White quartz slab with bold graphite-black veining, open white field, and layered marble movement. A strong choice for statement countertops, islands, vanity tops, and selected interior wall applications.
Item No :
ALQS7122Surface finish :
Polished or honedOrder(MOQ) :
200 square metersPayment :
T/T, L/C, CashProduct Origin :
ChinaColor :
whiteShipping Port :
Xiamen or other China portLead Time :
20 daysWeight :
2.7 kg/M3Product Description
Graphite Rift White Quartz is a high-contrast white engineered quartz design with bold dark veining and lighter connecting movement. It is made for buyers who want a cleaner white base than many dramatic marble-look designs, but still need visible structure and identity on the slab. This design works best when the pattern is allowed to open up across larger surfaces rather than being cut into too many small pieces.
The slab reads as bright and architectural from a distance, then more layered up close. The broad white field keeps the look open, while the dark vein network brings direction, contrast, and a stronger visual anchor. It feels less cloudy than soft Calacatta styles and less crowded than many heavily patterned statement quartz designs.








· Kitchen islands with enough surface area to show full pattern movement
· Long countertop runs in modern kitchens
· Vanity tops where the buyer wants a sharper black-and-white contrast
· Reception counters, feature tops, and selected interior wall panels
· Showrooms and display spaces that need a memorable white quartz option
· It gives a project a clear visual signature without depending on heavy all-over pattern density.
· The white background stays commercially flexible, so it can sit with black, walnut, ash, warm beige, or matte lacquer cabinetry.
· For distributors, this is the kind of slab that photographs well and is easier to market than quieter white patterns that disappear in listings.
· For project buyers, it offers a more controlled and repeatable supply option than natural marble with similar contrast.
· For fabricators, the result is strongest when the main dark veins are planned around island length, sink cutouts, and seam locations rather than left to chance.
· Kitchen countertops
· Island tops
· Bathroom vanity tops
· Bar tops
· Reception counters
· Window-side worktops
· Interior wall cladding in selected dry areas
· Display furniture tops and commercial interior feature surfaces
This design is not the best fit for buyers who want a very quiet, low-movement white surface. It is also less ideal for very small tops, because cutting this slab into short sections can break the pattern and reduce its visual value. For full outdoor exposure or highly heat-abusive work zones, quartz should only be specified after confirming the exact project conditions and fabrication details.
This is a display-friendly product. One good full slab photo can sell it faster than a small sample, because the value is in the long black vein movement and the open white balance. It is worth presenting this design as a statement white quartz, not as a generic white countertop color.
Pattern planning matters here. Before cutting, confirm where the strongest dark veins will land, especially around sinks, hob openings, waterfall ends, and visible seams. If that step is ignored, the finished top can still be serviceable, but it may lose most of the design intention.
This design is strongest when the decision is made from slab view, not sample-chip view. A small hand sample will not show the real layout logic of the pattern. If the project requires consistency across multiple kitchens or rooms, slab approval and batch coordination should be done before production.
Use mild pH-neutral cleaning products for daily care. Do not place hot cookware directly on the surface, and avoid aggressive impact on corners, cutouts, and unsupported spans. For projects with visible vein flow requirements, keep slab numbering, cutting drawings, and layout confirmation in the same workflow from approval to fabrication.
Q1. Is this design better for islands or small vanity tops?
It is usually better on islands, long runs, and larger visible surfaces. That is where the dark vein structure reads properly.
Q2. Does this slab work with black cabinets?
Yes. It works especially well with black, dark walnut, smoked oak, and warm grey cabinetry because the black veins already create a visual bridge.
Q3. Is it a good choice for projects that want a calm white kitchen?
Only if the buyer still wants a visible design statement. If the goal is a very soft and quiet white kitchen, a lighter and less contrasting pattern would usually be a better fit.
Q4. Should buyers approve this from a sample or a full slab?
Full slab approval is much safer. The pattern value is in the overall flow, not in a small cut sample.
Q5. Can this design be customized for project needs?
Aoli Stone’s current official page for this product presents it as a customizable quartz option with multiple design, size, thickness, and finish choices, so project discussion should start from slab view and required application rather than from a generic standard list.
Looking for a white quartz slab with stronger contrast and better slab presence? Send Aoli Stone your required slab size, thickness, finish, quantity, and application scene, and we can help evaluate whether this design fits your project layout before quotation.
Packing
Technical information
The main component of quartz stone countertop material is 93% quartz sand and resin, color or others. It feels very similar to stone.
|
Test item(s) |
Test method(s) |
Test result(s) |
|
Absorption by weight |
ASTM C97/C97M-15 |
0.05% |
|
Density |
2371 kg/m³ |
|
|
Abrasion resistance (polished) |
ASTM C241/C241M-15e1 |
44 |
|
Flexural strength |
ASTM C880/C880M-15 |
Dry condition:35.6 MPa |
|
Wet condition:40.1 MPa |
||
|
Compressive strength |
Refer to ASTM C170/C170M-17 |
Dry condition:248 MPa |
|
Wet condition:240 MPa |
||
|
Coefficient of linear thermal expansion |
ASTM C531-00(2012 |
22.2×10-6/C |
|
Specular gloss(60) |
ASTM D523-14 |
38.2 |
|
Stain resistance test |
Refer to ANSI Z124.6-2007 |
Total stain resistance value:56 Maximum individual depth of staining:0.04mm |
|
Composition analysis |
FTIR,PGC-MS,XRF and TGA |
See Page 9 |
|
Radioactivity |
GB 6566-2010 |
Class A |
|
Mohs'hardness |
Refer to EN 101:1991 |
6 |
|
Specimens identification No. |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
|
Absorption by weight (%) |
0.04 |
0.05 |
0.05 |
0.05 |
0.04 |
|
Mean water absorption (%) |
0.05 |
||||
|
Density (kg/m³) |
2358 |
2372 |
2375 |
2373 |
2376 |
|
Mean density (kg/m³) |
2371 |
||||