This 3/4" coffered panel (24"x24") is a recreation of the original pattern from the Palmetto Carnegie Library, Palmetto FL circa 1914.
Due to water damage, a large section was destroyed. We remolded it for the Historic Preservation Society's
renovation of the library. Carnigie, the richest American at that time, gave over $56 million dollars to American public libraries.
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Profile depth: Recess 3/4"
Requires filler. Best for medium and large sized rooms.
Nail-up must be put up on a 1"x2" furring strip system (for this pattern only). Due to the coffered depth (3/4") plywood will not work with this pattern.
Click on pattern for larger image and information.
All Patterns
6in Patterns
12in Patterns
24in Patterns
Pattern 1
Profile 1/4"
Pattern 2
Profile 1/4"
Pattern 3
Profile 1/8"
Pattern 4
DropIn Sale!
Pattern 5
Pattern Sale!
Pattern 6
Profile 1/4"
Pattern 7
NailUp Sale!
Pattern 8
Profile 1/4"
Pattern 9
Profile 3/8"
Pattern 10
SnapLock Sale!
Pattern 11
Profile 1/2"
Pattern 12
Pattern Sale!
Pattern 13
Pattern Sale!
Pattern 14
Pattern Sale!
Pattern 15
Profile 1/2"
Pattern 16
NailUp Sale!
Pattern 34
Pattern Sale!
Pattern 18
Profile 1/4"
Pattern 19
SnapLock Sale!
Pattern 20
Profile 1/8"
Pattern 21
Profile 1/8"
Pattern 22
Profile 1/2"
Pattern 23
NailUp Sale!
Pattern 24
DropIn Sale!
Pattern 25
SnapLock Sale!
Pattern 26
SnapLock Sale!
Pattern 27
Pattern Sale!
Pattern 28
Pattern Sale!
Pattern 29
SnapLock Sale!
Pattern 30
SnapLock Sale!
Pattern 31
Pattern Sale!
Pattern 32
Pattern Sale!
Pattern 17
DISCONTINUED
Filler F1
hammered
Filler F2 (18")
pattern
Filler F2 - D
pattern
Blank (Drop-in)
blank
Click on a color group below to view available finishes.
Tin Ceilings remind us of a different time in our country's history. Tin Ceilings stir memories of gentler days when elegance and beauty reigned. A slower paced era where style and grace were the watchwords in home decor. Old time victorian homes, formal parlors, farmhouses with wood burning stoves and other historic architecture we've seen in literature and film or remember from our childhood.
It is said that "Everything Old Becomes New Again". It reinvents itself and becomes fashionable again, perhaps because it was so fashionable in the first place. Fashion goes in and out of style as modern ideas are introduced to the market. But the popular styling's of the past always cycle back into modern contemporary culture. The Tin Ceiling exemplifies this concept.