Gold finishes

- Gold finishes bring warmth, contrast and a refined metallic accent to New Zealand homes, apartments, hospitality spaces and commercial interiors. Browse gold-coloured surface finishes, including brushed brass tones, antique gold, rose gold, metallic paint effects, gold-veined stone, tiles, hardware and decorative wall finishes from trusted suppliers. Whether you want a subtle matt gold detail or a bright reflective finish, ArchiPro helps you compare materials, colours, textures and supplier options in one place.

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Gold finishes can be subtle or highly decorative. The best choice depends on where the finish will sit, how often it will be touched, the surrounding materials and the level of sheen you want. In interiors, gold is often used as a warm accent against stone, timber, white surfaces, black detailing or soft neutral palettes. In commercial projects, it can help reception areas, bathrooms, bars and retail spaces feel more polished without relying on heavy ornament.

Choosing gold finishes for New Zealand interiors

Start by browsing the wider product range, then narrow your search by material, application and colour. A gold finish on a cabinet handle performs differently from a metallic wall coating or a gold-veined porcelain slab, so compare the substrate as carefully as the colour.

Where gold finishes work best

Gold can suit both small details and larger surfaces, but scale matters. A polished gold tap, handle or trim reads as an accent. A gold faux finish wall, glitter finish, metallic ceiling treatment or large stone surface becomes a focal point. If the room already has strong patterns, keep the gold tone more muted. Brushed, satin and antique gold finishes are often easier to live with than mirror-like finishes because they show fewer fingerprints and soften reflected light.

  • Kitchens: use gold on handles, splashback tiles, tapware accents, trims or benchtops with gold veining.
  • Bathrooms: match gold hardware with warm tiles, stone-look surfaces or soft painted walls.
  • Living areas: consider metallic wall finishes, gold-toned timber stains, decorative panels or feature lighting trims.
  • Commercial spaces: specify durable finishes for high-touch zones such as doors, counters, joinery and lift lobbies.

Floors, tiles and stone

For floors, gold usually appears as a vein, fleck or warm undertone rather than a full metallic surface. Explore flooring finishes for timber stains, vinyl, carpet and hard flooring options that sit well with gold accents. For bathrooms, kitchens and foyers, tiles and stones can include marble-look porcelain, natural stone, mosaics and slabs with gold or brass-coloured detailing. Check slip resistance, sealing requirements and suitability for wet areas before choosing a product.

Walls, ceilings and paint

Gold works well on vertical surfaces when the finish has depth and the lighting is controlled. Browse wall and ceiling finishes for panels, wallpapers, textured coatings and decorative surfaces. If you are considering an antique gold paint finish, rose gold metallic finish or gold metallic bright reflective finish spray, compare sheen level, preparation requirements and sample results in the room itself. Paints vary widely, and metallic pigments can look different in natural and artificial light.

Joinery, handles and solid surfaces

Cabinetry is one of the easiest places to use gold without overwhelming a room. Cabinet handles and knobs are available in brushed gold, aged gold, brass, champagne and rose gold tones. For benchtops, vanities and counters, solid surface products can pair with gold hardware or include warm veining similar to calacatta gold designs. In high-use areas, ask suppliers about scratch resistance, cleaning methods and whether the surface can be repaired.

Acoustic finishes, stains and treatments

Gold does not need to be glossy. Acoustic finishes can use warm metallic fabric, perforated panels or timber tones to soften sound in offices, restaurants and media rooms. Stains and treatments can add honey, amber or gold-brown colour to timber while keeping the grain visible. These are useful when you want warmth rather than an obvious metallic effect.

What to check before you buy

  • Durability: ask whether the finish is plated, anodised, powder coated, painted, PVD coated, sealed or part of the material itself.
  • Colour stability: some aged gold and antique brass tones are designed to patina, while others are made to keep a consistent colour.
  • Cleaning: avoid abrasive cleaners on metallic coatings, polished hardware and decorative paints unless the supplier confirms they are safe.
  • Samples: compare samples in the actual room. Gold changes under cool LED light, warm lighting and direct sun.
  • Coordination: match undertones. Yellow gold, champagne, brushed brass and rose gold can clash if placed too close together.

For the most confident result, compare several gold finishes side by side and involve your designer, builder or supplier early. ArchiPro makes it easier to assess premium options across surfaces, hardware and specialist finishes suited to New Zealand projects.