D & Wave: A Modular Ceramic System
Not a Pattern. A System.
The D & Wave series by DNZ Tiles is not designed as fixed tile patterns.
It is developed as a modular surface system where every piece can be reconfigured to create different spatial outcomes.
Instead of defining a single surface, D & Wave defines a set of rules:
Rotate. Combine. Create.
D & Wave Series
Both series are built on the same production principle—dry pressing in custom steel moulds—but they express two different surface behaviors:
- D Series: structured, directional, architectural
- Wave Series: fluid, continuous, organic
Together, they form a controlled but flexible system where contrast becomes part of the design language
ROTATE
In the D & Wave system, rotation is not a secondary action—it is part of the design logic.
Each tile can be rotated in multiple directions, changing how the relief interacts with light.
With a simple rotation:
- shadow depth shifts
- rhythm changes
- surface perception transforms
A single module becomes multiple visual outcomes.
COMBINE
D & Wave tiles are designed to connect, not repeat.
When combined across a surface, they allow:
- structured repetition (D Series)
- flowing transitions (Wave Series)
- or hybrid compositions between both
The result is not a fixed pattern, but a controlled surface field.
CREATE
Creation happens at installation level.
Architects and designers are not applying a predefined layout—they are composing the surface in real time.
By rotating and combining modules, every project becomes:
- site-specific
- visually unique
- composition-driven rather than pattern-driven
D & Wave as a Design Language
The strength of the system lies in the relationship between its two expressions:
- D Series defines structure
- Wave Series introduces movement
When used together, they create a balance between order and fluidity within the same modular logic.
The D & Wave series redefine ceramic tiles as a modular design system rather than a static surface product.
Rotation changes perception.
Combination builds structure.
Creation defines individuality.
In this system, the surface is not delivered—it is composed.