Glass Types in Architecture: A Guide to Choosing the Right Flat Glass

Jun 30, 2025

Eeny, meany, miny, moe, let’s take the guesswork out of architectural flat glass. At Skyline, many glass types serve as the base for our decorative processes, giving architects and designers a canvas to create custom solutions. Choose among our patterned glass offerings from artists and designers across the globe, or find inspiration for your own custom project from our installed work portfolio.

Low-iron Glass

Low-iron glass is crystal-clear with zero green tint, which makes it an ideal neutral for printed or painted glass applications. If you’re working on a project where detail and color need to shine through perfectly, this is your MVP. Looking for standard clear, we have that, too!

 

Non-Reflective Glass

Velour Glass

This glass type offers an ultra-matte finish with a soft, obscuring touch. Great for privacy without losing light. The texture leans more heavily matte compared to Silk — it’s got a foggier look and blocks visibility just a little more.

Silk Glass

Silk is Velour’s more refined sibling. It still has that matte finish, but it’s more subtle, allowing for a bit more light and visibility. It has a refined look—elegant, understated, and modern.

 

Mirrors

Low-iron Mirror 

Low-iron Mirror has no greenish hue—just a sharper, truer reflection. It’s especially great when you’re pairing it with our Eco-etch technique to apply a design to the surface. 

Silk Low-iron Mirror

A mirror with a matte twist. This one’s got a subtle, silky texture that cuts glare while keeping that clean, crisp reflection. Also, beautiful when paired with an etched pattern on surface one.

 

Tinted Glass

Bronze Tinted Glass 

Tinted glass brings the mood—and Bronze Tinted Glass brings the warmth. With its rich, earthy tone, it adds a cozy, inviting vibration to any space. Think of soft shadows, golden light, and a relaxed atmosphere. Beautiful with digitally printed or etched pattern elements. 

Grey Tinted Glass

If Bronze is cozy, Grey is cool. Grey Tinted Glass is all about sophistication and that modern, architectural edge. It gives spaces a polished, contemporary feel—think demountable walls in upscale offices. It softens harsh light, adds a layer of privacy, and delivers a bold, designer-grade finish.

 

Textured Glass

Wave Glass

Wave Glass features soft, vertical “reeds” spaced ½ inch apart, creating a gently undulating surface. It plays beautifully with light and shadow, adding texture without being too bold. Ideal for partitions, demountable walls, or anywhere you want a little motion without chaos.

Groove Glass 

Now take those reeds, tighten them up — Groove Glass has a finer texture with ⅛ inch spacing. It’s more structured and linear, offering a cleaner, more geometric look. Modern and architectural.

Pixel Glass

Pixel Glass adds a modern, geometric edge to any space. Perfect for creative environments or as a subtly textured accent wall. Check out the close-up of Pixel Glass!

 

So, Which Glass is Right for Your Project?

So, which glass is right for your project? Each type is a starting point, shaped by artwork, pattern, and process. Choose from a broad range of curated designs or bring custom artwork, then explore the Projects gallery to see how these glass bases take form in real spaces.

 

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