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Calacatta Ice Grey Quartz GQ-T367 for Wholesale

Primärfarb(en) Off-White
Akzentfarbe(n) Dark Charcoal Grey Veins + Faint Light Grey Flecks
Handwerk Regelmäßig
Fertigstellungen Poliert / Geschliffen / Wildleder / Leder
Maßgeschneiderte Größe 138″ × 79″ / 126″ × 63″ / Anpassbar
Dicke 20mm/30mm/Customizable
Randstil Abgeschrägte polierte Kante/2+2cm lamellierte Kante/Gehrungskante
Land Thailand
Full Body Quartz Ja
Buchungsübereinstimmung verfügbar Ja
Arbeitsplatten
Wohngebiet: Ja
Gewerblich: Ja
Mauer
Wohngebiet: Ja
Gewerblich: Ja
Bodenbelag
Wohngebiet: Ja
Gewerblich: Ja

Beschreibung:

GQ-T367 unfolds as a quiet cartography of light and depth, where the surface becomes a topographic study in restraint and refinement. The base is a soft, even light gray—cool and composed like the stillness before sunrise over a high plateau—offering a neutral ground that absorbs ambient glow without reflection or glare. Across this serene expanse, veining emerges not as bold strokes but as wind-drawn threads: fine, feathered lines in charcoal and deep gray that branch unpredictably, resembling the natural fissures of ancient stone exposed to time. These veins vary subtly in thickness, some converging into linear segments that intersect at irregular angles, creating a network of delicate movement that feels both organic and precisely engineered. The polished surface enhances clarity without introducing texture, preserving a minimalist elegance that invites contemplation rather than distraction.
In application, GQ-T367 thrives in spaces where calm intentionality meets modern design. In a modern farmhouse kitchen with dark walnut cabinetry, it acts as a luminous counterpoint—its understated veining catching the morning light while grounding the space with quiet sophistication. In a transitional master bathroom, it wraps around a freestanding tub, its cool tone amplifying the sense of serenity and cleanliness. And in a contemporary living room with a floating stone fireplace, the slab’s subtle patterning echoes the rhythm of flame and shadow, anchoring the room in architectural harmony.
Consider a boutique wellness retreat in the Pacific Northwest—where minimalism meets nature. Here, GQ-T367 was selected for the reception desk and guest bathroom vanities. Its neutral palette harmonizes with reclaimed wood accents and floor-to-ceiling windows, allowing the surrounding forest to remain the visual focus. The smooth, non-porous surface ensures durability under high traffic, while the refined veining adds depth without overwhelming the tranquil aesthetic. This is not just a material—it’s a narrative of balance, where engineered precision mirrors the quiet logic of natural form.

Häufig gestellte Fragen

Not necessarily—and it depends on what you're comparing.

Most fabricators will tell you that mid-tier engineered quartz runs close to mid-tier granite in material cost, but the real difference shows up in labor and long-term handling.

Granite often needs sealing at install and every 1–2 years after, plus more careful edge fabrication due to natural fissures or soft spots.

Quartz skips all that—no sealant, consistent density, tighter tolerances on edges and cutouts.

That saves time and reduces callbacks.

On the flip side, high-contrast veined quartz with full-body printing—like GQ-T367—can cost more than average granite slabs because of the inkjet process and jumbo slab yield.

Freight and duties also play a role: since Grand Quartz Tech slabs are made fully in Thailand, landed cost varies by port and order size.

For commercial jobs where schedule predictability matters, quartz usually wins—not because it's cheaper upfront, but because there’s less rework, fewer surprises on color match, and no last-minute granite slab rejects.

From a fabricator’s standpoint, engineered quartz solves real headaches—especially with consistency and prep time.

You get uniform thickness across every slab, so no shimming or lipping during installation.

No sealing means one less step before handoff, and no etching from lemon juice or vinegar—critical in kitchens where homeowners skip trivets.

Polished finishes on light colors hide smudges well, but dark polished slabs like GQ-T367 show fingerprints and water marks until wiped.

Honed or matte finishes reduce that, though they’re slightly more porous at the surface and need more frequent cleaning in high-splash zones.

Full Body Printed Quartz—like what Grand Quartz Tech uses—means veining goes all the way through, so seams don’t telegraph as badly on busy patterns.

In hospitality projects, we’ve seen fewer seam repairs over 3–5 years compared to natural stone.

Just keep in mind: quartz isn’t fireproof.

Thermal shock from hot pans directly on the surface can cause microfractures, especially near cutouts.

Always use trivets—and remind clients.

It depends on what you’re buying—and how you’re buying it.

A basic white or gray quartz slab is often priced close to mid-range granite, but design complexity changes everything.

GQ-T367, for example, uses Full Body Printed Quartz technology, which requires precise inkjet calibration and higher-grade raw quartz—so it sits above entry-level lines.

Slab size matters too: Grand Quartz Tech offers super jumbo slabs up to 138" x 79", which cuts waste on large islands or seamless countertops, but those slabs carry a over standard 126" x 63" sizes.

Finish plays a role—polished is standard; leathered or brushed adds labor and cost.

Project volume shifts the math: wholesale buyers ordering container loads get better terms, and lead times stay tight (20–30 days) because production is in-house in Chonburi.

Fabricators report lower overall job cost on quartz versus granite—not because material is cheap, but because there’s less sanding, no sealer touch-ups, and fewer edge breaks during CNC routing.

So 'expensive' only tells half the story.

It’s about where the money goes—and where it doesn’t.

No—'quartz' alone doesn’t tell you what you’re getting.

Engineered quartz is a manufactured product: ~93% ground quartz aggregate, bound with polyester or vinyl ester resin, pigments, and sometimes glass or mirror chips.

That’s what Grand Quartz Tech makes—fully controlled, NSF-certified, low-silica production lines.

Natural quartzite is completely different: it’s a metamorphic rock, quarried like granite, with variable hardness and porosity.

It etches easily, needs sealing, and often has iron deposits that rust if wet for too long.

You’ll see both sold under 'quartz' labels at some distributors—especially online—so always check the spec sheet.

If it says 'engineered stone', 'man-made quartz', or lists resin content, it’s engineered.

If it says 'quartzite' or 'natural stone', it’s not.

GQ-T367 is engineered quartz—printed, consistent, non-porous—but it’s designed to mimic natural Calacatta marble, not quartzite.

Mistaking the two leads to unhappy clients, callbacks on staining, and warranty disputes.

Ask for the mill certificate.

Better yet, request a sample slab and do an acid test—real quartzite fizzes; engineered quartz won’t.