Blog: From the Bedrock

How Do You Care For Marble? Just a Little Soap and Water

Posted by Steven Schrenk

Melinda McCoy of House 214 Design features Polycor's honed White Cherokee American marble in her home kitchen

Melinda McCoy is what you call the everyday home decorator.

Her Cape Cod style home, located in Ohio, isn’t filled with cookie cutter details or over the top designs. Instead, her home is known for its timelessness and practical beauty.

“I got tired of looking at magazines and Pinterest for inspiration,” McCoy said. “I’d find an idea I liked, then put it in my home and it didn’t look right. I like to make decisions with intention behind them.”

Melinda McCoy of House 214 Design features Polycor's honed White Cherokee American marble in her home kitchen

 

McCoy, the founder of House 214 Design, offers online courses and curates blog posts to help homeowners learn basic interior decorating tips.

Her love of homes with an old world charm stems from childhood. Growing up in the south, McCoy spent much of her free time embarking on home tours, stepping inside of some of the most beautiful estates. It was there she fell in love with the utilitarian element of these older homes.

McCoy’s style preference isn’t much different today — for her, the key to creating a beautiful home starts with consistency and purpose.

Melinda McCoy of House 214 Design features Polycor's honed White Cherokee American marble in her home kitchen

 

Over the past 10 years, McCoy has added a master suite and brand new kitchen onto her 1940 built home, but you might not know it if you took a tour.

“What was really important to me, was staying true to the roots of the home,” McCoy said. “That’s always the biggest compliment I get — when people walk in, they don’t know where the old house stops and the new house starts.”

McCoy’s intention to connect with the history of the home extends to her material choices.

In her kitchen she selected a marble countertop that could have easily been chosen by the original homeowners (and, in fact, if they had it would still look and feel as great as it does today). GEORGIA MARBLE-WHITE CHEROKEE  is an American stone with a soothing grey vein pattern that’s right at home with McCoy’s classic grey, white and black palette. It also has a higher density than European marble so it can stand up to all the baking, crafts and homework McCoy and her family do on its surface every day.white-cherokee-polycor-marble-honed

 

See White Cherokee up close

Download The Slab Image Portfolio

 

The space also features stainless steel appliances, subway tiles on the wall, stunning white schoolhouse pendant lighting, an antique kitchen cupboard, and wood antique butcher block.

Melinda McCoy of House 214 Design features Polycor's honed White Cherokee American marble in her home kitchen

 

“The kitchen really is the heart of the home,” McCoy said. “It’s the gathering space. I think people are really craving that and they want people to be together. Today, people are craving that feeling.”

The spacious center island has a honed surface that adds a touchable texture that complements her home’s old world European farmhouse feel.

Melinda McCoy of House 214 Design features Polycor's honed White Cherokee American marble in her home kitchen

 

“I think people look at marble sometimes like everybody has it. People see it as trendy, but it’s not,” she said. “It’s something that’s been around forever. Marble has that timelessness to it because it has such a history and story to it. We thought it intertwined really well into our old home.”

See how Melinda McCoy cleans her marble with just soap and water.

 

McCoy first came across Polycor on Instagram, and she immediately fell in love with their work. 

Before using Polycor’s marble in her home, she visited the Georgia quarry, where she witnessed where the marble originates from, and how it is quarried. 

“I’ve never been to a quarry before,” McCoy said. “Actually seeing it versus walking into a big slab warehouse — you see it in its element. We went to the stone yard, where they were cutting slabs. You get to see the whole process from start to finish — you see the narrative.” 

Melinda-McCoy-House-214

 

McCoy who has three children said the marble is constantly in use. She loves that the marble doesn’t require a demanding upkeep routine. 

Her advice for keeping the marble clean is soap and water. “I don’t use any other elements. It’s pretty simple,” she said. “Marble’s supposed to wear over time. It’s supposed to have a story to it. It gets better with how long you have it.” 

To learn more about cleaning American Marble, download the care guide.

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Topics: Marble, Kitchen, American marble, White Cherokee Marble, Countertops, honed finish

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