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Book-Matched Storm Blue Vein Quartz Slabs GQ-T382 for Wholesale

Primary Color(s) Pure Ivory White
Accent Color(s) Pale Slate Blue-Grey
Craft Regular
Finishes Polished / Honed / Suede / Leathered
Customized Size 138″ × 79″ / 126″ × 63″ / Customizable
Thickness 20mm/30mm/Customizable
Edge Style Eased polished edge/2+2cm laminated edge/Mitred edge
Country Thailand
Variations High
Full Body Printed Quartz Yes
Bookmatch Available Yes
Countertops
Residential: Yes
Commercial: Yes
Wall
Residential: Yes
Commercial: Yes
Flooring
Residential: Yes
Commercial: Yes

Description:

Surface personality: GQ-T382 presents a soft off-white to very pale gray background, touched with cloudy undertones that keep the slab from looking flat or overly stark. Medium and darker gray veins move mainly on a diagonal, flowing from upper left toward lower right in long, relaxed strokes. Some veins are fine and airy, while others widen into feathered bands with diffused borders, like graphite washed lightly across misted marble. Occasional blue-gray notes cool the overall tone just enough to give the surface a clean, modern freshness. Along several vein paths, small granular clusters appear as quiet mineral texture, adding close-up depth while the room-scale impression remains calm, bright, and classic.

American interior applications: This quartz is well suited for projects where a marble-inspired countertop needs to feel refined without becoming a loud focal point. In a transitional kitchen, GQ-T382 pairs naturally with white shaker cabinets, brushed nickel hardware, soft gray backsplash tile, and medium oak or hickory flooring; the diagonal gray movement gives the island direction while the pale base keeps the kitchen open and easy to stage. In a modern farmhouse bathroom, it works beautifully over a white oak vanity with matte black faucets, simple sconces, warm white walls, and woven storage details, creating a crisp but relaxed vanity surface. It is also a practical choice for a classic American laundry room, especially above soft gray cabinetry with nickel pulls, porcelain floor tile, and utility shelving, where the gentle veining helps disguise everyday visual clutter while maintaining a polished residential finish.

Case-inspired project framing: Imagine a 660-square-foot boutique home renovation consultation studio with a front client counter, one sample-review table, a compact coffee alcove, and a small powder room. The designer specifies GQ-T382 for the welcome counter, beverage ledge, and restroom vanity to create one consistent light stone language throughout the space. During layout planning, the fabricator lets the diagonal gray veins travel across the customer-facing counter face, giving visitors a subtle sense of motion from the entry toward the material display wall. The quieter off-white fields are reserved for working zones where cabinet samples, hardware boards, tablets, and finish folders need a clean background. Under warm-neutral 3500K lighting, the countertop brightens the compact studio without producing a cold glare, while white shaker displays, pale oak sample drawers, brushed nickel pulls, matte black signage, soft gray upholstery, and cream walls all connect back to the slab’s balanced cool-gray character. The result feels orderly, approachable, and commercially practical—an effective reference for distributors, builders, and designers specifying light quartz for kitchen countertops, islands, bathroom vanities, laundry tops, boutique counters, and small hospitality surfaces.

Frequently asked questions

Vinegar won’t etch or damage quartz like it would natural stone, but it’s not the best choice for regular cleaning.

Quartz is non-porous and acid-resistant, so vinegar won’t harm the surface chemically. However, frequent use can strip away the protective finish over time, especially on polished surfaces, leading to dullness. It’s also a weak disinfectant—better options exist.

For daily cleaning, stick with mild dish soap and water. If you’re disinfecting, use a product specifically labeled safe for quartz. Avoid vinegar on high-gloss or honed finishes; it’s better reserved for occasional spot cleaning.

Contractors see this issue often—clients use vinegar thinking it’s ‘natural,’ but it’s a shortcut that can compromise the long-term appearance. The takeaway: vinegar is safe in small doses, but not ideal for routine care.

Quartz veins themselves—especially the golden or metallic-looking ones—are not valuable in terms of precious metals. The gold you see in quartz countertops is typically a pigment or resin additive, not real gold.

That said, veins add visual value by mimicking natural stone like Calacatta marble, which drives demand and price. High-contrast, dramatic veining increases perceived luxury and can make a slab more desirable for high-end projects.

For fabricators, the value comes from the aesthetic, not the material. Some rare, naturally occurring quartz veins with actual gold mineralization exist (like in gemstone-grade specimens), but those are not used in countertop slabs. So while the veins aren’t valuable by weight, they are valuable in design. Think of them like artwork—enhancing the look, not the worth of the stone itself.