watershaping

Stepping Up
I've written several times in the past about the fact that more and more landscape architects and designers are getting into watershaping.  As evidence, all you need to do is look at design-award competitions in the pool and spa industry and note the increasing number of submissions from landscape professionals:  It's even getting to the point in some programs where they're outnumbering participants who come from the traditional pool and spa industry. You'll find even more evidence of this phenomenon on the web sites of landscape-focused companies, where you'll see watershapes of all shapes and descriptions in most of their photo galleries.  Moreover, many I know in the pool and spa industry have had the experience of
True Vision
We may be well into our ninth year of publication, but I'm still amazed and often amused by the ways that some people choose to describe WaterShapes.  I've heard some armchair critics, for instance, dismiss us "a pool magazine that covers ponds," "a pond magazine that covers pools" or "a fountain magazine with
True Vision
We may be well into our ninth year of publication, but I'm still amazed and often amused by the ways that some people choose to describe WaterShapes.  I've heard some armchair critics, for instance, dismiss us "a pool magazine that covers ponds," "a pond magazine that covers pools" or "a fountain magazine with
Cross Pollinating
It may be a cliché, but I think there's something to be said for the notion that you need to know where you've been to see where you're going:  The present and the future are always both a result of (and a response to) the past. For years, voices in this magazine have described, defined and advocated changes in the way the watershaping industry works.  I, for one, have written volumes on what the pool and spa industry was once like and how the benefits of elevating our approaches flow to everyone from suppliers, designers and contractors to consumers as well.  I've also meditated more than once on how professionals on the
Cross Pollinating
It may be a cliché, but I think there's something to be said for the notion that you need to know where you've been to see where you're going:  The present and the future are always both a result of (and a response to) the past. For years, voices in this magazine have described, defined and advocated changes in the way the watershaping industry works.  I, for one, have written volumes on what the pool and spa industry was once like and how the benefits of elevating our approaches flow to everyone from suppliers, designers and contractors to consumers as well.  I've also meditated more than once on how professionals on the
A Fresh Start
Through all my years of working on WaterShapes, one of the most persistent frustrations I've encountered has had to do with the ongoing lack of access would-be watershapers have to college-level education on the subject.  And it's a frustration shared by landscape architects, many of whom have told me how rankled they are by
A Fresh Start
Through all my years of working on WaterShapes, one of the most persistent frustrations I've encountered has had to do with the ongoing lack of access would-be watershapers have to college-level education on the subject.  And it's a frustration shared by landscape architects, many of whom have told me how rankled they are by
Riding a Wave
If you've been paying any attention to the media lately, you may have noticed that watershaping is "in" as a big-time topic for television, books, magazines, newspapers and other forms of mass communication.   Never in all my years as part of this industry can I recall a time during which the subject of beautiful custom pools, spas, fountains, ponds, streams and interactive bodies of water has won so much attention.  It seems as if our society has finally caught on to the power, beauty and excitement of the art form many of us
Cool Motifs
Watershapes of all kinds have come a long way in recent years, with elaborate, fully integrated and highly creative designs that were mostly unheard of in days gone by. For many of us, me included, exposure to "aquatic environments" (as they are now grandly known) began with the most familiar
Music of the Moment
Sometimes it's the most ordinary experiences that yield the most sublime memories - the pleasant surprise, a beautiful view, the warmth of the sun after a dip in the ocean.  For me (and I suspect I'm not alone), these experiences occur