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Project: Calacatta Gold marble island restoration in a luxury McLean, VA kitchen — full etch removal, stain extraction, and re-polishing on a 9-foot kitchen island that had developed multiple etch marks and oil stains over five years of daily use. Single-day restoration; surface returned to original mirror finish.

The project at a glance

The damage we found

The homeowner contacted us after a dinner party where a guest noticed the etch marks across the surface. Five years of daily kitchen use had accumulated:

Notably, the bold gold-and-grey veining was completely intact — the damage was surface-level, exactly the kind of damage that responds best to professional diamond honing.

The restoration process

  1. Site protection. Adjacent walnut cabinetry, the wood floor below the island overhang, and the surrounding hardware were masked and protected before any wet work began.
  2. Pre-clean. Commercial pH-neutral cleaning across the entire island to remove built-up residue, soap film, and the failing sealer.
  3. Stain extraction. The three oil stains were extracted via poultice — a stone-safe degreasing paste applied at 1/4 inch thickness, covered with plastic, and left to draw the oil out over 24 hours. (For this project we did the poultice work the day before our diamond honing visit so the stains were fully extracted by the time honing began.)
  4. Diamond honing — coarse. Started at 400 grit to flatten the etch marks. Each etch was honed across the entire island uniformly — we never spot-treat etches because the result would be a visibly inconsistent finish.
  5. Diamond honing — refining. Progressed through 800, 1500, and 3000 grit, with each pass removing the marks left by the previous pass.
  6. Polishing. Final polishing passes with chemical polishing pads to restore the original Calacatta mirror finish.
  7. Sealing. Premium impregnating sealer applied to slow future stain absorption.
  8. Marble Armor application. The homeowner opted to add Marble Armor to the island as part of the project — an invisible composite film that prevents future etching from the daily acidic spills that had caused the original damage. Approximately 10-year protection.

The outcome

By the end of the single 1-day visit, the island was restored to like-new condition:

The homeowner reported in a follow-up visit (six months later) that the Marble Armor was holding up exactly as expected — they were no longer worried about the daily lemon-and-citrus cooking they had been avoiding to protect the stone.

Why this project matters for similar Calacatta installations

Three takeaways for other homeowners with Calacatta marble:

Cost range for similar projects

This particular project (45 sf island + Marble Armor) fell in the middle of the typical range.

Warranty

All Rose Restoration work is backed by our 1-year written workmanship warranty. Marble Armor installations carry an additional 10-year manufacturer-backed protection warranty against etching and staining.

Related services

Frequently asked questions

Can a Calacatta island with this much damage really be restored in one day?

Yes. A 30-60 square foot island with multiple etches and a few stains is a single-day project for two senior technicians. Larger projects (full kitchens with island and perimeter) take 1-2 days.

Will the new finish match the rest of my Calacatta surfaces?

If only the island is being restored and adjacent surfaces (perimeter, backsplash) are also Calacatta, you may want to restore them simultaneously to ensure uniform polish. We assess this during the in-home consultation.

Why Marble Armor instead of just sealing more often?

Sealer prevents staining; Marble Armor prevents both staining and etching. For a Calacatta kitchen island that sees daily acid exposure (lemon, wine, citrus), Marble Armor is the only product that addresses the etching risk.

How long should a restored Calacatta island stay beautiful?

With Marble Armor: 10-15 years before professional restoration is needed again. Without Marble Armor: 4-6 years for a heavy-use kitchen island. The difference is significant.

Was the gold veining affected by the restoration?

No — the veining is structural to the stone, deeper than the surface layer we removed. The pattern looked identical before and after restoration, just with the original polish restored.

What if I have other Calacatta surfaces in the home?

We typically include a brief assessment of any other Calacatta installations during the visit. Common findings: master bath vanity needs lighter restoration ($600-1,200) or a powder room counter is fine for now and can wait several more years.

Schedule a free Calacatta restoration assessment

For Calacatta marble restoration in McLean, Great Falls, Vienna, Tysons, or anywhere across DC, MD, and VA: call 703-327-7676 or request a free in-home assessment. Senior technicians respond within 2 business hours. Most residential Calacatta restoration projects are quoted between $850 and $3,500.

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