- Feb 14, 2004
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Check out the new 180FX materials: (high-resolution printing)
http://www.formica.com/en/us/products/180fx#swatchesTab
Pricing is pretty favorable too. The sheets come in as large as 12' x 5', so you can do seamless installations even on stuff like large kitchen islands. The two limitations seem to be not putting hot stuff directly on it (up to 275F degrees, for short period of time) & no cutting on it - so you have to use a potholder under hot pans, pots, and trays, and use a cutting board. The benefit is the cost to look ratio.
Here's a lady who did a marble countertop in her kitchen; the real stuff would have been $6k, but the Formica marble countertop (bullnose edge with 11' x 5' dimensions) cost $1,300: ($4,700 price difference)
http://simpledetailsblog.blogspot.com/2014/09/formica-calacatta-marble-review.html
It's not limited to just countertops, either - you can do walls, backplashes, waterfalled edges, and even dinner tables with it. IdealEdge technology eliminates the brown seam lines (my current place has seams & it's uggo). The dinner table idea is what initially caught my attention because I have been looking at large dinner tables & they get crazy expensive, whereas you can build one out of Formica for a pretty good cost savings, while still getting a great-looking surface. Some more ideas here:
http://www.houzz.com/formica-180fx
A dinner table off Houzz:
Anyway, just an FYI if you're looking to do a project on a budget.
http://www.formica.com/en/us/products/180fx#swatchesTab
Pricing is pretty favorable too. The sheets come in as large as 12' x 5', so you can do seamless installations even on stuff like large kitchen islands. The two limitations seem to be not putting hot stuff directly on it (up to 275F degrees, for short period of time) & no cutting on it - so you have to use a potholder under hot pans, pots, and trays, and use a cutting board. The benefit is the cost to look ratio.
Here's a lady who did a marble countertop in her kitchen; the real stuff would have been $6k, but the Formica marble countertop (bullnose edge with 11' x 5' dimensions) cost $1,300: ($4,700 price difference)
http://simpledetailsblog.blogspot.com/2014/09/formica-calacatta-marble-review.html
It's not limited to just countertops, either - you can do walls, backplashes, waterfalled edges, and even dinner tables with it. IdealEdge technology eliminates the brown seam lines (my current place has seams & it's uggo). The dinner table idea is what initially caught my attention because I have been looking at large dinner tables & they get crazy expensive, whereas you can build one out of Formica for a pretty good cost savings, while still getting a great-looking surface. Some more ideas here:
http://www.houzz.com/formica-180fx
A dinner table off Houzz:

Anyway, just an FYI if you're looking to do a project on a budget.