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Jade Stream Vein Printed Quartz GQ-R0256 for wholesale

Primary Color(s) Bright Calacatta White
Accent Color(s) Soft Taupe Brown, Subtle Green
Craft Printed
Finishes Polished / Honed / Suede / Leathered
Customized Size 138″ × 79″ / 126″ × 63″ / Customizable
Thickness 30mm / Customizable
Edge Style Eased polished edge / 2+2cm laminated edge / Mitred edge
Country Thailand
Variations Medium
Full Body Printed Quartz Yes
Bookmatch Available Yes
Countertops
Residential: Yes
Commercial: Yes
Wall
Residential: Yes
Commercial: Yes
Flooring
Residential: Yes
Commercial: Yes

Description:

GQ-R0256 starts quietly, then reveals its character in layers. The background sits between soft white and warm off-white, with cloudy tonal shifts and faint translucent-looking areas that keep the slab from feeling flat. Across this milky field, slim gray, taupe, beige-brown, and deeper brown lines travel in an irregular mix of diagonal and horizontal routes. Some veins read like fine sketch marks; others open into broken, feathered seams with slightly darker edges. The effect is similar to mineral threads moving under a thin veil of polished stone—classic, natural, and refined, with enough movement to give a countertop identity without overwhelming the room.

For U.S. residential specifications, this color is especially useful when designers want a marble-inspired surface with warmth rather than a cold white finish. In a transitional kitchen, GQ-R0256 can sit above white shaker cabinets, warm brass hardware, a creamy tile backsplash, and medium oak flooring, allowing the beige-brown accents to connect naturally with metal and wood details. For a modern farmhouse island, it pairs well with natural oak cabinetry, matte black faucets, woven counter stools, and simple pendant lights; the soft base keeps the kitchen open, while the branching veins make the island feel intentionally selected. In a classic American primary bathroom, it works beautifully for vanity tops, tub decks, low backsplashes, or shower ledges alongside a light gray vanity, polished nickel fixtures, white walls, and a freestanding tub, creating a bright but gentle spa atmosphere.

Case-inspired framing: imagine an 820-square-foot boutique interior hardware and lighting showroom with a compact sales counter, a finish-sample table, a coffee niche, and one client restroom. The designer specifies GQ-R0256 for the 8-foot consultation counter, the beverage ledge, and the vanity top so the small showroom feels consistent from entry to back area. During layout review, the fabricator places the more expressive brown-gray branches on the vertical counter face, where they read clearly from the door, while the calmer off-white portions are reserved for the writing surface where order forms, metal samples, and catalog books need visual clarity. Under neutral 3500K display lighting, the countertop adds clean brightness without looking sterile. Brass pulls, black track lighting, natural oak sample drawers, soft gray walls, and cream upholstery complete a practical commercial setting that still feels curated and residentially relatable for daily client appointments.

Frequently asked questions

In many U.S. residential and multifamily markets, upgrading to Quartz Countertops is usually less about dramatically increasing the sale price and more about improving buyer perception, marketability, and speed of sale or lease turnover. From real remodeling and builder experience, outdated laminate countertops often make kitchens feel older even when the cabinets and flooring are acceptable, while quartz gives the space a cleaner, newer, and more “move-in ready” appearance. That visual upgrade matters because kitchens and bathrooms are among the first areas buyers evaluate emotionally. In mid-range homes, rental properties, and spec builds, quartz is often viewed as a safe upgrade because it combines a modern look with lower maintenance than natural Granite or Marble.

However, the return depends heavily on choosing the right quartz for the property level. In practical project experience, spending aggressively on highly dramatic luxury patterns does not always produce proportional ROI, especially in entry-level or mid-market homes. Buyers respond more consistently to clean, neutral, broadly appealing designs such as warm white, cream, soft gray, or lightly veined quartz because these work with more cabinet and flooring styles. The goal is usually not to create a “wow showroom kitchen,” but to avoid giving buyers renovation objections. Many contractors find that practical quartz upgrades can help homes photograph better online, reduce buyer hesitation during walkthroughs, and support faster leasing or resale timelines even when the exact dollar return is difficult to isolate.

For commercial buyers and builders, the most important factor is balancing appearance, durability, and installation efficiency. Jumbo slabs, stable color consistency, and reliable fabrication support often matter more than chasing the cheapest material price. That is why many distributors and project buyers focus on suppliers who can provide repeatable slab quality and scalable inventory for multiple units or developments. In real-world resale and multifamily projects, quartz is rarely the single reason a property sells for more, but it is often one of the upgrades that helps the kitchen feel current, easier to maintain, and more competitive in the market.