The new Mutina Puzzle tiles collection is an opportunity to personalise your floors and walls in endless combinations of graphic patterns and block colours.
February 14th, 2017
What do you call a tile collection that allows you to create a new design each time? Puzzled?
Architectural solutions provider Rice Fields presents Puzzle by Mutina, an Italian porcelain stoneware tile collection that offers a fascinating play of shape, form and colour, unrestrained in design scope.
A brainchild of internationally acclaimed London-based designers Edward Barber and Jay Osgerby, Puzzle is an original composition of pattern and colour, its endless combinations limited only by your imagination.
Inspired by geometry, the Puzzle glazed stoneware tile collection brings three important elements together to create infinite wall and flooring designs: The collection comprises eight colour families, each one consisting of a set of six graphic patterns, three plain tiles in three different block colours, and a set of two symmetrical edge patterns in two colours. All the tiles come in a standard 25cm x 25cm size – a single format style quite unusual in the ceramic tile industry today.
Puzzle presents an opportunity to organise layouts and patterns on floors and walls using the infinite configurations allowed by the elements to create unique installations that are new each time.
A revolutionary collection that pays tribute to individuality and personalisation, Puzzle by Mutina takes traditional tiling practices through a roller-coaster ride of design possibilities. Start out with a block colour, blend in the graphic and edge patterns, organise the tiles into geometric or abstract designs to shape the space, and then gradually disperse them randomly. Or work your way up the wall to create a unique facade that communicates with the design on your floor.
INDESIGN is on instagram
Follow @indesignlive
A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers
Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!
In the second instalment of our performance seating three-parter, we turn to DKO’s Michael Drescher and Jacob Olsen to peek behind Sayl’s confident architectural form and explore the ideas of inclusivity, adaptability and freedom to move as hallmarks of what sitting your best actually means.
The newest brand to emerge from Cosentino’s creative crucible is Ēclos, a next-generation mineral surface that embodies the organic beauty and tactility of marble in a precision-mineral surface or material.
In the last instalment of our three-part performance seating series, Alex Bain from Architectus explains why sitting well shouldn’t feel like sitting at all and explores an unexpected success metric of the hybrid workplace: the grounding power of emotional support.
In the first instalment of our three-part series exploring what it means to sit your best, we pose the question to Gray Puksand’s Dale O’Brien, who discusses the importance of ease and majority rule when it comes to sitting and reveals why specifying a task chair is not unlike choosing a Volvo.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
The decision isn’t really about budget. It comes down to who designs the kitchen, who builds it, and whether those are the same people installing it in your home.
At Hornsby Park, AJC Architects’ Southern Lookout marks the first architectural intervention in the transformation of a former quarry into a major public landscape.