Dave Noon

Our project was remodeling a kitchen in a victorian house built in 1890. The eating area of the kitchen had a original tin ceiling that had been painted many times and was damaged. We wanted to keep a tin ceiling and also add it to the new cooking area of the kitchen. I search on line and discovered your wonderful products. It was just what we wanted. We ordered all the samples. The hardest part was picking which color and pattern to go with. We used the nail up style in the original part of the kitchen since the furring strips were there from the original tin ceiling. This also determined the layout design in this area. In the new cooking area we used the SnapLock style. Installation of both was easy, but the SnapLock was much faster and easier than the nail up.



We have had many compliments on our new ceiling. We live in a historic preservation neighborhood and have referred many of our neighbors to your web site.



Thank you for providing a wonderful product and great service. We can't wait to redo another room where we can add a new ceiling.

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.