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- Glacier Stream Quartz GQ-T375 for wholesale
Glacier Stream Quartz GQ-T375 for wholesale
| Primary Color(s) | Pale Ash Gray |
| Accent Color(s) | Subtle Slate Gray + Faint Ash Gray Veins |
| 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 |
| Full Body Quartz | Yes |
| Bookmatch Available | Yes |
| Countertops Residential: Yes Commercial: Yes |
| Wall Residential: Yes Commercial: Yes |
| Flooring Residential: Yes Commercial: Yes |
Description:
Frequently asked questions
Can I use Clorox wipes on a quartz countertop?
Yes—but with real-world limits most sales reps won’t tell you.
In kitchens and bathrooms where disinfection matters, fabricators routinely see Clorox wipes used without issue on polished quartz.
But here’s what actually happens: the alcohol and sodium hypochlorite dry fast, leaving behind a faint film that builds up over time—especially on darker or high-gloss finishes.
That film dulls shine, attracts dust, and can make seams more visible.
On honed or leathered slabs?
Wipes strip surface oils faster than polished ones, leading to uneven sheen in high-touch zones like near sinks or cooktops.
We’ve seen it on GQ-T375 after six months of daily wipe-downs—no damage, but noticeable loss of depth in the veining.
For routine cleaning, warm water and dish soap work better.
If you need disinfection, rinse thoroughly after wiping and avoid letting the wipe sit longer than 10 seconds.
And always test first—some UV-cured finishes react unpredictably to bleach-based cleaners.
What is the most popular quartz countertop color?
Warm white with soft gray veining—think Calacatta-style—is still the top seller across residential and mid-market commercial jobs.
But 'popular' depends on who’s buying and where.
In builder-grade condos and spec homes, it’s usually a consistent, low-variation warm white like GQ-T375—clean, easy to match with cabinets, and forgiving during fabrication. custom homes lean into bolder movement: gold-tinged veining, subtle texture variation, or full-body printed slabs that hold pattern across seams.
In hospitality projects, uniformity wins—so solid creams or soft grays with minimal contrast get specified for consistency across 50+ rooms.
What’s shifted lately isn’t the color itself, but how it’s delivered: full-body printed quartz (like Grand Quartz Tech’s Stone Look line) now dominates because bookmatched installations hold up visually across large islands and backsplashes.
Regional preferences still matter—coastal markets favor cooler tones; southern builders stick with warmer bases.
But if you walk into any slab yard today, warm white with gray veining is the default sample pulled first.
Is Grand Quartz Tech as good as quartz?
Grand Quartz Tech *is* quartz—not a competitor to it.
It’s one of several engineered quartz manufacturers serving the US B2B market, built around specific production strengths: full-body printed technology, jumbo slab formats up to 138" x 79", and dedicated low-silica lines for safer fabrication.
Most fabricators we work with say GQ slabs cut cleanly, polish evenly, and hold edge detail well—especially in 3cm applications where resin content and aggregate distribution matter.
But 'as good as quartz' misses the point: performance varies by formulation, not brand name.
A dense, fine-aggregate slab behaves differently under thermal shock than one with larger chips—even within the same factory.
GQ-T375, for example, uses a balanced resin-to-quartz ratio suited for both residential countertops and light commercial use, but wouldn’t be our first pick for a bar top exposed to constant heat cycling.
What matters is matching slab specs to the job: finish type, thickness, edge profile, and how much movement you need across seams.
Grand Quartz Tech gives you options—not guarantees—and that’s how experienced buyers treat it.
Is Grand Quartz Tech high end?
It depends on what 'high end' means for your project.
Grand Quartz Tech isn’t positioned as a -branded label—it’s a B2B manufacturer focused on consistency, lead time, and slab utility.
Their strength lies in reliable full-body printed quartz at scale, not marketing campaigns or showroom exclusivity.
In real-world terms: GQ slabs ship with tight tolerances, minimal bowing, and strong seam integrity—key for contractors running tight schedules on multifamily or hotel jobs.
They’re NSF and SGS certified, made entirely in Thailand with local raw materials, and offer 20–30 day lead times—something many US-distributed brands can’t match.
But they don’t chase trend-driven finishes or ultra- pricing tiers.
If 'high end' means flawless bookmatching across 12-foot islands, GQ delivers.
If it means hand-selected slabs with artisan-level variation, that’s not their lane.
Fabricators who specify GQ regularly do so for volume jobs where predictability, slab size, and clean fabrication matter more than boutique branding.
It’s execution—not positioning.






