The mini slat panel keeps the acoustic felt backer of the range but uses narrow slats and tight gaps, for a fine, detailed rhythm that reads as a crisp texture rather than bold banding. It suits smaller rooms and close-up surfaces — reception desks, booths and residential feature walls — where a fine grain looks considered.
This page describes the planned specification — a mini-slat build-up on an acoustic backer. Absorption (α<sub>w</sub>) and reaction-to-fire (Euroclass) figures are published per finish only against a named test report; slat width and gap change the result, so this range carries its own tested figures rather than borrowing another panel's.
Specification
Why some rows say “pending”. We are pre-launch. Absorption (αw / NRC) and reaction-to-fire (Euroclass) figures are published per finish only when a named test report supports them, and FSC when the certificate is held — never before. Geometry shown is the planned standard specification.
How many panels?
covers ≈ 13.0 m² — add a margin for cuts and offsets
Finishes
- Natural oak
- Walnut
- Smoked oak
- Black
- Grey
Typical applications
- Reception desks, booths and meeting rooms
- Boutique retail and hospitality detail
- Residential feature walls
See and feel it before you specify, or get a project price.
Frequently asked questions
Do finer slats absorb less sound?
Slat width and gap both affect a build-up's absorption, so a mini-slat panel can perform differently from a wide-slat one — which is exactly why the figure is only quoted against that build-up's own ISO 354 report, not carried across from another panel.
Where does a mini slat suit best?
A fine slat reads as a crisp texture rather than bold banding, so it tends to suit smaller rooms and close-up surfaces where a wide slat would look heavy. Choosing between fine and wide is mostly about the scale of the space and the look you want.