- الصفحة الرئيسية
- كوارتز
- ألواح الكوارتز
- Super White Fine Veins Quartz Slab GQ-T277 for Wholesale
Super White Fine Veins Quartz Slab GQ-T277 for Wholesale
| الألوان الأساسية | أبيض لامع |
| لون (ألوان) الزخرفة | Charcoal Grey + Soft Light Grey Veins |
| صياغة | عادي |
| تشطيبات | مصقول / مصقول / سويدي / جلد |
| حجم مخصص | 138 بوصة × 79 بوصة / 126 بوصة × 63 بوصة / قابل للتخصيص |
| سُمك | 20mm/30mm/Customizable |
| أسلوب الحافة | حافة مصقولة مريحة/حافة مصفحة 2+2 سم/حافة مشطوفة |
| بلد | تايلاند |
| Full Body Quartz | نعم |
| متوفر بمطابقة الكتاب | نعم |
| أسطح العمل سكني: نعم تجاري: نعم |
| جدار سكني: نعم تجاري: نعم |
| أرضيات سكني: نعم تجاري: نعم |
وصف:
أسئلة متكررة
What quartz color goes with white cabinets?
Most fabricators will tell you: go for a white quartz with soft, linear grey veining — not too bold, not too faint.
It’s the sweet spot for white cabinets because it adds quiet movement without competing.
In real-world kitchens, that subtle contrast reads as clean and intentional, especially under LED or north-facing light.
If your cabinets are high-gloss, you can lean into slightly bolder veining — but avoid tight, chaotic patterns; they telegraph seams more and make edge fabrication trickier.
Warm-toned whites (with beige or ivory undertones) work better with painted oak or cream-tinged cabinets, but they’ll yellow faster near windows if the resin isn’t UV-stable.
Polished finishes on dark-veined slabs show smudges and water spots more — honed or suede finishes hide that better in daily use.
Always dry-lay with your actual cabinet doors and lighting.
What looks balanced in a showroom often shifts once it’s next to your wall tile or backsplash.
Grand Quartz Tech’s marble-look line includes several of these balanced whites — all full-body printed, so edges and cutouts match the surface pattern.
Does white quartz go with white cabinets?
Yes — but only if you treat it like a material choice, not just a color match.
In high-traffic commercial kitchens, pure bright-white quartz without veining often reads flat or clinical, especially under cool lighting.
Installers usually recommend something with tonal variation: soft silver veining, faint taupe washes, or even ultra-fine gold flecks — anything that gives depth when viewed from different angles.
A slab that looks uniform at 3 feet may show banding or resin pooling at 10 feet.
Also, white quartz with heavy resin content can telegraph seam lines more than denser formulations, especially on 2cm slabs with eased edges.
If your cabinets are matte-painted MDF, stick with low-contrast veining — glossy cabinets handle more visual weight.
And don’t skip the sample test: hold it next to your cabinet finish in morning, noon, and evening light.
Grand Quartz Tech runs low-silica, UV-resistant lines out of Thailand — their white marbles are formulated for consistent batch-to-batch tone, which matters when ordering multiple slabs for large projects.
Anyone have pics of Eyes White Quartz counter tops with black fixtures?
Eyes White Quartz isn’t a Grand Quartz Tech SKU — but the question points to a real design challenge: pairing crisp white quartz with matte black fixtures.
In real-world installs, that combo works best when the quartz has tight, consistent veining — loose or swirling patterns compete with the sharpness of black hardware.
Most contractors report fewer callbacks when the veining is linear and under 1mm thick; it reads as texture, not distraction.
Lighting is critical: recessed LEDs with high CRI (>90) bring out the contrast without washing out the veins.
Avoid placing black fixtures directly under halogen pendants — the glare creates hotspots that exaggerate any resin pooling in the slab.
Also, matte black faucets scratch easier than brushed nickel, so if the kitchen sees heavy use, consider satin black instead.
Since GQ doesn’t produce ‘Eyes White’, ask your wholesaler for a comparable full-body printed white marble look — their T277 series has similar tonal range and tighter vein control, especially in super-jumbo sizes where bookmatching stays aligned across islands and perimeter runs.
Does anyone know of a white quartz with a thin blue veining? TiA?
Thin blue veining in white quartz is rare — and for good reason.
Most engineered quartz manufacturers avoid it because blue pigments degrade faster under UV exposure, especially near windows or skylights.
What starts as a delicate aqua line can shift toward grey or lavender after 18–24 months in direct sun.
Fabricators who’ve used it report higher seam visibility too — blue veins rarely print full-body, so cut edges often show a white core that breaks continuity.
If you need that coastal vibe, consider a white quartz with fine, cool-grey veining and a slight blue undertone in the resin — it holds up better long-term and reads 'blue-adjacent' in the right light.
Always request a 12×12” sample, tape it to your cabinet door, and watch it for three days under your actual lighting.
Grand Quartz Tech doesn’t offer dedicated blue-veined slabs, but their Stone Look line uses UV-stable mineral pigments and full-body printing — some batches in the T277 family run cooler, almost icy, which pairs well with navy cabinetry or cerulean tile accents without the fading risk.






