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- Traymore Beige Warm-Tone Quartz Slabs GQ-T392
Traymore Beige Warm-Tone Quartz Slabs GQ-T392
| Primary Color(s) | Pale Greige |
| Accent Color(s) | Subtle Beige 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 |
| Full Body Printed Quartz | Yes |
| Bookmatch Available | Yes |
| Countertops Residential: Yes Commercial: Yes |
| Wall Residential: Yes Commercial: Yes |
| Flooring Residential: Yes Commercial: Yes |
Description:
Visual character: GQ-T392 is designed for projects that need quiet stone movement rather than a dramatic marble statement. The surface sits in a soft off-white to light warm gray range, with beige, greige, and taupe undertones giving it a gentle mineral warmth. Instead of bold veining, the pattern appears as fine horizontal striations and diffused linear bands, like sediment layers slowly settled across pale limestone. Cloudy mottling softens the background, while the elongated flow keeps the slab calm, natural, and contemporary. From a distance, it reads clean and neutral; up close, the fine layered texture adds the kind of subtle depth designers often look for in travertine- or limestone-inspired quartz countertops.
Design direction: This color works especially well in American interiors where the countertop should support the room instead of taking over it. In a soft modern kitchen, GQ-T392 pairs naturally with white oak flat-panel cabinetry, matte black faucets, slim black pulls, warm white walls, and a handmade off-white tile backsplash; the horizontal movement adds structure while keeping the palette relaxed. In a California casual bathroom, it can be used for a floating vanity, low backsplash, shower ledge, or tub deck beside warm neutral tile, light oak millwork, linen textures, and brushed nickel or matte black fittings. It is also a practical choice for transitional laundry rooms and mudrooms with shaker cabinets, brushed nickel hardware, woven baskets, porcelain floor tile, and soft greige paint, where its quiet pattern helps hide daily visual clutter while maintaining a refined finish.
Case-inspired framing: Picture a 640-square-foot model-home sales office for a small townhome development, with one check-in counter, a finish-selection wall, a compact beverage station, and a restroom for buyers. The designer specifies GQ-T392 for the 7-foot welcome counter, the coffee ledge, and the restroom vanity so the space feels consistent, neutral, and easy for buyers to imagine in their own kitchens and baths. During layout planning, the fabricator runs the fine horizontal bands lengthwise across the counter face, creating a calm visual line from the entry toward the sample wall. The quieter off-white sections are kept on the writing surface, where brochures, floor plans, cabinet samples, and tablets need a clean background. Under 3500K lighting, the slab gives the office a warm, steady brightness rather than a glossy showroom glare. White oak display panels, matte black signage, soft taupe upholstery, brushed nickel hardware boards, cream wall paint, and warm gray flooring all connect back to the slab’s balanced undertones. The finished environment feels orderly, approachable, and commercially practical—ideal for builders, distributors, and designers who need a versatile quartz surface for kitchens, vanities, laundry counters, mudroom tops, apartment upgrades, and light commercial counters.
Frequently asked questions
Do warm beige quartz countertops end up looking yellow once they’re installed?
They can read yellower than expected, but it’s usually the room doing it, not the slab suddenly changing color.
In real-world kitchens, warm beige quartz shifts a lot under 2700K under-cabinet lights, cream cabinets, yellow oak floors, or late-afternoon sun. Most fabricators will tell you to view the sample flat on the countertop, not propped up like a paint chip, because island lighting hits it differently.
Direct UV is a separate issue: quartz resin can discolor over time near strong windows or skylights, especially on very light colors, though it’s less common in normal indoor exposure.
The safest move is to bring home a full-size sample if available and check it morning, afternoon, and night next to your cabinet door, backsplash, and floor. Warm quartz looks great when the whole palette is intentional, but if you pair it with cool white cabinets or blue-gray tile, the beige undertone can suddenly look like “yellow.”
Granite or quartz countertop — which one is actually better if quartz costs more?
Quartz countertops often cost more today not because they are simply “more expensive material,” but because premium quartz has evolved significantly in both technology and design capability.
Modern high-end quartz is no longer limited to basic or repetitive patterns. With advanced thermo-printing technology and deep-vein surface engineering, today’s premium quartz can achieve rich movement, natural variation, and sophisticated aesthetics that closely replicate — and in some design cases even enhance — the visual complexity of natural stone. At the same time, it delivers strong advantages in consistency, maintenance, and large-scale design coordination.
This is why quartz is widely used in modern residential kitchens, waterfall islands, hotel projects, and commercial interiors where visual continuity and design control are important.
The higher cost of quartz in many markets is usually related to several key factors:
- higher-grade raw materials, including premium resin systems
- advanced veining and surface printing technology
- jumbo slab production and improved dimensional control
- thicker slab options for structural and design requirements
- more complex edge profiles and fabrication work
- higher precision in pattern design and color consistency
These factors contribute to better long-term performance, more stable appearance across multiple slabs, and greater flexibility in design execution.
Granite, as a natural material, remains valued for its unique, one-of-a-kind formations and organic variation. It offers a traditional natural-stone character that many homeowners still prefer.
Quartz, on the other hand, is preferred in many modern projects because it provides a highly controlled aesthetic, consistent color matching across large spaces, and low maintenance without the need for sealing.
In practice, the decision is not about which material is “better,” but which one better fits the design intent, usage requirements, and long-term expectations of the project.






