Raw Material
Recycled Clean Stone
Recycled stone is also referred to as recycled clean stone, reclaimed stone or recycled crushed stone. The raw material for making it comprises of 93% crushed marble powder which is derived from reclaimed stone boulders procured from mines & projects, where it is no longer needed, preventing usable material from going to the landfill. The other 7% comprises of epoxy-resin binder, color pigment & recycled natural stone chips or terrazzo. This combination makes this raw material eco-friendly & sustainable.
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The stone is also known as Engineered stone as it is non porous, more flexible and harder than many types of natural stones. Since it has a uniform internal structure, it does not have hidden cracks or flaws that may exist in natural stones and additionally, it also has a color/pattern consistency. The processed stone creates fewer carbon emissions than wood, metal, or concrete. Recycling of the stone is not harmful to the earth.
Where eco-design is involved, our focus & commitment is 100%. We at Venaesthetic Creations, firmly believe in creative reuse of material, also known as up-cycling.
Additionally, recycled aggregates are the best available option for a sustainable future.
Agate Stone
No gemstone is more creatively striped by nature than agate, chalcedony quartz that forms in concentric layers in a wide variety of colors and texture. Each individual agate forms by filling a cavity in host rock. As a result, agate is round as a round nodule, with concentric bands like the rings of a tree trunk. These bands sometimes look like eyes, fanciful scallops, or even a landscape with trees. Almost all agates are translucent and could allow light to pass thought them.
Semi-Precious Stones
Geologists agree that the planet is composed of three layers a central core, a middle area called the mantle, and a relatively thin crust upon which we live and where precious stones are formed. The core is believed to consist of an inner hub of a very dense rock which is surrounded by an outer core layer of liquid rock, containing mainly silicates of iron, magnesium, aluminum, calcium, sodium and potassium. Those silicates, by far the most common minerals in the Earth’s crust, from the basis for the majority of semi-precious stones.