Brass sheets and plates provide flat metal stock for projects that begin with forming, machining, or cutting precise components from a stable surface. Fabricators often rely on these materials when a design starts with a blank that will later be bent, drilled, stamped, or shaped into a finished part. In architectural work, brass sheet also serves as a visible material for panels, trim, and interior metal details where surface quality matters.

Flat-rolled brass combines durability with workability, which makes it useful across many fabrication methods. It can be formed into complex shapes while still maintaining strength and corrosion resistance. When the final surface will remain exposed, the material also responds well to brushing, polishing, and protective finishing.

Lewis Brass & Copper supports customers who need dependable sheet and plate supply in commonly specified gauges and alloys. If a job calls for a particular thickness, format, or alloy, we can help match the request to available inventory or coordinate mill sourcing so projects stay on schedule.

Brass Bronze and Copper Sheet Metal Rolls

Industries That Use Sheets & Plates

Brass sheet and plate are widely used anywhere flat, formable metal is the starting point for finished parts.

Architecture & Construction

Cladding, trim, panels, reveals, accents, and elevator interiors.

Manufacturing

Formed parts, guards, covers, brackets, prototypes, and production runs.

Electrical Manufacturing

Bus bars, connectors, spacers, and conductive components.

Hardware

Kick plates, corner guards, signage, fixtures, and furniture details.

Copper Sheet Metal

Why Lewis Brass & Copper for Sheets & Plates

Lewis Brass & Copper supports fabricators who rely on flat brass stock for forming, cutting, and finishing work. Consistent inventory helps customers keep projects moving when sheet and plate are needed for panels, parts, or architectural details. 

Our service-center approach ensures dependable supply and practical support, so buyers have material available when project schedules demand it. With a warehouse location supporting distribution, we help reduce delays that can interrupt production or installation work.

Sheet & Plate FAQs

In many purchasing contexts, “sheet” refers to thinner flat-rolled material, while “plate” refers to thicker sections. Your drawing, gauge/thickness callout, and ASTM requirement should drive the selection.

A commonly specified alloy for brass sheet and plate is CDA 260 (Cartridge Brass), often produced to ASTM B36. This alloy is widely used for flat-rolled brass because it forms well and provides good corrosion resistance.

Yes—flat-rolled brass is commonly supplied as sheet/plate and as coil. Coil can be useful for higher-volume fabrication, continuous forming, or stamping operations.

Thickness impacts stiffness and forming limits; temper impacts how easily the material bends or holds shape. Share your forming method and end use, and we’ll help narrow the best-fit option.