Light grey breccia quartz slabs with a soft off-white base and layered grey movement. A practical choice for countertops, vanity tops, wall cladding, and interior projects that need a quieter marble-look surface.
Item No :
ALQZV003Surface finish :
Polished or honedOrder(MOQ) :
200 square metersPayment :
T/T, L/C, CashProduct Origin :
ChinaColor :
greyShipping Port :
Xiamen or other China portLead Time :
20 daysWeight :
2700 Kgs/M3Product Description
Light Grey Breccia Quartz Slabs offer a softer marble-look direction for buyers who do not want a flat plain surface or a heavy dramatic vein. The base reads as very light grey to off-white, while the pattern moves through the slab in cloudy, broken grey formations that feel layered rather than sharp. For many projects, that makes it easier to use across kitchens, vanity tops, wall panels, and other interior surfaces without the space feeling visually overloaded.






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This design is calm, pale, and architectural.
Instead of bold linear veining, it uses wider broken grey structures, soft mineral-like patches, and low-contrast transitions. On a full slab, the effect feels more natural and more forgiving than a high-contrast Calacatta style. On finished tops, it gives movement without turning every surface into a focal point.
Buyers usually choose this color when plain white quartz feels too safe, but bold marble-look quartz feels too strong.
It works well in spaces where the designer wants texture and depth, but still needs the room to stay bright and controlled.
For distributors, it can sit in a useful middle position: easier to sell than a very aggressive pattern, yet more expressive than a basic white slab.
For project buyers, it is also easier to combine with wood veneer, light oak, brushed metal, soft grey cabinets, and neutral flooring.
One practical advantage is that this pattern does not depend on a single dramatic vein to look good, so smaller cut pieces can still keep some character.
This is not the best fit for buyers who want a crisp white background with bold Calacatta drama.
It is also not the strongest choice for projects that depend on highly symmetrical bookmatching, because the pattern is soft and diffuse rather than sharply structured.
Like most engineered quartz applications, it is better treated as an interior material, especially where long-term direct outdoor exposure or strong UV conditions are involved.
This color is easier to position when you show it as a “soft stone-look grey” rather than a dramatic feature slab.
It can work well for customers who ask for something warmer and more textured than plain white, but still commercially safe.
Do not sell it only from a small hand sample. This design reads much better from slab photos, because the full movement is part of the value.
Check vein direction before cutting islands, waterfall ends, and long vanity runs.
Because the pattern is layered and broken rather than strongly linear, seam planning matters if the customer expects a clean visual flow across joined pieces.
For projects with multiple units, batch approval should be based on slab photos or slab videos, not only a generic sample chip.
This product is suitable for projects that need a controlled stone look across repeated interior applications.
It is especially useful where the design brief calls for a light, neutral surface with more visual life than a plain engineered stone.
Before final approval, confirm slab size, thickness, finish, cut-to-size scope, packing method, and batch consistency against the actual project requirement rather than approving from description alone.
Clean with a soft cloth and a pH-neutral cleaner for daily maintenance.
Do not place very hot cookware directly on the surface without protection.
Avoid harsh chemical exposure, abrasive pads, and unnecessary impact on exposed corners.
For commercial projects, a simple maintenance guide should be given to the end user at handover, especially for vanity tops, worktops, and heavily used counters.
Q1. Is this product more white or more grey?
It reads mainly as a very light grey to off-white surface, with soft grey movement across the slab.
Q2. Does it work well for kitchen islands?
Yes, especially for buyers who want movement without making the island too visually dominant.
Q3. Is it a good choice for commercial vanity tops?
Yes. The pattern is calm enough for repeated use, which is often helpful in hospitality, apartment, and office washroom programs.
Q4. Is this the right slab for a dramatic luxury statement kitchen?
Not always. If the project needs bold contrast and a strong feature vein, another pattern may do that job better.
Q5. Can Aoli Stone supply cut-to-size and project support?
Yes. Aoli Stone can support slab supply, cut-to-size processing, and project-based fabrication communication when drawings and quantity requirements are clear.
Send Aoli Stone your target slab size, thickness, finish, and application drawings.
We can help review whether this pattern is suitable for your project, then prepare slab photos, quotation details, and fabrication support based on the real requirement.
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 |
||||