Review by Booklist Review
Pebble mosaics of Spain's Alhambra Palace and marble tesserae floors tracing back to the Roman Empire are gathered here to provide inspiring examples of adornments that beautify space. This compilation of projects goes beyond predictable approaches to interior and exterior decoration, incorporating terra cotta shards, fragments of glazed pottery, seashells, slate, and pebbles to create textural accents. From simple plaques and trivets for beginners to projects such as a garden bench that will doubtless require some degree of expertise or innate talent, and from such objects as a planter with a striped design to the gridlike pattern of a tabletop with insets for candles, the authors present a contemporary aesthetic. Step-by-step photos and text offer explicit instructions for most projects, while illustrations showing a complex undertaking such as the bench skip over the early stages of construction. Still, this primer presents useful advice on fabricating original walkways and stepping-stones, and for personalizing objects to be appliqued with cement and stones. --Alice Joyce
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review
Mosaics are enjoying a surge of popularity among artists and landscapers, and both of these books provide ideas for outdoor projects. Outdoor Mosaic offers a selection of photos and descriptive explanations of projects in different settings done by the authors' London-based studio, Mosaic Workshop. These are mostly large, complex, professionally designed and executed works. No projects are included, but there is a chapter of technical information. Pebble Mosaics provides step-by-step projects for paths, planters, and decorative objects made from natural pebbles, shells, and shards. Many involve mortaring the mosaic to an already existing feature such as a birdbath. Outdoor Mosaic will inspire home crafters and professionals alike, while Pebble Mosaics will appeal more to beginners. Both of these books would be good additions to garden collections needing more material on mosaics. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.