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  • Stone-textured overlay transforms Maine ski resort
  • The time has come for this colorful concrete Aztec calendar
  • Molding an ergonomic concrete chair in about 24 hours
  • Arizona artist offers colorful concrete clocks
  • Florida concrete waterscape dominated by 40-foot waterfall
  • Stylish concrete block bench demonstrates the value of workshops
  • Yes, it's a dog with a trowel
  • Design competition for architectural and decorative concrete announced
  • Decorative concrete bigwigs at the 2012 Concrete Decor Show put on the hat and boa
  • Versatile Building Products names 2011 Photo of the Year winners
  • Fiery, overflowing concrete martini glass is the toast of Las Vegas
  • Bob Harris of the Decorative Concrete Institute to deliver keynote at 2012 Concrete Decor Show
  • First images of finished art at SAY Si, San Antonio
  • TV show features concrete that looks like wood
  • Kansas City concrete trade group announces decorative concrete award-winners
  • New networking group for carvers and theme builders announces contest
  • Explosions of color top Maui counters
  • Oregon store sports glossy golden O thanks to decorative overlay
  • Registration is OPEN for the 2012 Concrete Decor Show!
  • Mural at the top of the mountain
  • Wife of Crown Polymers executive passes away
  • Print-reading class and polishing demo in Kansas
  • Brush exchange at Sherwin-Williams stores
  • Decorative concrete impresses franchisees of expanding bakery chain
  • A fantastic playbridge in Winnipeg
  • Concrete Decor Show 2012: Check us out!
  • San Diego University building transformed by Westcoat Fast Stain dye system
  • Concrete Play Day medical benefit in Seattle raises money, spirits
  • Gaye Goodman discusses Roy Snowball: A collaboration of opposites
  • Concrete Play Day in Seattle: June 24-25, 2011
  • L.M. Scofield launches 2011 decorative concrete contest
  • Great steps and more in Great Falls
  • A river of water-based stain at a museum in Montana
  • Cheng Concrete reveals 2011 Circle of Distinction Design Challenge winners
  • Images from 2011 Concrete Decor Show & Spring Training
  • Metallic red-gray tile pattern adds pizazz to garage
  • "Concrete Nation" TV show covers Concrete Decor Show
  • Polished concrete benches create patterns at Rhode Island School of Design
  • American Idol winner Ruben Studdard to perform at Concrete Decor Show
  • Power tools used to carve concrete mural at trade-show booth
  • L.M. Scofield announces Decorative Concrete Award Winners
  • Wood, concrete and water: A decorative concrete shower stall
  • The Nashville Dinner Theatre makeover on TV, online
  • Concrete artist takes her work online
  • Technical presentations from the Nashville design charrette
  • Concrete Countertop Design Competition: Embedded gears with faux fluid
  • Concrete Countertop Design Competition: A vanity lit from within
  • Concrete Countertop Design Competition: Water flowing down the stairs
  • Concrete Countertop Design Competition: Concrete kitchen, granite island
  • Concrete Countertop Design Competition: Cast-in-place that looks precast
StainedConcrete and More
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Bob Harris provides contractors with creativity through the transition of gray concrete to pieces of art.

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Join Fu-Tung Cheng in this step-by-step instructional guide for creating beautiful and functional concrete countertops.


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Gaye Goodman discusses Roy Snowball: A collaboration of opposites

An appreciation of Roy Snowball’s concrete stain art, written by artisan Gaye Goodman. The first three works in this piece are by Roy Snowball. The last four are by Snowball and Goodman.


I met Roy Snowball, a kiwi from New Zealand, about seven years ago when he attended one of my acid staining seminars in New Mexico. I got into the business of staining as a fine arts painter who needed to make money doing something more salable than large, abstract oil paintings. To my delight I found that I could get paid to do large abstractions on people’s floors. In mixing and overlapping colors across the floor, I was opening up a new niche in the staining business, at a time when most stainers were working with one color only and staying within the lines of a geometric design.

Roy was entering the business from the other side — concrete placement. He had been pouring driveways, pool borders and interior floors for 30 years and his body was starting to protest loudly. He already had one torn rotator cuff from pounding and stamping and was working on his second.
Roy wanted to learn decorative staining in order to have a physically easier way to make a living. However, there was no one selling acid stains in New Zealand, so his first step was to manufacture his own stains and overlayment materials. He had always had a keen interest in chemistry, and he soon realized that he could push his stains into new colors and reactions with each other.

 

"Energy is Joy", by Roy Snowball

While I was discovering new combinations and dilutions using manufactured stains by several companies, Roy was making greater breakthroughs, because he understood the periodic table of elements and how an oxidizing agent could be added to a color to cause electrons to jump to a higher energy state, which could permanently change the color.

 

"Spotted Gecko", by Roy Snowball

I traveled to New Zealand several times to tour that amazing country and also to collaborate with Roy in his studio. We found great synergy as we worked together on sample boards. Roy tended to pile one experiment on top of another and never took notes or photos along the way. He would often lose track of what he had done, which made certain effects difficult to replicate.

 

"Round Blue Tabletop", by Roy Snowball

Roy never could explain quite how he got the dark blue on this round table, which was my favorite.

 

"Alfalfa Oval Table", by Roy Snowball and Gaye Goodman

I insisted on being more methodical and would remove my gloves and scribble notes or take progress shots as we worked on four or five microtopped concrete backer boards at a time.In the frenzy of creativity, however, I also lost track of some important stages. We got great alfalfa prints the first time we tried using Roy’s gold stain, but couldn’t get such clarity on subsequent efforts. We often had our best luck when playing with a nonchalant attitude.

 

"Southwestern Petroglyphs", by Roy Snowball and Gaye Goodman

I introduced Roy to the use of faux “petrogyphs” made by etching away stain through a layer of felt. Then Roy showed me how complexity could be increased by staining, then applying a thin veil of microtopping and staining over that area with another color. This could lead to some wonderful misty imagery.

 

"Autumn Vista" (detail), by Roy Snowball and Gaye Goodman

On our “Autumn Vista” piece (shown above and below) we experimented with leaves embossed into the wet microtopping, and we used liquid latex rubber as a resist to protect the leaves before spraying the area around them with an oxidizer (which is how we got the black accents). We also used a surfactant and some red dye on this board, which is about 30 inches by 40 inches.

 

"Autumn Vista", by Roy Snowball and Gaye Goodman

Roy’s most recent efforts have been aimed at finding chemicals that are inexpensive and can make stain colors which do not yet exist, such as purple and red. He has made some progress with this, but we’re not going to give away all our secrets just yet.





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