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Wholesale Calacatta Quartz Slabs with Ash Gray & Gold Veins GQ-R0209

Primary Color(s) Pure Snow White
Accent Color(s) Soft Ash Gray + Warm Champagne Gold
Craft Printed
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 High
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-R0209 is a polished Calacatta-inspired quartz surface with a clear white ground and an elegant network of gray movement. The main veins travel diagonally across the slab in long, relaxed sweeps, like weather fronts crossing a pale winter sky. Some passages widen into smoky gray clouds with soft edges; others tighten into fine linear cracks and delicate feathering. Warm gold-brown accents appear only in selected vein edges, giving the design a measured hint of warmth rather than a heavy gold effect. This balance makes the slab feel luxurious, natural, and current: bright enough for clean modern interiors, but detailed enough to avoid a flat white countertop look.

Application direction: For U.S. residential specifications, GQ-R0209 works especially well when the countertop needs to be the quiet luxury element in the room. In a modern kitchen with white oak cabinetry, brushed brass pulls, integrated appliances, and soft white walls, the gray veining adds movement while the subtle golden notes connect with warm metal finishes. In a transitional primary bathroom, it can be used for double vanity tops, tub surrounds, shower ledges, and full-height vanity backsplashes beside polished nickel fixtures, pale limestone-look tile, and a freestanding tub. For a modern farmhouse kitchen, this slab offers a refined contrast over a navy, charcoal, or deep green island, especially when paired with white perimeter cabinets, oak flooring, apron-front sinks, and simple cone pendants.

Case-inspired framing: Imagine a 690-square-foot boutique floral design and event consultation studio with a front ordering counter, a compact beverage station, one client meeting table, and a small restroom. The designer selects GQ-R0209 for the 8-foot service counter, the coffee ledge, and the restroom vanity to create a bright, premium surface story without making the small space feel overly formal. During slab layout, the fabricator positions one sweeping gray vein across the front counter face so it reads like a natural directional gesture from the entry toward the consultation area. Calmer white sections are reserved for the worktop zones where sample books, tablets, ribbon cards, and flower color boards need clarity. Under 3500K lighting, the polished surface reflects a clean glow, while white oak shelving, brushed brass display rails, charcoal-painted lower cabinets, ivory walls, and soft linen seating pick up the slab’s warm-cool balance. The result is practical for daily client traffic, visually memorable for appointments, and easy for homeowners or commercial buyers to imagine in kitchens, baths, reception counters, and boutique hospitality spaces.

Frequently asked questions

It can be bookmatched, but the seam won’t magically disappear just because the slab pattern is dramatic. Most fabricators will tell you Calacatta-style veining is one of the hardest looks to seam well, because your eye follows that gray vein right across the wall or island.

If the slabs are true bookmatch pairs, the layout has to be planned before cutting, not figured out on install day. Seam placement, vein direction, slab size, and whether the material is 2cm or 3cm all matter. On feature walls, installers often dry-fit panels and mark the vein flow before committing. On countertops, sink and cooktop cutouts can force compromises. Epoxy color matching helps, but it doesn’t fix a vein that shifts half an inch at the joint. Island lighting angle also makes seams more visible, especially on polished material.

The best jobs come from a shop that photographs the slabs, sends a layout for approval, and is honest about where the pattern will break.

For contractor or wholesale buyers, the warranty is usually narrower than what a homeowner sees in a retail showroom. A frequent surprise is that slab manufacturers often cover manufacturing defects in the material, but not fabrication errors, install damage, jobsite abuse, improper support, heat damage, outdoor UV exposure, or color variation between lots.

Most fabricators will tell you claims get messy once the slab has been cut, because a cracked sink rail could be a material flaw, a handling issue, or a weak cabinet/support condition. Polished, honed, and matte finishes may also have different care expectations, especially with fingerprints, hard water marks, or abrasive pad damage.

For commercial jobs, Airbnb units, hotels, and rentals, some warranties are limited or excluded unless that use is clearly approved in writing. Before ordering, ask for the current written warranty, batch information, care sheet, and what happens if a slab arrives warped, cracked, or shade-mismatched.

Also confirm who files the claim: distributor, fabricator, GC, or owner. Verbal promises at bid time don’t help much later.