Design Guide

Epoxy Floor Colors & Design Options

Picking a color is the fun part — and the part most homeowners overthink. This guide walks you through flake blends, metallic finishes, and how to choose a floor that fits the way your home actually looks. When you're ready, we'll bring physical samples to your free estimate.

Flake Blends (most popular)

Full-flake epoxy is our most-installed system. Vinyl color chips are broadcast into the wet coat and sealed under a clear topcoat — durable, slip-resistant, and forgiving of minor slab imperfections. Here are the blends New Braunfels homeowners pick most often.

Domino

Crisp black & white flakes on a charcoal base. Modern, high-contrast — pairs with gray or white-trim homes.

Tuxedo

Black, white, and silver flakes on a deep gray base. A clean, dressed-up look for showroom garages.

Cabin

Warm browns, tans, and copper flakes on a mocha base. Hides dirt — great for shops and patios.

Granite

Gray, black, and white flakes mimicking natural stone. The most popular all-purpose pick.

Sandstone

Soft beige and ivory flakes on a tan base. Bright, neutral — works with Texas Hill Country exteriors.

Sedona

Earth-tone reds, browns, and golds. A warm, Southwest-inspired pour for patios and entryways.

Metallic Epoxy Finishes

Metallics use suspended mica pigments that move during installation, giving each floor a one-of-a-kind marbled look. Best for interior living spaces, showrooms, and statement garages where you want something that looks more like polished stone than a coated slab.

Pearl White

Soft, luminous white with subtle silver swirls. Brightens dark garages and gallery-style spaces.

Slate

Charcoal with cool blue-gray movement. A high-end industrial look without going too dark.

Copper

Warm amber tones with rust and gold swirls. Reads almost like polished stone.

Midnight Blue

Deep navy with sapphire and silver veining. Dramatic — best as a feature floor.

Solid Colors & Decorative Concrete

Not every floor needs flakes. Solid-color epoxy in safety yellow, battleship gray, or tile red is the go-to for workshops, storage rooms, and commercial spaces. For patios, walkways, and pool decks, we also install stained, stamped, and overlay decorative concrete — same durability conversation, very different aesthetic.

How to Choose a Color That Matches Your Home

Match your trim, not your siding

Pick a flake or base that picks up a tone from your home's trim, garage door, or fascia. Floors that echo trim look intentional; floors that fight the siding look like an accident.

Go darker if you actually use the space

Light floors look great in photos. In a real garage with tires, lawn equipment, and dropped tools, mid-tone grays and browns hide scuffs better and stay looking new longer.

Texture matters as much as color

Full-flake floors give a slight orange-peel texture that adds slip resistance. Metallics are smoother and more reflective — beautiful, but pick a finish coat with grit if it's a wet area.

Look at samples outdoors

Garage and patio floors live under natural light. We bring physical chip samples to every estimate so you can see them in your actual space — not on a screen.

See the samples in your space.

We bring physical chip and metallic samples to every free estimate — so you can see the color on your actual slab, in your actual light, before you decide.

No pressure. No obligation. We'll get back to you within 1 business day.