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What's In Your Decorative Toolbox?
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TOM
RALSTON CONCRETE
Santa Cuz, Calif.
www.tomralstonconcrete.com |
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Tom Ralston of Tom Ralston Concrete in Santa Cruz, Calif.,
is a third generation concrete contractor, getting his
first introduction to the business as a young boy in 1964.
Ralston wasn't sure about making concrete his life's work
until he took on his first decorative project in 1989;
since then he has shaped a company that performs all types
of decorative concrete work, structural concrete and masonry.
Ralston now employs 36 people and does work mainly in
a 50-mile radius in the San Francisco and Monterey bay
areas Other projects, demonstrations and consulting have
taken him and his company to Italy, Hawaii, Newyork, Atlanta,
Las Vegas and most recently Panama.
| TOM'S
TOOLBOX INCLUDES: |
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Bull float
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Pool trowls
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9-cu.-ft.mixer
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Grinders with 4-in. diamond blades
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Dremel tools
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Hand made edgers and pointer trowels
for very tight spots
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Sheet rock taping tools |
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Backpack sprayers
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Airless sprayers and air brushes
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Tuck pointers, rakers and other implements
used in brickwork
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Various sized chisels and rat tails
to carve lines
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Axes to carve in random lines
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Hand polishers with diamond pads |
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Ralston's list of often-used products includes acid
stains, acrylic stains, colloidal dyes, alcohol dyes,
wood dyes, silicon carbide grit, color hardeners and
even shoe polish. He often keeps seashells, aquarium
sand and beach glass handy for certain projects such
as decorative floors and countertops, and uses copper
and brass imbeds for drain boards and trivets on countertop
jobs.
When it comes to equipment, Ralston utilizes a few
unique items that allow him to achieve the one-of a-kind
finishes his customers want. By pressing wrinkled plastic
on a wet acid stain floor, Ralston can create the distinctive
look of batik, an ancient textile
dying technique. And for a recent project, Ralston turned
to a tool more traditionally used in the kitchen. "I
just finished a job in Panama on which I used a turkey
baster to apply droplets of retardant or) the floor,
so when the floor was washed the retardant created crater-like
pockets to replicate seaside shelves along the coastline.
It is a very cool treatment;' Ralston says.
One of Ralston's favorite decorative tools is an ordinary
small spray bottle. He fills multiple spray bottles
with different colors of stain and uses them to apply
and blend colors on a project. "The reason the
spray bottles work so well for acid staining is they
produce a very natural variegated finish similar to
colorations you might seen in a natural hardscape Ralston
explains. "We always spray wet on wet, which leaves
a randomly blended coloration that you cannot easily
get any other way. This technique is especially important
when using two or more colors together."
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