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  2. Panot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panot

    Panot (transl. flagstone) is a type of outdoor cement tile and the associated paving style, both found in Barcelona. Panot tiles are usually small and square, and feature graphic designs pertaining to the neighbourhoods of the city which they pave. The panot tiles designed by Antoni Gaudí are hexagonal.

  3. Ottoman architectural decoration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ottoman_architectural...

    The Tomb of Cem in the Muradiye Complex in Bursa, built in the late 15th century.The tomb contains relatively well-preserved examples of painted decoration from this era (upper walls), as well as single-colour hexagonal tiles (possibly dated to 1429) that are typical of early tilework.

  4. Hexagonal tiling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hexagonal_tiling

    Hexagonal tilings can be made with the identical {6,3} topology as the regular tiling (3 hexagons around every vertex). With isohedral faces, there are 13 variations. Symmetry given assumes all faces are the same color. Colors here represent the lattice positions. [2] Single-color (1-tile) lattices are parallelogon hexagons.

  5. Penrose tiling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penrose_tiling

    The tiles in the square tiling have only one shape, and it is common for other tilings to have only a finite number of shapes. These shapes are called prototiles, and a set of prototiles is said to admit a tiling or tile the plane if there is a tiling of the plane using only these shapes.

  6. List of Euclidean uniform tilings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_euclidean_uniform...

    The Laves tilings have vertices at the centers of the regular polygons, and edges connecting centers of regular polygons that share an edge. The tiles of the Laves tilings are called planigons. This includes the 3 regular tiles (triangle, square and hexagon) and 8 irregular ones. [4] Each vertex has edges evenly spaced around it.

  7. Mosaic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosaic

    A tile mosaic is a digital image made up of individual tiles, arranged in a non-overlapping fashion, e.g. to make a static image on a shower room or bathing pool floor, by breaking the image down into square pixels formed from ceramic tiles (a typical size is 1 in × 1 in (25 mm × 25 mm), as for example, on the floor of the University of ...