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Using brass profiles for design accents

Adding luxury accents to tiled surfaces

Brass as a design element

Brass profiles have become one of the strongest trends in high-end interior design. A thin brass strip between tiles — as a border, a transition, or a geometric inlay — transforms an ordinary tiled surface into something that feels intentionally designed and luxurious.

Unlike functional corner profiles that hide tile edges, decorative brass profiles are visible design elements. They're chosen for their appearance, not just their utility.

Types of brass profiles

Design applications

Installation notes

Brass profiles are installed during tiling, not after. The profile is set into the adhesive alongside the tiles, with the exposed face flush with the tile surface. This requires the tiler to plan the layout in advance — the brass strip replaces a grout line, so the grid must account for its width.

Solid brass profiles are expensive. Brass-plated aluminium or stainless steel offers the look at a fraction of the cost, but may wear differently over time. Real brass develops a patina that many consider part of its charm; plated profiles may peel.

Tip: When planning a layout with brass accent strips, add the strip width to your tile spacing in the Tile Cut Plan's grout gap setting for that row. This ensures the tile count accounts for the brass width.

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