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Flowing Vein Calacatta White Quartz Slabs GQ-T398 for wholesale

Primary Color(s) Soft Ivory White
Accent Color(s) Subtle Slate Grey + Faint Ash Grey Vein
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 Low
Full Body Printed Quartz Yes
Bookmatch Available Yes
Countertops
Residential: Yes
Commercial: Yes
Wall
Residential: Yes
Commercial: Yes
Flooring
Residential: Yes
Commercial: Yes

Description:

Color and vein character: GQ-T398 is a quiet marble-look quartz surface built on a soft off-white to very pale gray base. The background has gentle cloudy undertones, so it reads clean and bright without becoming flat or overly stark. Across the slab, light to medium gray veins appear in thin, irregular paths: some lines drift diagonally, some bend and taper, and others dissolve into faint misted patches. The movement is like fine pencil marks seen beneath translucent tracing paper—visible enough to give the countertop natural depth, but restrained enough to keep the room calm from a distance. This low-contrast visual makes GQ-T398 a practical choice for distributors, fabricators, and designers who need a classic white-gray quartz that feels timeless rather than dramatic.

Application direction: In a modern farmhouse kitchen, GQ-T398 works especially well with white oak accents, soft gray or navy cabinetry, brushed nickel hardware, simple pendant lighting, and warm white tile. The pale base brightens the island, while the wispy gray movement softens wood grain and painted cabinet colors without making the countertop look busy. In a transitional master bathroom, it can be used for double vanity tops, tub ledges, shower niches, and low backsplashes beside a freestanding tub, brushed nickel fixtures, large mirrors, and soft linen textures. For classic American laundry rooms and mudrooms, the same slab pairs easily with shaker cabinetry, woven storage baskets, gray floor tile, and utility sinks, giving everyday work surfaces a clean, finished look while visually reducing small clutter from detergents, keys, towels, and baskets.

Case-inspired framing: Imagine a 615-square-foot neighborhood home-renovation consultation office with a front welcome counter, one finish-review table, a compact coffee station, and a client restroom. The designer specifies GQ-T398 for the reception counter, beverage ledge, and vanity top because the slab looks professional, bright, and residentially familiar at the same time. During layout planning, the fabricator places the quieter off-white fields on writing zones where tablets, cabinet samples, and paperwork need visual clarity, while the slightly denser gray wisps are allowed to show on the customer-facing counter face for subtle stone detail. Under 3500K warm-neutral lighting, the polished surface gives the small office a soft reflected lift rather than a cold glare. White oak display shelves, navy sample doors, brushed nickel pulls, pale gray seating, warm white walls, and understated signage all connect naturally to the slab’s balanced tone. The finished setting feels organized, approachable, and easy to translate into kitchen countertops, bathroom vanities, laundry tops, mudroom surfaces, apartment upgrades, and light commercial counters.

Frequently asked questions

A little diluted vinegar used once is usually not the disaster people imagine, but I wouldn’t make it your daily cleaner. In real-world kitchens, the bigger issue is repeated exposure: acidic cleaners can slowly dull the resin-rich surface film, especially on honed, matte, or dark quartz where changes in sheen show faster than on a busy polished pattern.

Quartz isn’t marble, so vinegar won’t etch it in the same dramatic way. But quartz is made with mineral filler plus resin and pigments, and those binders are what don’t love harsh cleaners over time. Full-strength vinegar, oven cleaner, bleach, abrasive powders, and green scrub pads are where homeowners usually get into trouble. A frequent complaint we hear is “my quartz looks cloudy,” and half the time it’s cleaner residue, hard water film, or someone scrubbing too aggressively.

For normal cleanup, use a mild dish soap, warm water, and a microfiber cloth. For hard water around faucets, use a quartz-safe cleaner and rinse well. If you have honed or black quartz, expect more visible fingerprints and wipe marks, so technique matters more than the cleaner label.

Several quartz manufacturers produce Super Jumbo slabs in the range of approximately 136″ × 77″ (3450 × 1950 mm), although exact dimensions may vary by manufacturer, color collection, and thickness.

The primary advantage of Super Jumbo slabs is the ability to cover larger surfaces with fewer seams. They are commonly specified for oversized kitchen islands, full-height backsplashes, shower walls, and other large-format applications where a more continuous appearance is desired.

When evaluating slab size, it is important to consider the usable area rather than the nominal slab dimensions. During fabrication, edge trimming, cutouts, and layout optimization may reduce the effective working size available for a project.

For projects requiring Super Jumbo quartz, we recommend reviewing slab dimensions, pattern direction, and layout plans early in the design stage. This helps determine whether the larger format will reduce seams, improve material yield, and deliver the desired visual result.