Posts Tagged ‘Colors’

The Color of Water

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

By Tim Long

It has long been known we are effected by color. Our moods and emotions are altered by the application of the colors that surround us. For example artist, across a variety of media, have been using color to bring emotion to their creations since the beginning of time. Decorators use a similar understanding of color, carefully applying their knowledge in the selections of colors for various aspects to our homes. It is with the same attention to the detail of color, that a pool or spa can be enhanced, by color.

Red Stop Sign

Red Stop Sign

You need not be an artist or decorator to appreciate the influences color has in our lives. Think of our automated responses in our daily lives to the colors of red and green. These colors are part of our driving experience representing simple basic commands of movement. Red means stop and green means go. In signage, on and off the road, red represents danger such as fire and heat. It should not be thought that our responses to these colors are based on our experiences in driving and signage, but the other way around. These colors were chosen to represent these dangers because they were already part our automated responses to these colors. These danger colors, red and yellow, are part of the color spectrum we associate with warmth and heat, while other colors, such as green, are associated with coolness and relaxation.

Perhaps our reaction is fundamentally based on nature’s choice of color. The sun gives off a yellow to orange color, while fire is predominantly perceived as red or yellow. Ironically as fire becomes hotter it changes to blue, which we naturally associate with cool, but lets not confuse things. Blues and greens are easily associated with water as in the oceans and streams, while green is associated with forests and plants. Both are cool to the touch and invoke images of relaxation and comfort.

Deep color of the Blue/Green Diamond Brite Verde

Deep color of the Blue/Green Diamond Brite Verde

An artist will divide the colors into two groups, colors that are warm; red, orange and yellow, and colors that are cool; green, blue and violet. There are of course many other colors, but they all are some combination of these six primary and secondary colors.

It is important to note there are other responses, beyond a since of temperature, to colors as well. The warm colors seem to advance, meaning that they appear larger or closer than they are in reality, while the cooler colors tend to recede, as if moving away from us. This is particularly helpful when creating palates of colors for decoration purposes. It tends to manifest itself in our choices of the predominate colors and our contrasting highlight colors.

Another important characteristic of color, in terms of water, is that the color of the water often determines the ability to reflect. The darker the water the more the reflection capability. This may not seem important at first, but consider the use of mirrors in the home. Decorators have advocated using them strategically for years as they tend to make the space larger with the reflected images, sometimes doubling the enjoyment of objects being reflected. The water in a pool or spa can also achieve this same type of response, where it reflects the landscape and objects beyond. In the day light, these reflections could be of vibrant colored foliage, or even sculpture placed in the yard. At nighttime the reflection of lights and other lighted objects can be even more dramatic.

Blue-Green of the Ocean

Blue-Green of the Ocean

So when choosing colors for your backyard water-scape, be it a fountain, pool or spa, the color you choose is extremely important and should be considered with care. After all, this place is where you want to spend time, so color away!

To view a pool being transformed with an application of a colored surface, Click Here!

Click below to see the same pool having the finish applied:

It Begins With Design!

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

By Tim Long

Pool with Spa

Pool with Spa

If you are interested in building a pool, spa or water-feature one of your first consideration should be its design, what size, shape, how it will look and feel in your backyard. This involves understanding the many factors such as thefeatures you wish to include and where you want them located. It also includes knowing how much you want to spend.

This process typically starts with a designer. Most people are not accustomed to design work and need assistance in this area. Fortunately, most pool companies provide this service as part of their company’s building program. Unfortunatly,  for many companies, the designer is nothing more than a salesman, who is more interested in telling you what type of pool he can build and what you need in your yard.

A good designer, by contrast, will listen and incorporate your desires into the process. He or she will start by exploring the area to be used and by asking you many questions. Of foremost interest is how you intend to use the space. If a “designer” presents you with a design having never asked this very important question, run! If he is not interested in how you intend to use the area, he can’t tell you what you truly need. Most people have at least general ideas about the pool they want, having seen pools at their friends, relatives or even at favorite resort. These ideas may include many specific features that they have seen and appreciated in their travels. However, as trends appear and new innovations develop, their may be many wonderful possibilities, ideas that you might eagerly embrace, if the designer suggest them having first asked that one simple question.

I mentioned that a designer must listen. But I mean to suggest something more that just passive hearing. The designer must understand your wishes, respect them and incorporate them into the plans. You can’t imagine the number of times I have heard clients indicate that the designer heard their desires, and then returned with pool plans that bore no resemblance to their ideas.  That does not mean a designer will always incorporate everything into the plan. Sometimes that is not possible or even prudent. A good designer should make recommendations that sometimes may be inconsistent with the client’s wishes. This is particularly important if the client’s desires have some hidden conflict which may not immediately recognizable. At times the client’s desires will conflict with the designer personal tastes. However, a good designer knows the difference between what is a potential design conflict and simply a matter of taste. 

Further, the designer should not only be aware of current needs, but inquire as to future considerations. Knowing about intended family additions, for instance, may allow the designer to suggest additional safety devices, perhaps not needed now, but plans could be made to allow the future implementation easier. Another example is where a total plan would include not just a pool, but an outdoor kitchen as well. Though budget constraints require these projects to be spread over time, it is important to keep future planning in mind. Some future project may be less expensive if they were combined, at least in part, early in the project. For example, in the case of the desired future kitchen, it may be prudent to lay the gas line, before the pool deck is placed, even though it may not be used immediately. That would far less expensive than having to break the deck to install the gas line later.

Light On Water

Light On Water

There is a danger here that you might become side tracked. It is easy to become so focused on specific ideas and plans that you forget to consider the complete picture of your yard. A thorough design is one that looks at the entire backyard experience. You may think you are just buying a pool so the kids can play after school. But you are in reality creating an experience that is not just to be physically enjoyed, but to be absorbed both visually and emotionally. The designer should help you think in these broader terms, seeing how your pool relates to these various considerations and view your pool as it relates to the entire yard.

However a good designer, also concerned with the details, will discuss the colors and textures of the materials found on or in your pool. Each of these things will have great bearing on the experience. Some colors are warm and inviting while others are colder and more ahloff. Some materials are smooth to the touch while others are rougher, each giving a different and distinct experience.

The differing materials which will make up your pool will meet, creating joints at various sections, such as where the tile and coping meet or where the coping and deck meet. Each of these meetings or joints must be “detailed”. Details should be planned so that where the materials meet it has the proper look. These things do not happen by accident. It is in paying attention to the details that will make a simple project extrodinary or conversely make an expensive project look sloppy. Inquire of your designer about such details. If he is good, he will know or at least discuss the possibilities. You may not be a designer, but on this point, trust your instincts. The best designs are usually collaborations between a good designer and an involved client. If you don’t work well with a designer, get a new one.

The Sound of Falling Water

The Relaxing Sound of Falling Water

Sound will also be a design consideration. I have seen many waterfalls placed on pools. They were probably created at the client request. However, because the design or lack of it, the noise from the waterfall was so intense it interfered with conversation around the pool. Instead of being a relaxing sound, it was a noise that had to be eliminated. There are many waterfalls that have rarely been used after just a few months or even weeks because of the sound issue alone. Talk to your designer. The sound of water moving is very relaxing, and visually captivating, but must be planned properly. Consider this. Water is its most quiet when it is at rest, meaning at balance with gravity. At the other end of the spectrum, where water is far from rest, it makes a violent crashing sound particularly when it falls from great height or with great volume. The most relaxing sounds come from water which is almost at rest. Since the sound is always a combination of height and volume, it seems prudent that they should be considered in the design, before construction. The height is difficult to change once the pool has been completed, water volume should be adjustable with proper valving.

Don’t forget lighting, in your pool and in your yard. Paying attention to lighting can greatly enhance and extend the hours you spend outdoors. Lighting should be considered carefully. Consider getting assistance from a lighting specialist. However the designer can help you determine what elements in your yard should be illuminated for both beauty and function. When it comes to pool lights in particular, I must address one of my pet peeves. For many years the lights have been station directly below the diving board, which in many cases pointed the light directly at the house. Even now, with many, if not most, pools being built without diving boards, the lights are still positioned so that the light source is evident from inside the house. It is the goal of good lighting technique to eliminate where possible the views of the light source from the main viewing locations, which means the lights of the pool, should be point away from, and not toward the house.

One other issue should be addressed in the design phase. It is my recommendation that a soil’s analysis be performed to determine the suitability of the soil where the pool is to be located. This testing may have been performed by the builder of your home. If so, it is likely that this earlier soil’s report will sufficiently reveal the soil condition where your pool is to be located as well. There are many pool builders who do not suggest this kind of testing. However it is important. Consider that the pool, when complete is likely to hold thousand’s of gallons of water, which weighs a considerable amount. You could calculate almost 8 pounds for each gallon, not including the weight of the structure itself. In many areas of the country the soil, in it’s natural, undisturbed state, can bare the weight of this pool. However, in other areas this is not the case. Even in good areas, if the ground has been previously disturbed, and fill dirt has been used to landscape, for example, the strength bearing capacity of the soil many have been weakened. In these conditions, and in conditions where the soil does not naturally have the sufficient bearing capacity, extra measures must be performed, to ensure the integrity of the new structure. In some cases, the engineers will order piers to reach down to good solid soil below. In other cases, over excavation is required to remove “bad” soil, then good soil is brought on site and compacted into place. Whatever measures are required, it is the soil test that will allow the proper steps to be taken. It may cost more to have the test completed, and if necessary, the extra steps that are a result of the test will certainly cost more. Yet the cost of repairing a pool that is no longer level far outweigh any initial costs! A good designer and builder will confirm this information and highly recommend this course of action.

In summary, find a good designer, one that asks many good questions, incorporates your ideas, pays attention to all the details including, but not limited to color, textures, materials choices, sounds, lights even soil conditions. Be ready to ask many questions of the designer, be involved, help him make the choices that best suit all your needs. Enjoy the process. But most importantly remember that he is not just designing your pool, he is designing an experience!

Read the next article in the series “City Permits & Utilities“.