Brushed Brass

Brushed Brass is a study in restraint, where warmth is expressed through light rather than color. The surface reads as true brass, with a refined grain that can be specified to suit the project brief, including different sheen level. Through Modulux Services, this finish can be developed on the substrates that make sense for the build, while keeping the visual language consistent across joinery, panels, and detailed forms. The process is guided by an approved reference sample, then refined through controlled brushing and finishing steps, with [Insert: as sample consistency OR living variation is acceptable] confirmed during submittals. In the space, Brushed Brass carries a calm glow that sits naturally beside timber, plaster, and stone. It works at a close distance on furniture and cabinet fronts, and it scales into larger architectural moments where continuity matters, from wall planes to portals and cladding accents. For a clearer view into how the finish is made and aligned across batches, explore חדשות for process notes, shop workflow, and technology perspectives that support confident specification.

Brushed Brass

In interiors, Brushed Brass is often specified where touch and light meet. It brings quiet definition to cabinet fronts, kitchen islands, vanity panels, integrated pulls, shelving backs, display niches, bar fronts, reception desks, and furniture cladding. In elevator lobbies and corridors, it can shape the experience through door surrounds, reveal details, wall insets, and feature panels that read warm without becoming reflective. The finish pairs well with stone and matte surfaces, adding a measured highlight that stays composed under both daylight and warm interior lighting.

Architecturally, the same brushed brass language can extend into facade accents, soffits, column wraps, canopy undercladding, entry portals, signage, handrail details, balustrade infills, and exterior feature screens where a controlled sheen is preferred over mirror reflectivity. This look can be delivered through different Modulux methods, allowing the finish to be specified across mixed substrates and complex geometry, including flat panels, crisp edges, and curved forms, while keeping the grain direction and tonal intent aligned to the reference.

Share your substrate, geometry, and whether the element is interior or exterior. We can help confirm suitability, discuss sample direction, and align Brushed Brass with adjacent materials so the finish reads consistent from feature moments to everyday touchpoints.