Liquid Stone · LS-09

Slate Stone

The kind of dark that makes a room feel intentional rather than smaller. In the Liquid Stone range, Slate Stone reads as deep slate with quiet blue cast, built on an evenly balanced undertone and blue-grey slate pigment. The natural home for Slate Stone is rendered façades — and increasingly alcove and chimney-breast features. Works alongside polished concrete, mirror, smoked glass and chrome ironmongery. Owes a small debt to Victorian roofline, but doesn't ask the rest of the room to follow.

Where Slate Stone works

Best used in exterior, feature wall

Deep slate with quiet blue cast reads its best where the light is soft and consistent. Below are the rooms we've installed this shade in most often.

  • soffits, gutters and trim
  • alcove and chimney-breast features
Pairs with

Shades that sit beside Slate Stone

Picked by family, warmth and tonal proximity within the same range.

Technical

How Slate Stone is applied

Slate Stone uses the standard Liquid Stone build. The technical specification is the same across colour — only the pigment changes.

Sheen options
natural matt stone
Coverage
Built up in 2–3 controlled passes — spray or trowel.
Substrates
primed plaster, concrete, render, external insulation systems
Sealer
Mineral or weather-protective topcoat depending on exposure.
Cleaning
Soft brush and water. Re-seal exteriors every 8–10 years.
FAQs about Slate Stone

Questions clients ask about this shade

Won't Slate Stone make the room feel smaller?+

Deep shades like Slate Stone actually blur a room's edges, making walls feel further away rather than closer. The trick is to wrap the colour onto skirting and trim so there are no high-contrast lines to remind the eye where the room ends.

Can Slate Stone be used outside as well as inside?+

Yes — Liquid Stone in Slate Stone is rated for interior and exterior use. For exterior elevations we add a weather-protective topcoat rated for UK rainfall.

What does Slate Stone pair with from your range?+

We most often pair Slate Stone with the three closest shades in its family — see the pairings panel below. Beyond that, works alongside polished concrete, mirror, smoked glass and chrome ironmongery.