Resource Directory

Pushing Boundaries
Through many of the early “WaterShapes World” blogs, I wrote (perhaps too often?) about what was happening with the WaterShapes franchise and web site and all sorts of grand plans we had to burst back onto the scene with a huge, multilayered portal aimed at serving a broad universe filled by watershapers and their clients and prospects. In reality, we didn’t do much bursting and instead discovered what all sorts of web operations have experienced through the years:   Making things happen
Gearing Up
As 2012 comes to a close, I’ve slooked back on the year just past and I’m amazed by everything that’s happened with the WaterShapes franchise. The newsletter has gotten better with each succeeding edition, and the watershapes.com web site has grown literally every day since
On the Supplier Side
We know that the equipment and materials they offer us stand at the core of everything we design and/or build as watershapers.  Nonetheless, it’s easy to overlook the significant role played by those who manufacture, distribute and support the products we use. As I see it, however, discounting the role of suppliers in the watershaping process is a serious mistake.  Not only do these companies
To Good Use
Welcome to WaterShapes’ 2011 Resource Directory!   It’s our way of wrapping up a year’s worth of issues with a special edition that anticipates your professional needs in times to come.  Simply put, we’ve beaten the bushes and amassed a treasure trove of information that gives you direct, easy access to the products and services you’ll need to excel in the design, engineering and construction of watershapes and outdoor environments of all types in 2011 and beyond. Since the magazine’s debut a dozen years ago, we’ve served as
An Enduring Resource
Soon after we published our first-ever Resource Directory last December, we received this comment from a reader:  “Thanks for pulling this together.  I can’t tell you how frustrating it is to work with the big, fat buyer’s guides other magazines put together and sift through all the stuff I really don’t care about to dig out a few important nuggets.  I do have a complaint, however:  Why’d you take so long to
Material Issues
At a meeting in Phoenix in August 2008, Kirk Butler of Cactus Stone & Tile described watershape designers and builders as practitioners of "the science of selection" when it comes to deciding which products and materials to use in their projects. His observation immediately rang bells for me:  At that point late in the summer, we
Material Issues
At a meeting in Phoenix in August 2008, Kirk Butler of Cactus Stone & Tile described watershape designers and builders as practitioners of "the science of selection" when it comes to deciding which products and materials to use in their projects. His observation immediately rang bells for me:  At that point late in the summer, we