Why Everyone (Including Us) Is Buying Brushed Nickel Taps
We see trends land at The Blue Space constantly. Copper? Gone. Clinical white? A bit too cold for us. But brushed nickel? That one stuck.
It isn't just a phase. It’s practically furniture now. We see people walk into the showroom, stare at the wall of options, and just freeze. Totally overwhelmed. When that happens, we usually point them straight to brushed nickel. Why? Because it’s the safe bet. But the good kind of safe.
It sits right in the middle. On one side, you've got chrome. Shiny. Classic. But it shows every single water mark. On the other side, matte black. Cool, sure, but sometimes it feels a bit heavy in a small room. Brushed nickel is the Goldilocks option. Reliable. Good-looking. It just works.
If you are staring at your renovation plans and feeling lost, don't stress. We’ll explain why this finish is probably the answer you were looking for.
What Are We Actually Talking About?
Let’s keep this simple. It’s nickel. But it’s textured. It has these tiny, microscopic lines etched into the surface. That’s the "brushed" bit. It stops the metal from acting like a mirror and makes it scatter light instead.
Think of it as chrome’s relaxed cousin. Chrome is cool and blue. Sharp. Brushed nickel is warmer. It has a champagne tint to it. Sometimes a bit golden. You might not even notice the colour shift until you put it next to a grey tile, and then suddenly, it pops.
People ask us all the time: "Is this different to stainless steel tapware?" Honestly? You probably can't tell them apart just by looking. They are twins. But steel is utilitarian. Hard. Brushed nickel feels a bit more dressed up. A bit softer.
It’s the finish you pick when you want the room to feel like a home, not a clinic.
In The Kitchen (Where The Mess Happens)
Kitchens are gross. Let’s be real. Pasta sauce. Dough. Kids asking for drinks with sticky hands. Your taps take a beating.
We love brushed nickel here because it lies for you. It hides the mess. We’ll talk about cleaning in a sec, but for a high-traffic zone, it’s a lifesaver.
Functionality comes first. Start with our kitchen taps. If you have a big sink or you actually cook, grab a pull-out sink mixer. The finish on the nozzle hides the fingerprints from when you grab it. Brilliant.
Got an island bench? The tap is on display. It’s basically a hood ornament. You want height. A gooseneck sink mixer in brushed nickel looks like art. It catches the light but doesn't blind you.
There are plenty of standard sink mixers if you want to keep it low-key. Or, if you are doing a farmhouse thing, look at a 3-piece sink set. Old school hot and cold handles, but with the modern durability of nickel.
In The Bathroom (The Sanctuary)
This is where the finish really shines. Bathrooms usually have softer light. Fluffy towels. Timber. The warm undertone of the nickel just ties it all together.
The Vanity
Start here. Most people grab basin mixers because they are easy. One hole in the sink, one handle. Done. If you are tight on space—or you just hate scrubbing around the base of a tap—look at a wall basin bath mixer set. Getting the hardware off the bench makes the room feel huge. It just does.
We also have a massive stack of bathroom basin taps if you prefer the separate handles. Some people like the control. Fair enough.
The Shower
Don't mix finishes here. Please. If the basin is brushed nickel, the shower has to be too. You’ll need shower mixers to run the water. The brushed look is incredible against dark slate tiles. Or even subway tiles.
If you have that shower-over-bath setup (apartment living, right?), you’ll need shower and bath mixers with the little diverter button.
The Tub
The fun part. If you bought a freestanding tub, you need a floor tap. Our freestanding bath mixers in brushed nickel are absolute stunners. They look like sculptures.
For built-in baths, you have options. Bath fillers work well. Or grab dedicated bath tub spouts sticking out of the wall. Speaking of, don't forget you can buy standalone basin spouts or general spouts if you are building a custom setup.
Sorting Through The Types
Okay, you know the location. Now, the mechanism. We have a huge range of bathroom taps & mixers, but they work differently. Here is the team’s take.
Modern vs Retro
Standard mixers are standard. But check out progressive mixers. We are obsessed with these. You just twist the dial. Cold to hot. No lever sticking out. Clean.
Renovating an old house? If you have two holes in the wall, you can't switch to a mixer without re-tiling. Nightmare. Stick with bathroom taps three piece sets or wall top assemblies. Easy swap.
We also have hob mixers if you are mounting onto the bath ledge.
Tech & Safety
Hygiene is a big deal now. Electronic sensor taps in brushed nickel are great for powder rooms. No touching. We also stock lead-free taps if you are watching your water quality.
And for mobility support, we have accessible taps. Extended levers. Easier to turn. But they still look stylish.
Who Makes The Good Ones?
We stock a lot of brands. But only the ones we trust. With brushed nickel, quality matters. If the plating is cheap, it peels. We don’t want that.
For architectural, sharp looks, check out Phoenix or Meir. Meir basically specializes in finishes. Their stuff is bulletproof.
Want the designer look but need to keep some cash for the tiler? Nero and Fienza are crowd favourites. We sell heaps of these. They just work.
Then you have the legends. Caroma. Dorf. Clark. They’ve been around forever for a reason. Solid.
Looking for something unique? Maybe a weird shape? Browse Greens, Modern National, or Indigo. Also, keep an eye on Methven—their shower tech is next level.
For the kitchen, Oliveri and Turner Hastings do the farmhouse style perfectly. And don't overlook Seima or the value from Suprema.
Why We Actually Recommend It
We aren't just trying to move stock. We want you to like your bathroom in three years. Here is why brushed nickel wins.
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It Forgives You: Chrome shows every smudge. Matte black shows dust and toothpaste. Brushed nickel? It hides it all. The texture masks the water spots. If you have kids, this is the one.
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It Doesn't Age: It’s silver. It’s not a "crazy" choice. But the texture makes it modern. It won't date like rose gold did.
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It’s a Chameleon: It picks up the colours around it. Warm vanity? The tap looks warmer. Grey tiles? It looks cooler. It just fits.
A Quick Note on Care
Before you buy, a heads-up. Brushed nickel is tough, but don't scrub it with steel wool. Ever. And keep the bleach away.
Warm soapy water. Microfibre cloth. That’s it.
Also, check your accessories. Towel rails. Robe hooks. You want them to match. Most of the brands we listed, like Fienza and Nero, do full ranges so you can match everything perfectly without driving yourself mad trying to compare silver swatches.
We know renovating is huge. But picking the right tap is a small win. If you are stuck, or just want to chat about spout reach, give us a shout. We love this stuff.