Smalti tile, sometimes referred to as
Byzantine glass mosaic tile, are typically opaque glass tiles that were originally developed for use in mosaics created during the time of the
Byzantine empire.
Smalti is made by mixing molten glass with metal oxides for color;
the result is a cloudy mixture that is poured into flat slabs that are
cooled and broken into individual pieces. The molten mixture can also be
topped with gold leaf, followed by a thin glass film to protect against
tarnishing. During the Byzantine era,
Constantinople
became the center of the mosaic craft, and the use of gold leaf glass
mosaic reached perhaps it greatest artistic expression in the former
seat of the Orthodox patriarch of Constantinople, the
Hagia Sophia.
Traditional smalti tiles are still found today in many European
churches and ornamental objects; the method is also used by some
present-day artisans. In the 1920s, mass production methods were applied
to Smalti tile manufacturing, which enabled these tiles to find their
way into many middle-class homes. Instead of the old method of rolling
the colored glass mixture out, cooling, and cutting, the new method
called for
molten liquid to be poured and cooled in trays, usually resulting in 3/4 inch chicklet-type pieces.
Since the 1990s a variety of modern glass tile technologies,
including methods to take used glass and recreate it as ‘green’ tiles,
has resulted in a resurgence of interest in glass tile as a floor and
wall cladding. It is now commonly used in kitchens, spas, and bathrooms.
And while smalti tiles are still popular, small and large format glass
products are now commonly formed using cast and
fused glass methods. The plasticity of these last two methods has resulted in a wide variety of looks and applications, including
floor tiles
In the late 1990s, special glass tiles
have been coated on the back
side with a receptive white coating. This has allowed impregnation of
heat-transfer dyes by a printing process reproducing high resolution
pictures and designs. Custom printed glass tile and glass tile murals
exhibit the toughness of glass on the wearing surface with photo-like
pictures. These are especially practical in kitchens and showers, where
cleanser and moisture resistance are important.