Glass finishes
- Glass finishes bring light, reflection and clean detail to New Zealand homes and commercial interiors. Explore finish glass options for walls, tiles, surfaces, cabinetry, flooring accents and specialist edge details, with products from leading NZ suppliers on ArchiPro.Use this page to compare glass finish products by look, use, durability and installation needs. From antique glass finish effects and polished glass edge finishes to glass-like coatings for timber or concrete, the right choice depends on the room, the substrate and how much daily wear the surface will take.
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Glass can be a surface, a coating, a tile, an insert or a refined edge detail. It is used for clean splashbacks, reflective wall panels, textured decorative surfaces, glass tiles, cabinet hardware and glossy coatings that create a glass-like finish on wood or concrete. The best choice depends on where the finish will sit, how often it will be touched, and whether it must deal with water, heat, UV exposure or impact.
How to choose glass finishes for a New Zealand project
Start by deciding whether you need a true glass product or a finish that gives a glass effect. True glass is common in splashbacks, wall linings, tiles, handles and feature panels. A glass-like coating is more common on timber, concrete or joinery, where the aim is depth, gloss and protection rather than a separate sheet of glass.
For a wider view across related product types, browse the Products directory.
Match the glass finish to the room
In wet areas, glass needs more than good looks. Bathrooms and laundries need surfaces that are easy to clean and suitable for high moisture. Glass tiles, glazed mosaics and wall panels are often used around vanities, showers and splash zones. For floor areas, check slip resistance and cleaning requirements before choosing any glossy product. Compare hard-wearing options in flooring finishes and moisture-friendly glass tiles and stone finishes.
For kitchens, glass splashbacks and coloured panels can create a sharp, low-maintenance surface behind benches and cooktops. Heat tolerance, fixing method and edge finishing matter, especially around power points and exposed ends. In living areas or retail spaces, antique glass finish panels, fluted glass and mirror-backed finishes can soften reflections while adding depth to walls or cabinetry.
Walls and ceilings give you the most freedom. Back-painted glass, textured glass and printed glass can be used as feature wall linings or panels. If you are comparing these against wallpaper, plaster effects or timber linings, review wall and ceiling finishes to see what suits the scale of the room.
Understand finish, edge and surface details
Searches such as "finish glass" and "glass edge finishes" often come down to the final detail. Exposed glass edges can be arrised, polished, bevelled or shaped. A polished edge has a clean reflective line, while an arrised edge removes sharpness without the same refined look. Bevelled edges suit mirrors, decorative panels and traditional interiors. For frameless glass or visible shelving, the edge finish affects both safety and appearance.
Surface texture is just as important. Clear gloss glass is simple and reflective. Frosted or acid-etched glass gives privacy and reduces glare. Reeded, ribbed and fluted glass add texture while still allowing light through. Antique glass finish products can include mottling, soft mirror effects or subtle colour variation. These suit bars, powder rooms, wardrobes and display joinery.
Some buyers search for Feast Watson glass finish because they want a clear, high-gloss coating rather than actual glass. These coatings sit closer to stains and treatments, especially when the substrate is timber. A glass-like finish on wood needs careful sanding, compatible primers or sealers, and a dust-free application area. Gloss makes preparation defects more visible.
Check compatibility with surrounding finishes
Glass rarely works alone. The paint colour behind or beside it changes the way it reads in natural and artificial light. Compare adjacent paint finishes before locking in a back-painted glass colour or mirror tint. Warm whites, cool greys and deep colours can shift once viewed through glass.
For benchtops, vanities and reception counters, glass may be used as an insert, aggregate, top layer or splashback beside a solid surface finish. If you want a glass finish concrete look, confirm whether you mean polished concrete with high gloss, a clear coating, or a glass aggregate surface. Each has different maintenance and slip considerations.
In offices, hospitality spaces and multi-residential projects, glass can help separate areas without blocking light. If sound control matters, compare glazing, seals and nearby acoustic finishes. The glass alone may not solve noise transfer if gaps, doors and junctions are poorly detailed.
Small details also count. Glass knobs, clear pulls and smoked glass handles suit vanities, wardrobes and display cabinetry. They can add reflection without committing to a full panel or tiled surface. Browse cabinet handles and knobs if the project only needs a subtle glass accent.
What to confirm before ordering
- Location: Is the finish for a wet area, kitchen, floor, wall, exterior space or commercial setting?
- Safety: Ask whether toughened, laminated or safety-rated glass is required for the application.
- Edges: Confirm polished, bevelled, arrised or hidden edges before manufacture.
- Colour: View samples in the project lighting, especially for tinted, back-painted or antique glass finish products.
- Cleaning: Check whether the surface needs special cleaners, sealers or non-abrasive cloths.
- Installation: Measure carefully and allow for holes, cut-outs, fixings and substrate flatness.
Glass finishes are most successful when they are specified early. Talk with suppliers about lead times, cut-outs, fixings and compliance needs before building work reaches the final stage. ArchiPro makes it easier to compare premium glass finish products and connect with suppliers who understand New Zealand projects.







