Stonescaping
Idea Book
See How
Stonework Designs Can Add Graceful Contours and Distinctive Touches
To Your Landscape
By Andrew Wormer
Expert Advice on
Using Stonework To Add Artful Organization to Your Outdoor Spaces
There's nothing quite as functional -- or as
beautiful -- as nature's own building blocks. Often shaped and
weathered by natural forces, each stone has its own unique look and
feel.
Used as elements in a carefully planned
landscape design, stonework can add an artful organization to your
outdoor spaces. Creating sturdy walls, private patios, graceful
gardens, and offering unlimited opportunities for your imagination
to soar -- with features like ponds, streams and waterfalls that can
transform your property into a sylvan sanctuary.
From cover to cover, this delightful book
offers hundreds of practical design ideas illustrated with colorful
photographs and drawings, all divided into six sections.
Paths and steps -- Find out how to
build a rustic cobblestone walkway from rabble rock excavated during
construction or a formal entry out of volcanic rock cut into
bricklike pavers with a brilliant purple color.
Terraces, patios and garden spaces --
Learn how to extend your living space by creating a flagstone patio
for outdoor dining, a scenic retreat punctuated with irregular
stones and natural plantings, or a poolside enclave with a
fieldstone surface and matching retaining walls.
Walls -- Discover creative ways to
design natural boundaries that blend with your landscape, from
simple dry stone walls to a more delicate presence with native
fieldstone held together with mortar.
Pools, ponds and fountains -- See how
stone can give water its shape and form with the stone-like
appearance of stamped concrete surrounding your pool or
natural-looking ponds, streams and waterfalls you can design and
build yourself.
Finishing touches -- Find out how to
surround your home with artful flourishes like the eye-catching
textures of a garden border featuring a geometric collage of
salvaged brick and variously flat stones in a variety of shapes and
colors.
When you flip through this popular idea book,
you'll be amazed at all the ways you can enhance your property with
stonescaping designs. Whatever your budget or locale, it will
inspire you to get creative with nature's most versatile building
material.
Introduction:
Back in the 1970's, it was fashionable to
spend some time "finding oneself" after graduating from college. So,
not long after pocketing my newly minted bachelor's degree in
English, I joined a landscaping crew instead of pursuing a more
traditional career. While most of our duties seemed to revolve
around pushing lawnmowers, we occasionally worked on more
interesting projects, including a few that involved the use of
stone. At the time, the material seemed to require a lot more labor
than my 21-year-old mind thought it was worth, particularly on those
very hot days when a truckload or more would show up on our job
site, or when the client seemed overly particular about just how the
stone should be placed.
Over the years, I've developed a keener
appreciation for stone and the various roles that it can play in the
landscape. Though carpentry has become my trade, and journalism my
profession, stone has come to play a central role in my life. In
Vermont, where I live, old stone walls abound, and quarries continue
to produce slate, granite, and marble, just as they have for over
two hundred years. The lakes my family swims in are notable for
their rocky outcroppings and shale and cobble shorelines; a sandy
beach is a rarity here. We fish from beautiful, boulder-strewn
streams, hike on paths and ski on slopes that often seem to be
carved from stone. Even our house pays homage to stone: its
foundation is built directly onto bedrock. Walk down into our
basement and you'll step onto the smooth ledge outcropping that
passes directly beneath our home.
Besides underpinning our dwelling, granite
ledges surround it. With them, we've created informal, low stone
walls and borders for our gardens. From time to time, I walk out
into the woods that surround our home with my pry bar and unearth
new candidates, ensuring that our borders continue to slowly grow.
We are, quite literally, surrounded by stone.
But we're ready to go a step further too. We
have some informal flagstone paths that need attention, a gravel
driveway that we'd like to redo, and a spot on our property that
needs a proper retaining wall. And wed like to add on a new outdoor
room, a place where we can gather and comfortably enjoy those balmy
Vermont summer evenings.
Maybe you're like me, looking for practical
solutions to particular landscaping problems. Or maybe you've seen a
stunning wall or walkway somewhere that you think would look great
at your home. Maybe you're putting in a swimming pool, and would
like to make it look like a more natural part of your landscape. Or
maybe your budget is more limited, but you still love the look and
sound of water moving over rocks. The right kind of stone will help
you achieve your goals; all you need are some ideas to help you
figure out how you'll use it.
That's where this book comes in. Here you'll
be presented with a range of practical and inspiring ideas for using
stone in your landscape. Along with tried and true designs for
inviting walkways and beautiful walls, you'll see new ways of using
stone in gardens and patio spaces. You'll discover ideas for
creating graceful streams, waterfalls, or even simple fountains that
will help transform your backyard into a private retreat. And you'll
find a wide range of outdoor living spaces that family and friends
can enjoy for years to come. As the examples in the book will
demonstrate, there is a world of stone to explore; use this book to
help get you started on the right path.
Table of Contents:
Chapter 1: Paths and Steps
Paths
Steps
Chapter 2: Terraces, Patios and Garden Spaces
Sitting Places
Dining Places
Outdoor Rooms
Garden Paths and Floors
Poolside Spaces
Chapter 3: Walls
Dry Stone Walls
Mortared Walls
Chapter 4: Benches, Landscaping Features & Sculpture
Benches
Landscaping Features
Sculpture
Chapter 5: Pools, Ponds and Fountains
Pools
Ponds
Streams and Waterfalls
Water Basins and Fountains
Chapter 6: Finishing Touches
Entryways
Driveways and Transitions
Borders
Soft-cover, 9-3/16 x 10-7/8 in.,
144 pages, with
color
photos and drawings
Published 2005
ISBN 978-1-56158-763-6
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