How Kiln-Fired Tile Printing Works
Kiln-fired tile printing is a ceramic production process where specialized ceramic pigments are permanently fused into the glaze of porcelain or ceramic tiles during high-temperature firing. Rather than sitting on the surface, the image becomes part of the tile itself.
The Kiln-Fired Printing Process
The process begins by applying ceramic pigments to the tile surface, followed by controlled kiln firing. As the temperature rises, the glaze softens and the pigments melt into it, permanently bonding with the ceramic surface.
Once fired, the printed image is no longer a coating or applied layer. It shares the same hardness, chemical resistance, and durability as the surrounding glaze.
Kiln-Fired Printing Compared to Other Tile Printing Methods
| Printing Method | Where the Image Sits | Suitable for Outdoor & Pool Use | Expected Longevity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dye-Sublimation (Surface Transfer) | On top of the surface | No | Months to 1 year |
| Epoxy / Coatings | On top of the surface | Limited | 1–3 years |
| Kiln-Fired | Fused into the glaze | Yes | Decades |
