Marble
Banswara Purple Marble
Rich violet tones. Banswara, Rajasthan.
View Details →FOB Mundra / Nhava Sheva. MOQ and pricing vary by specification.
Flowery Gold Marble is quarried in the Kesariyaji area of Rajsamand district, central Rajasthan — a stone-producing region in the southern Aravalli belt known for its warm-toned and decorative marbles. The Kesariyaji deposits produce stone with distinctive floral, organic patterning where iron-rich minerals migrated through the limestone protolith during metamorphism, creating the gold and amber tones combined with green and brown detail that define the material.
Gemarix sources Flowery Gold directly from quarry operators in Kesariyaji, allowing block-by-block selection for visual character. Flowery Gold's patterning varies significantly between blocks, and project-matched supply requires hands-on selection at the quarry stage. Our direct relationships make this kind of curation possible for export specifications where buyers want visual coherence across multi-container installations.
Indicative quarry views — actual sourcing site varies by stone
Flowery Gold is a medium-grained metamorphic marble with a recrystallised calcite matrix containing significant iron oxide and clay-derived mineral concentrations. The gold and amber tones come from iron oxide; the green and brown floral patterns come from chlorite and serpentine-group minerals introduced during metamorphism. The way these minerals distributed in organic, flowing patterns rather than discrete bands is what produces the floral character that gives the stone its name. Origin and specifications verified by Gemarix.
Flowery Gold slabs present a warm gold base with floral, organic patterning in green, brown, and deeper amber tones. The patterning reads as decorative and expressive rather than restrained — flowing curves and irregular forms that suit traditional, ornate, and heritage design vocabularies. Some blocks lean richer gold; others present cooler greens and browns; book-matched pairs produce dramatic mirrored compositions.
The marble pairs powerfully with traditional and heritage design palettes — against teak, brass, leather, and warm walls it provides a sculptural, decorative anchor. In contemporary settings it works as a deliberate accent feature where the patterning is part of the design statement. Polished finishes maximise the warm tones and pattern depth; honed finishes soften the visual drama and suit floor applications.
Flowery Gold Marble is most commonly specified for feature walls, fireplace surrounds, traditional residential flooring, hotel lobbies, and book-matched cladding in projects with traditional or heritage design vocabularies. Its decorative patterning makes it ideal for spaces where the stone is intended as a primary visual feature rather than a quiet background material.
Gangsaw slabs (280 × 180 cm) allow the floral patterning to extend without joints, important for feature wall applications. Cutter slabs (180 × 60 cm) suit vanity tops and smaller installations. Book-matched pairs are available on request — particularly effective for fireplace surrounds and feature panels where mirrored patterning enhances the decorative effect.
Polished finish maximises the warm tones and pattern depth — most often specified for feature walls and vanity applications. Honed finish softens the patterning and produces a contemplative matte suitable for floor applications. Leathered finish introduces gentle surface texture, quieting the visual drama for projects where the patterning should be present but understated. Brushed finish suits heritage and traditional applications.
This stone is supplied in two production formats. Gangsaw slabs are large-format slabs for premium architectural projects requiring continuous surfaces. Cutter slabs are smaller-format slabs optimised for residential installations and tile production.


Custom tile sizes available: 60×60 cm, 60×90 cm, 90×90 cm. Cut to specification at our Rajasthan facility.
Apply a penetrating stone sealer at installation; reseal annually in kitchen and bathroom environments. Clean with a pH-neutral stone cleaner — avoid acidic cleaners and abrasive pads, which etch the calcite content and dull the polished surface. Blot spills promptly, particularly wine, coffee, and oil. The warm tones are intrinsic to the stone's mineralogy and will not fade under normal interior conditions when correctly sealed.