything from a small vanity top or table to the largest kitchen.

First-Class work at a Can't-Miss price.
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