fitting

Interior Splendor
Working outdoors in the California sun is typically seen as a desirable perk, especially when, as in this case, the on-site alternative was working below ground in a confined labyrinth of narrow passages with limitless opportunities for banging your head. But here, it's my general sense that the plumbers working below ground on Hearst Castle's Neptune Pool (San Simeon, Calif.) had an easier row to hoe than did the marble applicators working in the open air. For one thing, tasks performed on the interior surface of the pool were
Size Does Matter
'Surely you've heard this line before and never believed it,' declared Stephanie Rose to open her June 1999 Natural Companions column, 'but I'm here to tell you that size does matter. 'Have you ever, for example, built a pond or fountain with concrete either surrounding it or fanning out from it beneath the soil - and then had your clients say they wanted a very mature tree or shrub planted right up against the edge?  There you are with
The Perfect Fit
To me, setting natural stone has always seemed something like assembling a very large jigsaw puzzle:  All the pieces have to fit together, and there's definitely a right way and a wrong way to make it happen. I start the process systematically by laying stones out in an adequately large area and then just looking at them.  As I go, I visualize how each will work as part of the overall composition and identify stones with either convex or concave contours that might fit together in some visual way.  I'm constantly asking myself, "If I put this stone here and this other one right next to it, how will it work?  Should I pick another stone and use a different combination?" Nature helps me in coming up with the answers, because