Sydney
0404930695
info@pozzolana.com.au
Unit 3/20 Bearing Rd
Seven Hills Sydney
Find Us on Social Media
Sydney
0404930695
info@pozzolana.com.au
Unit 3/20 Bearing Rd
Seven Hills Sydney
Find Us on Social Media
Use this section to outline the tone families, contrast levels and finishes you plan to apply across the project. The diagrams below help you map how tones shift from space to space, without tying you to specific names.
Start by deciding which tone carries the background, which supports circulation zones, and which is reserved for feature areas.
Continuous, low-contrast tone that links most spaces together.
Used where activity is highest: lobbies, main corridors, shared working areas.
Reserved for key thresholds, focal walls, stairs or special zones.
Think of each mix as three parts: base tone, visible inclusions and surface finish. The graphic shows their relative weight.
Overall field that you notice first when entering the space.
Granular elements that add movement, direction and scale.
Surface texture and sheen, adjusted to suit slip and cleaning needs.
A simple ladder of three steps helps keep decisions consistent across the scheme.
Collections group mixes by series and grade so you can move from soft and calm fields through to highly expressive compositions, without relying on fixed names.
Map each series to its most typical applications. This helps you narrow options quickly.
Grades describe how much movement you see from aggregates and how open the field appears.
Dense, small inclusions for a smoother, more uniform read.
Balanced expression suitable for most interior and exterior slabs.
More open field with inclusions used as quiet points of interest.
Directional or feature-driven look, used where you want a stronger statement.
Mixes that incorporate reclaimed content for circular design goals.
Run through this checklist when shortlisting options with clients or project teams.
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