
Mistral is one of the warmer, more weather-like quartzites in the Antolini range. A sandy cream field is moved by gold currents that run like wind across the slab, with faint teal pockets surfacing here and there to keep the palette from going flat. The effect is soft and atmospheric — movement without hard veining.
Because the colour is warm and the movement is gentle, Mistral works as a primary surface rather than just an accent. It is at home on island tops, full kitchen runs, and bath vanities, and it pairs naturally with brass, walnut, and warm plaster. The faint teal pockets reward a closer look, so it rewards placement where people gather and linger.
“Because the colour is warm and the movement is gentle, Mistral works as a primary surface rather than just an accent.”
As a true quartzite, Mistral brings the hardness and etch resistance that let it stand up to a working kitchen — the warmth of a marble palette with the durability quartzite is prized for.
This is Lot AO892, chapas 41–48, polished, in the yard now on South Sepulveda. Worth reading in person under warm light.
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