Monolith water features

There are many types of natural stone water features – pebble stacks, slate pyramids, spheres and boulders to name a few, but my personal favorite is Monoliths. A monolith is essentially a large and long piece stone sawn at one end to produce a flat base so it can then sit in an upright position. It is then drilled from top to bottom in order to make a passage for water to be pumped from underneath the piece to gush out at the top of the piece and cover the stone in water.

There are some variations on this with the most popular being a circle, shape or letterbox size rectangle cut from the face of the piece for water to cascade from this area.

Monoliths are usually available in Granite, Limestone and Sandstone but my favorite is always Slate. Slate works brilliantly as a water feature as the water running over the stone really enhances the depth of its color and character. If your in the UK and looking for a Slate Monolith I would recommend Wadsworth Design. They manufacture monoliths from Welsh green, plum and purple slate and offer an excellent service sending images to their clients for them to choose which piece they would like to order or you can even visit them to select your monolith in person.

Wadsworth Design

slate mono green slate mono plum

 

Advantages of Stone Veneer

What is Stone veneer? Stone and slate veneer is 100% natural stone. Its essentially an ultra thin, light and flexible stone tile. The technology and manufacturing process for this was created in Germany and the top layer of the veneer tile is natural stone backed with polyester resin to a fiberglass or cotton backing.

The advantages to using this format of natural stone are great, less wastage, little to no cracking and damage whilst handling the materials are no chipped edges and corners.

The standard tile size is large and with larger sheets available it is possible to clad furniture, vanity tops, kitchen units, doors etc to provide a natural stone finish in areas where previously this hasn’t been viable or practical.

Also the material is flexible so it can be applied directly to circular columns and radius corners without the need for a joint.

It is much easier to install in comparison to traditional stone tiles. It can be fixed by a carpenter, decorator, mason or DIY enthusiast with general woodworking tools and adhesives, no specialist stone masonry tools are required.

There’s a fantastic range of colours, for more info and prices you can visit – Lite Stone

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