profession

A Window on Our World
With a first glance at last month's cover of LandShapes, a colleague of mine said he thought it more properly belonged on the cover of an architecture magazine instead of on my landscape publication.  It was beautiful, he said, but he felt that the dominance of the wall in the image made him wonder if he'd received the right magazine.   In defending the choice of this photograph, I found myself flooded by all sorts of thoughts and considerations, many of them having to do with
A Powerful Niche
Even though I've been on the leading edge of a movement for several years now, it still feels strange to put this thought on paper:  A growing number of professionals like me are now finding work as consultants in the design and construction of watershapes.   Who would ever have thought it possible?  Just a few short years ago, the idea that anyone could make a living by charging for designs or construction oversight was outlandish and the subject of skepticism, shock and derision among architects, landscape architects and pool contractors.   To that point, after all, "pool design" was generally a service that existed almost exclusively to support the sales efforts of contractors.  These folks, who were accustomed to
A Powerful Niche
Even though I've been on the leading edge of a movement for several years now, it still feels strange to put this thought on paper:  A growing number of professionals like me are now finding work as consultants in the design and construction of watershapes.   Who would ever have thought it possible?  Just a few short years ago, the idea that anyone could make a living by charging for designs or construction oversight was outlandish and the subject of skepticism, shock and derision among architects, landscape architects and pool contractors.   To that point, after all, "pool design" was generally a service that existed almost exclusively to support the sales efforts of contractors.  These folks, who were accustomed to