Frosted privacy
Obscure direct views while allowing light to continue moving through interior and exterior glass.

Privacy / pattern / branding
Decorative film changes how glass looks and behaves without the cost or permanence of specialty glass. Frosted, patterned and custom-looking surfaces can create privacy, define a space and give ordinary glass architectural purpose.
What matters on this surface
Obscure direct views while allowing light to continue moving through interior and exterior glass.
Use bands, full coverage and pattern-based layouts to complement the room instead of fighting it.
Give conference rooms, entries and storefront glass a more deliberate, branded appearance.
The Perform X approach
Decorative film changes how glass looks and behaves without the cost or permanence of specialty glass. Frosted, patterned and custom-looking surfaces can create privacy, define a space and give ordinary glass architectural purpose.
Every project starts with the details that change the recommendation: what the glass is made of, how it is oriented, how the space or vehicle is used, what visibility must be preserved and what the customer wants the finished surface to look like.
The result is a film choice with a reason behind it—not a generic upsell or a one-shade-fits-all answer.
Common questions
Most architectural decorative films can be professionally removed, making them more flexible than etched or specialty glass.
Frosted film obscures detail, but silhouettes and light may still be visible depending on distance and lighting. Perform X can help choose the right opacity.
Yes. Partial-height bands, stripes and shaped layouts can create privacy exactly where it is needed while leaving other glass clear.
No. It works well on residential entry glass, bathrooms, sidelights, interior doors, cabinets and other compatible surfaces.
Pensacola solar control
Tell us what you drive, live in, work in or take out on the water. We’ll help you choose a film that fits the job—not just the darkest roll on the wall.