Gold Washed w/ White HAND FAUXED
Master faux finisher, Brian McQuillan (Tampa, FL), hand finishes each panel in selected patterns and molding per order. Filler is available for 24" patterns. Base coated metallic gold is hand fauxed with a creamy white. Please call the design center for layout, design and inquiries. Pricing listed below.
Patterns available: 2, 3, 5, 8, 9, 10, 11, 14, 19, 22, 23, 25, 26, F01 (see below)

Molding available: c1, c2, c3, c8, c9, m1, m2


As the process requires time, special paint and technique, it takes up to 3-4 weeks to make these panels.
This item is a Custom Color. To learn more about this type of product and our policies, please click here.
Panel / Molding Type Price (per panel)
SnapLock $46 per Panel
3-D*DropIn $44 per Panel
Nailup / DropIn / Filler $42 per Panel
c1, c2 $30 per Panel
c3, c8, c9, m1, m2 $25 per Panel
12" Sample $10 (includes shipping)
Must call to order, not available on e*store.

As the trick to making this color look best, only panels with high and low embossed areas in the patterns are suitable for this technique. The list of patterns available reflects this fact.

Please call the design center if you are interested in this color so we can layout the ceiling for you and provide complete installation instructions. These panels cost more than our powder coated panels. As a premium finish, it is important to discuss precise installation, design and layout with a designer.

Why are Tin Ceilings so popular today?

Tin Ceilings remind us of a different time in our country's history. Tin Ceilings stir memories of gentler days when elegance and beauty reigned. A slower paced era where style and grace were the watchwords in home decor. Old time victorian homes, formal parlors, farmhouses with wood burning stoves and other historic architecture we've seen in literature and film or remember from our childhood.

It is said that "Everything Old Becomes New Again". It reinvents itself and becomes fashionable again, perhaps because it was so fashionable in the first place. Fashion goes in and out of style as modern ideas are introduced to the market. But the popular styling's of the past always cycle back into modern contemporary culture. The Tin Ceiling exemplifies this concept.