Metal acoustical ceiling tiles from Dakota Tin give your ceilings a vintage, rustic or industrial touch plus improve sound quality and reduce noise - absorbing 80% of noise!
Colorado Perforated Metal Acoustical Ceiling Tiles are corrugated tiles that have perforated holes throughout. It is then backed with an Owen Corning® SelectSound™ Black Acoustic Blanket to reduce sound reverberation.
With the acoustic blanket backing, our metal acoustical ceiling tiles provide excellent acoustical performance and sound insulation for multiplex theaters, sound studios, and performing arts centers. It also works great for noise reduction in places like restaurants, bars, coffee shops, and even offices.
These corrugated metal ceiling tiles come in uniform patterns like Galvalume (regular galvanized), Antique Galvanized (dark dull grey), or Rusted (pre-rusted).
About Colorado Metal Acoustical Ceiling Tiles
Perfect for theater rooms, music rooms, sound studios, coffee shops, bars, and any other area where sound quality or noise reduction is important.
Want to add a sealant to your tile?Just check the box to add an organic metal sealant to your reclaimed barn tin tiles for $4 more per tile. Many people have asked for a sealant solution for Dakota Tin products and we are happy to now provide that as a custom add-on.Not available for Galvalume.
This organic linseed sealant creates a simple shellac that coats the metal’s surface. It helps prevent additional rust by creating a film that prevents water and air from reaching the metal. It also helps add a level of shine to the metal.
Instructions On How To Cut Ceiling Tiles
Why Colorado Rustic Steel Ceiling Tiles Are So Unique
Colorado Rustic Collection Style Options
All of the patterns or styles from the Colorado Rustic Collection have a more consistent, uniform color pattern and have less contrast per tile compared to the Dakota Tin Collection.
Rusted:Pre-rusted and created with an all-natural, accelerated rust treatment. Because the solution is spray applied, rust is more evenly distributed, and the result is a more even coat of copper rust color, but still with small variations of blues and greys that you’d get from the antique galvanized style.
We start the rusting process, but if you'd still like more rust, learn how to increase the amount of rusthere.
View our online gallery of projects to see customer design projects and get inspiration.
See how DIYers, contractors, interior designers, business owners, and home owners are our metal products on their ceilings, walls, landscaping, design projects, and more.