
Geometric · Moroccan · Star & Cross · Terrazzo-effect · Floral
Encaustic & patterned tiles.
Encaustic tiles carry a centuries-old decorative tradition, from Moroccan riads to Federation hallways. Marmoré reproduces that pattern language in modern porcelain — the same visual depth, none of the sealing and fading that defines the original cement product.
Monochrome geometric
141 styles
Black and white geometric patterns — the heritage of Federation and Edwardian Australian hallways.

Lantern Glass Mosaics 238X248X.8 Black Matt B2

4..8 Pietra White Mosaic

.5 Hikari Finger Mosaic Linen

.5 Hikari Finger Mosaic Cotton

2..7 Wabisabi Finger Mosaic Grey

2..7 Wabisabi Finger Mosaic White

Zellige Noir Black Square

Zellige White Fez Square

4..8 White Cloud With Specks Flat Square Mosaic

Zellige Argilla

Zellige Gesso

3..5 White Venetian Bamboo Matt Mosaic
Coloured Moroccan
108 styles
Saturated blues, greens and terracottas drawn from zellige and Andalusian tile traditions.

.5 Hikari Finger Mosaic Pistachio

2..7 Wabisabi Finger Mosaic Rust

2..7 Wabisabi Finger Mosaic Pink

2..7 Wabisabi Finger Mosaic Charcoal

Zellige Atlas Petrole Square

Zellige Beige Clear Square

Zellige Bleu Fonce`e Square

Zellige Bleu Jean Square

Zellige Caramel Square

Zellige Ecru Square

Zellige Emerald Square

Zellige Gris Rose Fonce`e Square
Terrazzo-effect
4 styles
Speckled aggregate prints in soft palettes — a modern reading of an old pattern language.

Alta Terrazzo Blue Finger Mosaic

Alta Terrazzo Green Finger Mosaic

Alta Terrazzo Multi Finger Mosaic

Alta Terrazzo Pink Finger Mosaic
Zellige & handmade
42 colourways
Hand-glazed Moroccan-style tiles with pooling, shade variation and edge irregularity built in by design.

Zellige Atlas Petrole Square

Zellige Beige Clear Square

Zellige Bleu Fonce`e Square

Zellige Bleu Jean Square

Zellige Caramel Square

Zellige Ecru Square

Zellige Emerald Square

Zellige Gris Rose Fonce`e Square
Encaustic cement vs porcelain encaustic-look
A long decorative tradition. True encaustic tiles are unglazed cement, with the pattern formed by pouring pigmented cement into a brass mould. The tradition is European and North African — Moroccan zellige workshops, Spanish and Catalan factories, Victorian and Federation-era Australian hallways all share the same root.
Real cement encaustic. Authentic cement encaustic is beautiful and unmistakable in person. It is also porous and demands sealing before grouting, after grouting, and regularly thereafter. Cement encaustic will stain from oil, wine and acidic spills, and outdoor or sun-exposed installations fade over time.
Porcelain encaustic-look. Modern porcelain reproduces the visual result on dense, non-porous, UV stable porcelain. No sealing required. From standing height the visual difference is negligible.
Who should choose which. Heritage restorations and clients who want authentic material should specify cement. Most new builds and renovations are better served by porcelain.
Using patterned tiles
Scale to the room. A bold encaustic pattern in a 3m² powder room is a defining design moment. The same pattern across a 30m² living room becomes visually exhausting. Match pattern intensity to the size and use of the space.
Mixing patterns. If two patterns appear in one space, contrast their scale — a large geometric paired with a fine-scale floral works. Two patterns at the same scale fight each other. Stop at two.
Where patterned tiles work. Hallways and entry runners are the classic Australian application. Powder rooms, laundries, mudrooms and kitchen splashbacks all suit pattern. Open-plan living areas generally don't.
Ordering. Order 15–20% extra rather than the usual 10% — pattern matching at the perimeter demands more cuts. Get a quote →
Patterned tile questions
Cement vs porcelain encaustic?
Cement is original and beautiful but needs sealing and will stain. Porcelain encaustic-look is visually equivalent, no sealing required, UV stable.
Do encaustic tiles need sealing?
Cement yes — before and after grouting, and every 1–2 years. Porcelain no — only the grout joints benefit from a standard grout sealer.
Can I mix patterns?
Two maximum. Contrast their scale — large geometric with fine floral. Same scale patterns fight each other.
Where do they work best?
Hallways, powder rooms, laundries, splashbacks, feature walls. Small transitional spaces. Not open-plan living areas.
Are they good for resale?
Yes in contained spaces (powder room, hallway, splashback). Avoid patterning large primary living areas — it narrows the buyer pool.
Looking for a feature wall tile?
Feature wall tiles →
