We're still here using the same hand-carved steel dies that pressed tiles during Theodore Roosevelt's presidency. Not reproductions of those dies, the actual embossing plates that shaped ceilings for hotels, saloons, and grand residences during the tin ceiling era's peak. These dies have produced millions of square feet of ceiling tiles across three centuries without wearing out, breaking, or requiring replacement.

 

This isn't nostalgia. It's the environmental strategy at the most fundamental level.

Close-up of a metal press machine.
Manufacturing Tools That Outlast Generations

Modern manufacturing typically requires periodic retooling. Designs change. Markets evolve. Equipment wears out. Companies update machinery to improve efficiency, adopt new technologies, or replace aging tools that no longer perform adequately.

Wooden box with decorative metal plaque.
Geographic Simplicity: The Transportation Advantage

We manufacture every tile in the United States. Every single one. No overseas production facilities, no contract manufacturing in low-cost regions, no complex global supply chains. American steel gets pressed into tiles in American facilities using American labor, then ships to projects across the country.

Bronze, silver, and gold decorative tiles.
Supply Chain Visibility

Domestic manufacturing also provides supply chain control. We know where our steel comes from. We know who processes it. We control every production step from receiving raw material through final coating, packaging, and shipping.

Vintage sharpener beside metal box.
Long-Term Business Thinking

Companies owned by families across multiple generations tend to operate differently from companies focused on quarterly performance. Not always better (family business has its own challenges), but differently, particularly regarding long-term thinking.

We regularly receive requests for replacement tiles on installations made before the current generation of owners was even born. Those calls come from bars installed in the 1970s, restaurants from the 1980s, homes from the 1950s. The tiles haven't failed. Buildings expanded, uses changed, or renovations required additional material. The original tiles just needed company.

For architects and designers navigating client sustainability requirements, this traditional-meets-modern story provides narrative value. Heritage manufacturing isn't incompatible with environmental responsibility. In many cases, it's the foundation.

The tiles we manufacture today will outlast almost everyone reading this. They'll likely outlast the buildings that house them. That longevity represents environmental strategy at its most fundamental: make things that don't become waste. We've done this for 125 years using tools that refuse to quit, in facilities that won't move overseas, for a market that increasingly values exactly what we've always provided.