You are here:

Luxury Ivory Sand Vein Warm Tone Quartz Slabs GQ-T395

Primary Color(s) Pale Ash Gray
Accent Color(s) Warm Light Brown Streak
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-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:

Color and pattern reading: GQ-T395 is a quiet, horizontally layered quartz surface for projects that need warmth, order, and a natural stone mood without heavy contrast. The background moves from pale light gray into soft off-white, with a clouded, slightly chalky undertone that keeps the slab gentle rather than stark. Across the surface, beige, taupe, warm greige, and light gray veins travel in long lateral bands. Some lines are thin and precise, while others spread into brushed, feathered layers, like sediment slowly pressed into a calm limestone face. Occasional gray-brown hairline accents add definition at close range, but the overall impression remains relaxed, smooth, and understated.

Application direction: This design is especially useful for American interiors where the countertop should create a composed backdrop. In a transitional kitchen, GQ-T395 pairs well with warm white shaker cabinetry, brushed nickel hardware, soft greige backsplash tile, and medium oak flooring; the horizontal movement gives the room a tailored line while the beige-taupe tones keep it welcoming. In a modern farmhouse kitchen, it works naturally with light oak accents, matte black faucets, simple pendant lights, open shelving, and off-white perimeter cabinets, giving the island a grounded stone character without making the space feel busy. For a soft classic master bathroom, it can be used on double vanities, tub decks, low splashes, and shower ledges beside taupe-gray cabinetry, nickel fixtures, ivory walls, and a freestanding tub, creating a calm spa-like brightness with subtle layered detail.

Case-inspired project framing: For a 610-square-foot boutique residential paint and finish consultation studio, a designer could specify GQ-T395 for a 7-foot client review counter, a compact coffee bar, and the powder-room vanity. The fabricator would orient the long bands across the counter length so the surface reads as a steady visual horizon from the entry to the sample display wall. The quieter off-white zones would be reserved for work areas where paint decks, cabinet chips, tablets, and finish boards need a clean viewing field, while the warmer taupe-beige layers would be allowed to show on the counter face for more depth. With warm-neutral showroom lighting, the polished surface would lift the compact room without glare, coordinating with warm white cabinetry, pale oak sample drawers, brushed nickel pulls, matte black shelf brackets, linen seating, and soft gray-beige walls. The result is practical for daily appointments, easy to specify across kitchens and baths, and refined enough for builders, distributors, and designers seeking a versatile light quartz countertop with natural horizontal movement.

Frequently asked questions

It can look dated if the brown is fighting the rest of the room, not because brown itself is the problem.

Most designers will tell you the safer warm quartz choices are the ones tied to something permanent: flooring, cabinet stain, backsplash undertone, or hardware finish. The trouble starts when a sample looks taupe in the store but orange, pink, or muddy under your actual kitchen lighting.

In real-world kitchens, island lighting angle and window exposure change these colors a lot, especially with polished slabs that reflect cabinets and floors.

Take the biggest sample you can get, lay it flat, and check it morning, afternoon, and at night under your lights. Brown quartz tends to be forgiving with coffee crumbs and everyday smudges, but some speckled patterns can read busy once installed over a large island.

If you want it to age better, keep the backsplash quieter and avoid matching every warm tone too perfectly.

With beige or cream quartz in a bathroom, the wall color has to respect the countertop undertone, not just “match beige.” A frequent complaint we hear is that someone picked a clean white or cool grey paint, then the quartz suddenly looked yellow or dingy. That usually isn’t the slab changing; it’s contrast. Warm quartz next to a blue-based white can look creamier than expected.
 
Installers and designers usually recommend testing paint swatches vertically right behind the vanity, because bathroom lighting is brutal. LED vanity bars, small windows, and mirror reflections all shift color. Soft warm whites, muted taupes, mushroom tones, and some greige paints tend to work better than stark gallery whites. If the quartz has visible veining, pull the quiet background color, not the darkest vein. Polished quartz will reflect the wall color more than a matte finish, so the paint can “cast” onto the counter. Also check it with your faucet finish and tile grout. Beige quartz with chrome, black, and brushed brass can all work, but the wall color is what keeps it from feeling accidental.