Make Your kitchen stand out

Brick Slips in Kitchens

Many of our customers use our brick slips in their kitchen, from simple kitchen splashbacks, to feature walls or multiple walls around the kitchen cupboards.

Browse our brick slips here, or click below to see more customer projects.

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Kitchen Brick Slip Guidance

We have a few pointers and ideas from customers that may help you in choosing not only which blend you want, but how you're going to use it.

 

Which Brick Slips Should I Use for My Kitchen?


The straightforward answer is whichever you think will look best. One way to make the decision easier though is through the collections we separate our brick tiles into. If you want or have a very modern kitchen and want something to compliment that - look into our contemporary collection, if you want a farmhouse look of old weathered brick, choose from our reclaimed collection. If you want something that has good colour and texture variations but not too much weathering, browse our traditional collection.

 

Always consider the colour of your mortar, it makes a big difference- refer to our mortar guide for more information.

 

Matching The Exterior of Your House

If you want your kitchen to follow on (or as near as possible) from the bricks on the exterior of your home, you could browse all of our brick slips yourself, but you can also simply contact us with a couple of images of the brick walls. We'll let you know what is closest to your bricks so you can get a sample, it may even be that we have a product offline that suits you best.

Matching is a tricky process, as the majority of house bricks are no longer manufactured, however, we have the largest brick tile range in the UK, so we will have something close.

Bring the units and the brick together

Feature Wall Behind Cupboards

Creating a feature wall as part of the kitchen setup is the most popular way of using brick slips in a kitchen. It replicates how you would use normal tiles, but you need to try and make sure that you tile a complete wall to get the proper effect.

Red Kitchen Brick Slip backsplash behind a wood worktop and grey cupboards.

Replicate a tile backsplash

Kitchen Backsplash

Many people will simply think of using brick slips where previous tiles may have been. This won't give the genuine look of full bricks though so we always recommend finishing on internal corners to get the best out of our tiles.

On a red mixed brick slip feature wall, a copper pipe sits with lightbulbs on multiple ends, and a pressure gauge.

Make it separate

Kitchen Feature Wall

Whilst the cupboards and worktop get a lot of attention, we often leave other walls untouched. These are perfect to create full character, without the hassle of tiling around cupboards.

Just a little bit

Hob backsplash

Depending on your kitchen layout, you may have a recess above a cooker. You can either tile the back of the recess, the sides as pillars, or all of it! You'll probably want to use our brick slip sealant here to make cleaning easier.

Feature Walls

We always prefer installations to keep the effect of a full brick wall. This means making sure no tile edges are visible.

In order to do this, you'll need to tile up to an edge- wall, ceiling, floor, cupboard, work surface etc.

We have corner tiles to maintain the look for external corners, internal corners don't need any extra effort though.

The ideal way to make this happen would be to tile the full wall(s) before the kitchen is installed, that way the worktops will meet at a natural point with the brick, and you won't have to make cuts around cupboards.

However, this isn't always possible, if a kitchen is already installed for example, in which case we advise to take extra care around edges, always keep in mind the effect of genuine brickwork, something not needed for ceramic tiling.

Splashbacks

If you choose not to do a full wall, then there are ways to hide the edges of the tile, timber framing or tile edging for example.

However we'd recommend simply using the mortar mix you've used, and making a 45-degree angle between the front edge of the tile and the wall- this gives a more natural look.

 

Brick Slips with A Kitchen Upstand

If you have an upstand, don't worry about the depth. Where you're having a new kitchen installed and have chosen one- pad it out to make it 25mm-30mm and everything will line up perfectly.

However if you're adding the brick slips afterwards, you obviously could remove a shallower one, but in reality it actually doesn't make too much of a difference having a cm difference in depth, so don't worry.

 

Other Considerations and Top Tips

One thing many of our customers have decided to install is a glass shield above the hob, this means you can still see the wonderful brickwork, but it makes cleaning food spatters much easier. You can also use our brick slip sealant to help with cleaning, but brick is very hardwearing and easy to look after, we've written an aftercare guide to help with any concerns.

 

Browse our brick slips to start your kitchen project, we always recommend ordering samples so you can see how each blend looks in your kitchen, it can change depending on lighting and surrounding colours amongst other things.

A blue kitchen with yellow brick slips behind it. A belfast sink is central with a gold tap, a pendant light with large glass shade is just off centre to the right.

Get Inspired

Need help finding the 'look' for your kitchen? Why not browse our inspiration page.

Kitchen Inspiration