I walk the terrain. I hand-pick every stone. I cut the base so it stands on its own. Then I send it to someone who wants something real in their space.
Most garden stones are poured concrete or imported bulk. Most decorative stones are interchangeable, forgettable, picked by weight in a warehouse. They have no story. They have no presence.
The DifferenceA Stonewell sculpture is different. I find each stone in the field — its shape, its grain, its character already present. Then I shape the base so it can stand. The stone becomes an object with intention. Something that belongs in a specific place.
Standing stones for the garden. Weathered, weighted, meant to weather further. Statement pieces that ground a landscape — not decorate it.
Smaller specimens for workspaces and bedside tables. A stone to look at when you're thinking. Something solid on your desk when everything else is digital.
Stones for the room where you breathe. Single pieces, selected for stillness. Some combined with raw crystals for energy work. Each one chosen, not manufactured.
"The difference between a rock and a sculpture is the same as the difference between a rock in a field and a rock in your hand. Someone had to see it."
Every Stonewell piece starts as a found object. I walk creeks, hillsides, and backcountry areas — places where stones have been shaped by water, time, and weather. I look for the ones that already look like something. Then I cut the base flat so they can stand upright and become what they were waiting to be.
This isn't mass production. It's selection. It's me, looking at hundreds of stones, finding the ten that deserve to be on someone's desk or in their garden or beside their meditation cushion.
Stonewell sculptures are for people who notice the difference between something made and something found.