Category 01
Edge profiling transforms a raw slab cut into a finished architectural element. The edge you choose defines the character of a countertop, stair tread, or vanity top more than the stone itself. We produce all standard and custom profiles on marble, granite, limestone, and travertine using CNC profile machines and hand-finishing where required.
Fully rounded edge on both top and bottom. The most forgiving profile — no sharp corners. Standard for bathroom vanity tops, pool coping, and any surface where safety and smooth ergonomics are the priority.
Rounded top with flat bottom edge. Softer than a square edge, more structured than a full bullnose. The most commonly specified countertop edge in residential kitchen projects across Europe and the Gulf.
A flat angled cut — typically 45° — that removes the sharp square corner and creates a clean modern line. Minimal material removal, simple tooling, low cost. The specification for contemporary minimalist architecture.
A decorative S-shaped profile combining a concave and convex curve. Classical heritage from architectural millwork, adapted to stone. Adds ornamental quality to countertops and stair nosings in traditional and transitional interior schemes.
Requires thicker slab (3 cm minimum) for full profile depth
A layered ogee-style profile with additional flat step detail, creating visual thickness and architectural shadow line at the edge. The premium edge specification for luxury kitchen and bathroom countertop projects.
3–4 cm slab thickness required
The sharp 90° corner is slightly softened with a minimal radius — typically 2–3 mm. Nearly invisible in isolation but eliminates chip risk and sharp edge hazard. The standard edge for contemporary minimalist specification.
A deliberately rough, hand-chipped edge that exposes the raw, uncut face of the stone. Adds natural character and rustic authenticity. Highly effective on travertine and limestone where the interior crystal structure contrasts with the natural face colour.
Natural broken edge retained from the quarry split — the most raw and natural profile available. Used primarily in cladding and landscaping where the raw stone edge becomes part of the visual language.
A small, subtle rounded edge — 5–8 mm radius — that softens the corner without any decorative profile ambition. The standard safe-edge specification for tile borders, windowsills, and any surface where only a safety radius is needed.
The countertop surface continues vertically down the cabinet face in a seamless drop — creating the appearance of a continuous stone surface from top to floor. Requires precision mitre joints at 45° or special laminated fabrication. The defining high-end kitchen aesthetic of the past decade.
Requires precision 45° mitre at top corner — fabrication tolerance critical
Two stone layers bonded at the edge to create the visual impression of a thick slab. A 2 cm slab with a 10 cm laminated edge strip reads as a 4 cm thick stone — the aesthetic of premium thick-slab countertops at realistic material cost.
Bond quality is critical — food-safe epoxy used for kitchen applications
Category 02
Our fabrication facility operates gang saw block cutters, bridge saws, CNC waterjet cutters, and multi-disc calibrating lines. Every product category from raw block to precision cut-to-size piece is produced to dimensional tolerances defined in EN 1341, EN 1342, and EN 1343 European standards.
Standard square and rectangular tiles cut from slabs using bridge saw or disc cutting systems. Produced in standard sizes from 20×20 cm through to 120×120 cm. Dimensional tolerance ±0.5 mm on non-calibrated; ±0.3 mm on calibrated production.
Custom dimensions produced to project drawings or BIM models. Any rectangular dimension is possible. Non-rectangular pieces (L-shapes, curved, angled) require CNC waterjet or CNC router. Standard CTS adds 15–25% to tile pricing depending on complexity and waste factor.
Minimum order for CTS: 20 m². DWG, PDF, or DXF drawings required
Raw blocks processed through multi-blade gang saws to produce large-format slabs. Standard slab size: 240×120 cm to 320×180 cm depending on block dimensions. Thickness: 1.5–4 cm standard; special thicknesses on request. Used for countertop fabrication, bookmatched panels, and bespoke large surfaces.
Tiles processed through multi-head calibrating and grinding lines to achieve uniform thickness with ±0.3 mm tolerance — the standard required for mechanical adhesive floor laying systems. Calibrated tiles are the specification standard for commercial flooring projects and professional tile installation.
Calibration adds 3–5 days to lead time — specify early
Road and pavement boundary stones produced from granite or hard limestone. Standard sizes: 100×20×30 cm and 100×25×30 cm. Custom dimensions available. All kerbstones produced to EN 1340 standard with required test certificates for public infrastructure projects.
Vertical stone blocks for landscaping boundaries, garden fencing, and retaining border applications. Typically square or rectangular section; hammered or split face on visible surfaces; sawn on bedding faces. Natural character material with structural landscape function.
Top-finishing stones for walls, pool edges, and garden structures. Critical to get right — coping stones protect the wall core from water ingress while providing a clean finished top edge. Produced with drip groove undercuts as standard to prevent water tracking down the wall face.
Drip groove undercut on underside is standard — specify if not required
Category 03
Stone architecture requires precision fabrication beyond standard tile dimensions. Our architectural works team produces complete staircase systems, skirting, window surrounds, columns, and all the stone elements that define the character of a building's interior. All architectural elements are produced with project-specific shop drawings and prototypes submitted for approval before full production.
Complete staircase sets fabricated to architectural drawings. Treads include edge profile (typically bullnose or square), anti-slip groove options, and precise dimensional control for alignment. Risers match the tread stone for visual cohesion. Sets are numbered and sequenced for installation.
Full stair set drawing required before production. Prototype tread submitted for approval.
The side structural or decorative elements of a staircase — the sloped stone panels that run alongside the flight and support or conceal the stair structure. Cut to precise slope angles matching the stair pitch. May be flat or profiled with decorative moulding.
Slope angle must be specified — derived from architectural stair section drawing
Continuous base strips that protect wall bases and create a clean visual transition between floor and wall planes. Produced in matching stone to the floor for visual continuity, or in contrasting stone as a designed feature. Standard height: 6–15 cm. Mitred at internal and external corners.
Supply with 10% overage for corner cuts and fitting losses
Horizontal stone elements at window bases — functional (water drainage) and aesthetic. Produced with outward slope for drainage, drip groove undercut standard, and front edge profile to architect specification. Material choice ranges from practical granite to decorative marble depending on exposure.
Minimum 2% slope away from building required. Specify if glazing is direct-to-stone.
Stone frames for entrance doors — architrave, threshold, and side elements. Particularly effective in limestone and marble for a grand entrance statement. Produced as matched sets with consistent face and profile. Sets include threshold stone with appropriate slip resistance finish.
On-site measurements must be taken before production. Tolerance ±2 mm for door frame sets.
Solid stone columns for decorative or structural applications, and cladded systems where stone is applied over a concrete or steel structural core. Solid columns are produced in sections and dry-assembled on site. Cladded systems use CNC-precision curved stone panels fixed to the structural core.
Structural design by others. Stone column specification requires structural engineer sign-off.
Top-finishing stones for walls, pillars, gate piers, and architectural features. The capstone protects the structure below from direct water ingress and provides a finished, designed termination to vertical elements. Produced with weathering profiles (slope, drip groove) as standard.
Decorative stone frames for fireplace openings — one of the most visible and characterful stone elements in a residential interior. Produced as a complete set: hearth, back panels, side jambs, mantel shelf, and frieze. Design ranges from simple contemporary profiles to elaborate classical carving.
Heat resistance varies by stone. Granite and soapstone preferred for high-heat proximity. Marble for decorative surround away from direct flame.
Complete stone railing systems — balusters, rails, and posts. Produced in turned or CNC-cut designs from marble, limestone, or granite. Particularly suited to traditional, neoclassical, and Mediterranean architectural schemes. Structural design and fixing system specified by structural engineer.
Structural design by structural engineer required before production
Decorative horizontal moulding at the top of walls, above doorways, or at ceiling-wall junctions. Produced from marble or limestone using CNC profiling machines and hand-finishing for classical profiles. A traditional architectural element experiencing renewed specification in high-end residential projects.
Profile drawing required. Complex classical profiles require hand-finishing — allow additional lead time.
Category 04
Our CNC carving centre and hand-carving workshop produce decorative stone elements of any complexity. From machine-precision waterjet medallions to hand-carved relief panels and bespoke mosaic designs, this is where stone crosses from building material into architectural art. All decorative works begin with a design approval stage — drawings, renders, or physical prototypes submitted before full production.
Five-axis CNC router and waterjet cutting produces exact reproductions of any architectural pattern — Islamic geometric designs, classical motifs, company logos, custom arabesque, and bespoke sculptural relief — with dimensional precision impossible to match by hand. Works from DWG, DXF, or high-resolution image files.
DWG or DXF file required. Image files accepted for conversion at additional design cost.
Skilled stone carvers produce organic, fluid carving work that CNC machines cannot replicate — flowing botanical forms, portraiture, sculptural figures, and complex multi-plane relief. Each piece is unique. Lead time is longer and cost higher than CNC, but the result is a genuinely handcrafted object with artistic value.
Minimum 4–8 week lead time. Prototype approval stage mandatory for large commissions.
Three-dimensional wall panels with raised design elements carved or machined into the stone face. Depth varies from subtle 10–15 mm surface texture to deep 80–100 mm sculptural relief depending on design and stone thickness. The interplay of shadow and surface creates a visual richness no flat material can achieve.
Maximum achievable depth depends on stone thickness and brittleness of material
Circular or multi-sided floor centrepieces cut by waterjet or CNC from contrasting stone types. The design is assembled from precision-cut interlocking pieces. Complexity ranges from a simple single-material compass rose through to multi-material patterns with 50+ individual elements. Each medallion is trial-assembled at the factory before shipping.
Trial assembly at factory required. Numbered for site installation.
Small stone tiles — typically 10×10 mm to 50×50 mm — assembled into geometric, figurative, or abstract patterns and mounted on mesh backing for installation. Natural stone mosaic uses marble, travertine, limestone, and granite offcuts, creating unique colour combinations impossible in any manufactured product.
Grout colour selection critical to overall appearance — specify before production
Precision waterjet cutting produces interlocking pieces from different stone types that assemble with hairline-tight joints. Multi-material compositions — combining Egyptian marble, granite, limestone, and imported stones — produce floor and wall designs of extraordinary visual complexity and precision.
Material compatibility check required — different stones must be compatible in thickness and hardness for joint quality
Text, logos, patterns, and line drawings engraved into the stone face using CNC routing or laser. Engraving can be left natural (visible from light angle), filled with contrasting grout or pigment, or gilded with metal leaf for maximum visibility. Common for memorial work, building signage, and corporate branding elements.
Font selection and size minimum specifications required. Vector artwork (AI, EPS, DXF) preferred.
Category 05
External stone products demand higher physical performance than interior stone — resistance to frost, UV stability, low water absorption, and certified slip resistance are all required specifications. Our granite and limestone paving and landscaping range is produced to EN 1341, EN 1342, and EN 1343 standards with full test documentation for infrastructure and landscape projects.
Small solid granite blocks — the ancient paving material used in European historic city centres for centuries. Standard sizes: 10×10×10 cm, 8×8×8 cm, 4×6×8 cm (fan-cut). The irregular bedding face and tight joint create a self-interlocking system with exceptional load distribution. Used in vehicular and pedestrian paving with equal effectiveness.
Available in flamed or natural split face. Flamed recommended for high-traffic with clean edge maintenance.
Individual flat stones placed at regular intervals in gardens, lawns, or gravel areas. Available in sawn regular shapes (square, circle, hexagon) or natural irregular shapes for an organic garden character. Thickness typically 4–6 cm for structural adequacy. Surface finish: natural, brushed, or sandblasted for grip.
Irregular natural-shaped stone pieces fitted together in an organic mosaic pattern. Available in limestone, sandstone, and quartzite. The installation is labour-intensive but creates a uniquely natural, handcrafted character impossible with any regular paving system. Typically sold by weight or m² for a specified thickness range.
Higher installation labour cost than regular paving. Specify desired character (tight joints vs wide joints) in brief.
Large flat stones for outdoor flooring — a step up from tiles in scale. Typical sizes from 60×60 cm through to 120×60 cm or larger on request. Thickness 3–5 cm for direct bed installation. Surface finishes: natural split, bush-hammered, sandblasted, or sawn. Limestone flagstones are the natural material of traditional English and Mediterranean courtyard architecture.
Boundary stones for roads, pedestrian paths, and landscape features. Standard dimensions to EN 1340. Available in granite (infrastructure projects, permanent installation) and limestone (landscape and garden applications). All kerbs produced with sawn faces on bedding and back, and natural or processed face on visible side.
EN 1340 test certificate available for infrastructure project specifications
Stone seating elements — from simple slab benches (stone top on stone legs) through to designed CNC-profiled furniture. Available in granite, limestone, and sandstone. Granite is preferred for permanence and weather resistance. Limestone and sandstone for warmer character in sheltered garden settings.
Structural design required for public-use benches. All public benches include anti-vandalism anchoring.
Complete stone water features — from simple bowl fountains through to multi-tier sculpted fountains. The stone shell is fabricated in our workshop; hydraulic and pump systems are the client's scope. Material selection is critical — granite is the only Egyptian stone appropriate for permanently submerged or frequently wet fountain elements.
Hydraulic design and pump specification are client scope. Stone fabrication only.
Category 06
Stone cladding systems differ from standard tiling in scale, fixing methodology, and structural requirements. Our cladding range includes material-only supply, and we can advise on fixing systems and subframe specifications in coordination with your facade engineer. All cladding products are produced to BS 8298 and EN 13373 dimensional tolerances.
Natural fractured face panels that create dramatic three-dimensional exterior wall texture. The irregular relief of split face panels catches shadow at every light angle, creating a surface that reads differently throughout the day. Supplied as individual panels or on mesh backing for easier installation. Available in basalt, limestone, and travertine.
Irregular thickness — typical variation ±10–20 mm from panel to panel. Allow for grouting depth in wall setting-out.
Horizontal strips of stone arranged in layered courses — either genuine stone (cut limestone, travertine, or slate strips) or reconstituted stone panels. Genuine natural stone stacked panels from our production use real limestone and travertine strips bonded to a backing board for ease of installation.
Weight per m² is significant — wall structural capacity must be confirmed before specification
Stone panels mechanically fixed to a subframe without adhesive contact with the building wall. The preferred system for large commercial facades, high-rise buildings, and any application where thermal movement or building tolerance is a design consideration. Requires engineered subframe and brackets — typically aluminium or stainless steel.
Requires facade engineer design for subframe and bracket system. Stone supply only from Majestic Stones.
Stone cladding tiles fixed to the substrate with cement mortar or polymer-modified adhesive. Standard system for low-to-medium rise facades, interior stone cladding, and renovation projects. Panel size is limited by adhesive bond strength and weight — typically maximum 60×120 cm for facade use.
Panel weight must be within adhesive system capacity. Maximum panel area typically 0.72 m² for reliable bond.
CNC-machined or mould-cast stone panels with three-dimensional surface geometry — wave patterns, diamond facets, angular forms. Creates architectural wall surfaces with inherent shadow and depth without the cost of hand carving. Available in limestone (best for CNC profiling) and engineered stone.
Lead time 3–5 weeks. Prototype approval required.
Category 07
Behind every finished stone element is a set of technical processes that define its precision, durability, and installation behaviour. These fabrication techniques are applied selectively depending on the application requirements, and are included in project quotations when specified in the brief.
A 45° mitre cut at the front edge allows a countertop to appear thicker than the actual slab by wrapping the stone down the front face. Two 2 cm slabs mitred together at the nose create a 4 cm thick-look edge. Requires precision cutting (tolerance ±0.5°) and food-safe epoxy bond. The Waterfall edge is a variant of this technique.
Bond quality and opening gap management critical. No visible joint on finished face.
Functional channels cut into the underside of horizontal stone elements — window sills, copings, step nosings — to break the capillary water path and prevent water from tracking under the stone onto the wall face below. Standard 10×10 mm groove at 20–30 mm from face. Mandatory on all external horizontal stone.
Should be specified on all external horizontal stone as standard. Often omitted by inexperienced specifiers.
Parallel grooves machined into stair tread nosings to provide a tactile and physical grip zone at the most critical slip-risk location. Standard specification: 3 grooves at 5 mm width × 5 mm depth, 10 mm apart, running the full length of the nosing zone. Required by building regulations in many jurisdictions for commercial stairways.
Building regulation requirement in many markets — check local code requirement
Two stone layers bonded with structural epoxy to achieve a target thickness where a single slab of that thickness is unavailable or uneconomic. Used for thick-edge countertops (laminated drop edge), reinforcing thin delicate stones, and creating increased slab weight for pedestal fountain bases. Bond must be food-safe for kitchen applications.
Food-safe epoxy used for all kitchen and food-contact applications
Fibreglass mesh or resin backing applied to the back face of thin, delicate, or fragile stone — particularly important for onyx, some translucent marbles, and very large-format thin slabs. The backing holds the stone together if cracked during transport or handling, and adds structural integrity for installation in panel systems.
Standard process for onyx. Recommended for marble slabs below 15 mm thickness in large formats.
Natural voids, pores, and minor cracks filled with colour-matched epoxy resin before final polishing. Standard process for travertine (which is inherently porous), and applied selectively to limestone and some marbles. The result is a smooth, uniform surface that conceals natural material character while improving stain resistance.
For travertine, specify "filled" or "unfilled" — both are legitimate design choices
Category 08
The most demanding and creative category of stone fabrication — unique pieces with no standard template. Every project begins with a consultation to understand functional requirements, design intent, and material suitability. Prototypes and material samples are presented for approval before any full production begins. All custom works include full documentation of dimensions, materials, and surface treatments.
Three-dimensional stone sculptures from relief panel through to full-round figurative work. Our skilled carvers work in marble, limestone, and granite from provided drawings, reference images, or 3D digital models. CNC roughing reduces material and time; hand-finishing achieves the final form and surface quality.
Lead time: 8–24 weeks depending on complexity. Digital model or reference drawings required.
Memorial stonework produced with the respect and precision the purpose demands. Available in granite (highest durability), marble (traditional), and limestone. Engravings, relief carving, photographs transferred to stone, and custom profile shaping are all available. Produced to your exact specification and inspected before dispatch.
Lead time: 3–6 weeks. Inscription text approval required in writing before engraving.
Stone tables, sinks, bathtubs, and free-standing furniture pieces. From a simple granite-top dining table through to a completely carved marble bathtub. Each piece fabricated to your dimensions with complete structural engineering for any load-bearing elements. Stone sinks and bathtubs include waterproof resin treatment to all internal surfaces.
Stone bathtubs: structural floor loading must be confirmed by structural engineer before specification.
Commercial stone reception desks and service counters — the first physical contact point between a building and its visitors. Designed in collaboration with your interior designer, produced in sections for site assembly, and finished to the exact surface treatment specified. Common specification: polished dark granite or marble face panel on a stone or composite core.
Produced in numbered sections for site assembly. Assembly drawing provided.
Company logos, names, and graphic devices executed in stone — engraved, relief-carved, or produced as separate letters applied to a stone background. A permanently material expression of corporate identity. Available in contrasting stone combinations (e.g., white marble letters on dark granite background) for maximum visual impact.
Vector artwork (AI, EPS, DXF) required. Prototype letter submitted for approval before full production.
Every Project Starts Here
Special works require more information than a standard tile order. Here is what we need from you to provide an accurate quotation.
DWG, DXF, PDF, or dimensioned sketches. The more precise your drawings, the more accurate our quotation. For curved or complex 3D work, a 3D model file is preferred.
Tell us which stone material you need (marble, granite, limestone), the surface finish required, and whether you need samples of the material before committing.
Provide your required quantity and installation date. Special works have variable lead times — earlier notice means more scheduling flexibility and potentially lower cost.
For new or complex works, we produce a prototype for your approval before full production. This eliminates costly mistakes and ensures the final product matches your intent.
File Formats Accepted