Stone Sample Kit Guide - April's Form Australia

Sample workflow

Stone Sample Kit Guide

How Australian trade users should request samples, interpret material direction, and move from sample approval to quote.

Trade resource

Designed for practical specification, not generic inspiration.

These pages make the trade path commercially usable before a full portal exists.

Sample kit purpose

  • Confirm colour direction, finish preference, and client confidence before a high-value quote.
  • Support designer presentations and material boards for active or near-term projects.
  • Reduce risk around natural stone variation before deposit.

Important limitations

  • A sample does not guarantee exact slab movement on a dining table or large vanity.
  • Final approval should rely on stone review and QC imagery where available.
  • Samples should be tied to a lead, role, project type, city, and intended category in the CRM.

Trade questions

Use the asset with a live project in mind.

Who can apply for Australian trade access?

Interior designers, architects, hospitality procurement teams, property stylists, and sourcing firms can apply when they have a genuine project pipeline or active specification need.

Does trade access guarantee fixed discounts?

No. Trade pricing is project-specific and depends on category, stone, quantity, complexity, delivery risk, timeline, and the level of recurring specification work.

Can trade users request samples before a live quote?

Yes, but samples are prioritised for active or near-term projects and should be tied to role, city, product category, and stone direction.

What information makes a trade quote faster?

Dimensions, drawings, stone preference, project city, delivery access, client approval deadline, budget band, and installation timing make the first quote response more useful.

Next step

Move from trade resource to live project.

Apply for trade access or send a quote brief with role, city, product category, stone direction, access notes, and client timing.