
Cipollino is named for its onion-skin layering, and the Greywave Classic selection pushes that movement to its most cinematic. A pearl-grey ground carries a sweeping black-and-gold wave that runs the length of the slab — directional, rhythmic, and unmistakably one continuous gesture. It is a marble that wants to be read as a whole rather than chopped into small pieces.
That makes it a feature-wall stone first. Run vertically, the wave gives a room movement and height; bookmatched, it opens into a symmetrical landscape. Polished, the gold catches light along the wave while the grey ground stays quiet, so the drama stays controlled rather than busy.
“Run vertically, the wave gives a room movement and height; bookmatched, it opens into a symmetrical landscape.”
Cipollino's layered structure means vein direction matters more than usual — orient the slab deliberately, and expect the natural patina of a marble over time. Sealing and considered placement keep it looking its best.
This is Lot AO895, polished. On the floor at our South Sepulveda yard; come see the wave at full height before committing to an orientation.
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