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Material Guide

A practical guide to architectural glass, hardware, finishes, interlayers and fabrication choices for showers, railings, storefronts, mirrors and custom glass.

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Materials

Glass, Hardware and Finish Selection

Choosing glass is more than deciding between clear or frosted. Glass type, thickness, edgework, tempering, lamination and hardware determine safety, code compliance, cost and how long the finished installation performs.

This LightGate Glass material guide helps homeowners, designers, contractors and property managers compare the options before a site measure. Final specifications are always confirmed against the opening, use case, local code and hardware requirements before fabrication.

Glass Types

Compare tempered, laminated, insulated, low-iron, tinted, frosted, back-painted and mirror glass by use case.

Hardware Systems

Understand shower hinges, channels, railing shoes, standoffs, patch fittings, door closers, mirror clips and shelf supports.

Finish Details

Plan edge polish, bevels, holes, cutouts, etching, privacy finishes, sealants, gaskets and corrosion-resistant metals.

Glass Types We Supply and Install

Glass Type Best Used For Key Properties
Tempered safety glass Shower doors, railings, entries, tabletops and code-required safety locations Heat-treated for strength; breaks into small blunt pieces when fractured.
Annealed glass Picture frames, cabinet glass, interior non-safety panels and some mirrors Standard float glass that can be cut after manufacture but breaks into sharp shards.
Laminated glass Storefronts, skylights, security glass, sound control and overhead glazing Two or more lites bonded with an interlayer so the glass holds together after impact.
Insulated glass units Windows, curtain walls, exterior doors and energy-code facades Two or more panes with a sealed air or argon gap for thermal and acoustic performance.
Low-iron glass Premium showers, display cases, railings and thick edge-visible panels Reduces the green tint in standard clear glass for cleaner color and clarity.
Tinted or reflective glass Facades, privacy glazing and solar-control applications Bronze, gray, blue or green tones reduce glare, heat gain and visibility.
Back-painted glass Kitchen backsplashes, wall cladding, marker boards and cabinet accents Opaque color applied to the back face for a clean, easy-to-maintain surface.
Frosted or acid-etched glass Privacy partitions, office doors, bathroom glazing and decorative panels Permanent satin finish that diffuses light and softens visibility.
Mirror glass Vanities, gyms, retail, decorative walls and feature panels Standard, antique and safety-backed options with custom shapes and beveled edges.

Glass Thickness Guide

Thickness is selected around span, load, support, hardware and code. Under-speccing can create movement or failure; over-speccing adds cost and weight without benefit.

Thickness Inch Equivalent Typical Applications
3 mm 1/8 in Picture frames, small cabinet doors and lightweight mirrors.
5-6 mm 3/16-1/4 in Cabinet glass, small shelves, framed shower panels and table protectors.
8 mm 5/16 in Light frameless showers, shelving and interior partitions.
10 mm 3/8 in The most common residential frameless shower door and enclosure specification.
12 mm 1/2 in Glass railings, heavy shower doors, glass entry doors and large partitions.
16-19 mm 5/8-3/4 in Structural glass, fins, treads, oversized doors and high-load railing conditions.
Rule of thumb: Frameless showers commonly use 3/8 inch tempered glass; railings and standalone glass doors often use 1/2 inch glass; structural work may require thicker engineered assemblies. LightGate Glass confirms the final specification against site conditions before fabrication.

Hardware Types and Where They Are Used

Shower and Bath Hardware

Wall-mount hinges, glass-to-glass hinges, clamps, U-channel, headers, handles, knobs, towel bars, sweeps, seals and support bars.

Glass Railing Systems

Base shoe, dry-glaze channels, standoffs, clamps, button fittings, post systems, cap rails and pool or balcony spigots.

Entrance and Door Hardware

Patch fittings, door rails, floor closers, pivots, locks, latches, panic devices and ladder or offset pull handles.

Standoffs and Fittings

Panel standoff bases and caps, spider fittings, glass clamps, brackets and connectors for glass-to-wall or glass-to-floor mounting.

Sliding and Barn Door Hardware

Exposed or concealed track systems, rollers, stops, soft-close hardware, bottom guides and sliding room-divider kits.

Mirror and Shelf Hardware

J-channels, mirror clips, standoff mounts, shelf brackets, pins, mastic, adhesives and setting blocks.

Hardware Finishes

Hardware should coordinate with plumbing fixtures, door hardware, lighting and exterior metals. Common choices include polished chrome, brushed nickel, satin nickel, matte black, brushed stainless, polished stainless, oil-rubbed bronze, satin brass, antique brass, gold PVD and white.

Materials and Interlayers

Material Where It Is Used
316 and 304 stainless steel Exterior railings, wet environments, standoffs and coastal conditions. 316 offers stronger corrosion resistance.
Brass and bronze Premium door rails, handles and decorative hardware.
Aluminum Storefront framing, U-channel, curtain wall and commercial entrance systems.
PVB interlayer Standard laminated safety glass with UV control and breakage retention.
SGP interlayer Structural laminated glass for railings, floors, hurricane glazing and high-stiffness conditions.
EVA interlayer Decorative laminated glass with colors, textures and embedded materials.
Silicone and structural sealant Weatherproofing, structural glazing, IGU edge seals and clean wet-area detailing.
Gaskets, setting blocks and vinyl Cushioning glass in channels and frames to prevent glass-to-metal contact.

Etching, Decorative Glass and Custom Finishes

Edgework and Fabrication

Before hardware goes on, the glass is fabricated to the final specification: flat-polished edges, pencil-round edges, beveled edges, CNC hole drilling, hinge cutouts, notching, shape cutting, tempering, heat-strengthening and lamination. Precise edgework helps hinges, clamps, railing hardware and seals seat correctly.

Poor cutouts or rushed drilling can create leaks, stress cracks and failed installs. That is why LightGate Glass measures first, confirms hardware clearances and fabricates only after the opening and use case are understood.

Services This Guide Supports

Frameless Shower Enclosures

Tempered panels, hinges, clips, channels, seals and support bars.

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Glass Railings

Laminated guard glass, base shoe, posts, standoffs and corrosion-resistant hardware.

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Storefronts and Entrances

Aluminum systems, doors, insulated glass, safety glass and commercial hardware.

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Office Glass Partitions

Framed, frameless, acoustic and grid-style systems for interiors.

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Custom Mirrors

Vanity, gym, antique, safety-backed and decorative mirror installations.

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Custom Glass Fabrication

Tabletops, shelves, backsplash glass, specialty panels and one-off templates.

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Answers

Material Guide FAQs

What thickness glass do I need for a frameless shower?
Most frameless shower doors and enclosures use 3/8 inch tempered glass. Oversized doors and heavier layouts may use 1/2 inch tempered glass after field measurement.
What is the difference between tempered and laminated glass?
Tempered glass is heat-treated for strength and breaks into small blunt pieces. Laminated glass bonds two lites around an interlayer so the panel holds together after breakage.
Is low-iron glass worth it?
Low-iron glass reduces the green tint of standard clear glass. It is most noticeable on thick shower glass, railings, shelves and display panels where the edge is visible.
Can you match glass hardware to existing fixtures?
Yes. Hardware finishes can be matched to common fixture families including chrome, brushed nickel, matte black, stainless, bronze, brass and gold PVD.
Do you offer custom glass etching and logos?
Yes. LightGate Glass can plan satin frost, sandblast patterns, privacy bands, decorative film and custom logo etching for offices, storefronts and partitions.

Ready to Specify the Right Glass?

Send photos, rough dimensions and your zip code through the free estimate form. A LightGate Glass estimator will confirm the right glass type, thickness, hardware finish and fabrication path before the project is ordered.

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