Eased Edge
A clean straight profile with lightly softened corners for everyday projects.
Sintered stone edge profiles
Compare 18 countertop edge profiles with realistic visuals, cross-section diagrams, comfort notes, and fabrication guidance for sintered stone projects.
Start with intent
Most buyers do not need the most complex profile. They need an edge that fits the application, touch point, slab pattern, and fabrication method.
Edge finder
Pick the project situation. The page highlights useful profiles below while keeping all 18 visible for comparison.
18 edge profiles
Each visual combines a realistic countertop edge render with a cross-section diagram. Use the notes to decide which profiles are practical before drawings, sampling, or quoting.
Practical profiles that usually work well for kitchens, vanities, islands, and project counters.
A clean straight profile with lightly softened corners for everyday projects.
A crisp angled chamfer that makes the edge look intentional without becoming decorative.
A small roundover that softens touch points while keeping a slim modern look.
A 45-degree built edge that creates a thicker premium look from thinner slabs.
Softer profiles for family spaces, high-touch counters, and projects where hand feel matters.
A rounded upper front edge with a flatter lower face for a softer hand feel.
A continuous round front edge that feels soft and safe from top to underside.
A medium rounded profile between pencil and bullnose for a balanced residential feel.
A larger softened radius that gives a more generous touch point than pencil round.
More detailed profiles for traditional, luxury, hospitality, and furniture-style surfaces.
A restrained S-curve profile for clients who want a light decorative detail.
A deeper decorative S-curve that creates a more traditional luxury edge.
A stepped profile with a rounded lower curve for a polished classic appearance.
A layered profile combining a concave cove with an ogee curve for extra depth.
A concave cut that creates a shadow line under the top surface.
Built-up, textured, faceted, and statement edges for highly visible project details.
A controlled textured edge for a more natural stone-like or handcrafted look.
A geometric angled profile that feels modern, architectural, and more sculptural.
A layered cascading profile with multiple small steps for a decorative statement.
A thick built-up edge with a controlled chiseled face for a substantial look.
A thick decorative built-up profile combining ogee movement with a rounded bullnose.
Decision table
Use this table for early selection. Final details should be confirmed with samples, cutting drawings, slab thickness, and fabricator capability.
| Profile | Style | Comfort | Cleaning | Fabrication | Best use |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eased / Pencil / Beveled | Modern, quiet | Medium to soft | Easy | Lower complexity | Kitchens, vanities, worktops |
| Half / Full / Demi Bullnose | Rounded, friendly | High | Easy to medium | Requires radius tooling | Family kitchens, tables, high-touch counters |
| Ogee / Dupont / Cove | Decorative, classic | Medium | Medium | Higher complexity | Luxury counters, vanities, hospitality |
| Mitered / 6cm profiles | Thick, premium | Depends on corner detail | Easy to medium | Requires accurate joining | Waterfall islands, reception desks, feature edges |
| Chiseled / Platner / Triple Waterfall | Statement, special | Varies by profile | Medium to higher care | Sample approval recommended | Feature counters, bars, display surfaces |
Sintered stone notes
Surface printed slabs can still be excellent, but visible straight edges, cutouts, and table edges should be reviewed from the side.
A mitered edge helps a thin slab look substantial and can make dramatic marble-look patterns feel more continuous.
Ogee, cove, chiseled, and 6cm built-up edges need sample approval, tooling confirmation, and shop drawings.
FAQ
For most modern projects, eased, pencil, beveled, and mitered edges are the safest starting points. The best choice depends on edge visibility, slab thickness, body color, and the fabricator's tooling.
Yes, especially for waterfall islands, reception desks, table tops, and projects that need a thicker premium look. Mitered edges should be planned with accurate cutting and sample approval.
Straight, eased, pencil, and simple beveled edges are usually easiest to clean because they have fewer grooves and shadow lines.
It can, but the buyer should check the cut edge and body color first. If the body color is different from the surface, a mitered detail may create a better visual result.
They can be used when the fabricator has suitable tooling and can show a finished sample. Detailed profiles should be confirmed before final quotation.
Send your application, slab thickness, edge visibility, and preferred surface look. Funtek can help you compare practical edge options before quotation.