back to top
FIANDRE FJORD
'Max.Sand Fjord
 
 
FIANDRE | FJORD
Max.Sand Fjord
COLOURS & STYLES
BACK
THE STORY
The porcelain stoneware slabs in the Fjord tile collection are inspired by the enigmatic charm of the lands of the North, places where the landscape is dominated by stone; here, the very force of nature erodes the rock, creating attractive protrusions and depressions that rise impressively over the North Sea.
MATERIAL
Glazed Porcelain Tile
APPLICATION
Floor
Wall
Slip Rating
R9
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN
Italy
VARIATION
Shade and Veins Variation (V2)
AVAILABLE DIMENSIONS
(L)3000 × (W)1000 × (H)6 mm
FINISH
Honed
Slip Rating
R9
FINISH
Honed
you may also be interested in
Astra
Inspired by St. Vincent’s stone (a natural limestone with a fine and even grain), the Astra tile collection is a contemporary reinterpretation of the stone’s timeless charm. The surfaces capture the diversity of effects of natural stone with great realism and rich chromatic depth.
Moon_Vein
The Moon_Vein tile collection takes its inspiration from Brazilian brown quartzite, a stone with a particular appearance looks almost like a wooden surface, traversed by soft, thick veining effects. Moon_Vein offers a new take on the particular features of the original stone, offering both light and dark shades with a striking, natural look. Ideal for interiors with a sophisticated, linear design.
Pietra Di Vals
Inspired by quartzite, Pietra Di Vals tile collection recaptures the colours of the natural material in two grey tones. The collection is also presented in two flexible formats to suit the interior requirements of most spaces.
Downtown
Uniqueness is sometimes originated by chance encounters, by the overlapping of technologies and materials and is dictated by the flowing of time. DOWNTOWN is a tile collection that holds different and varied material inspirations to give life to a surface, new and original, in which stories of city paths can be read.

They are fragments that remain fixed indelibly in the memory, the stones, the pebbles, the sidewalks’ concrete, trampled on thousands of times, become a unique and inseparable material, of which the chromatic variations indicate the belonging to a place.