We've had great luck with Versetta stone. Used it on our last 8 houses. Saves use from waiting on a specialty trade to come in and mortar the real stone on. Only downside is, there are limited colors currently.
I installed "faux" stone for many years. Here is a trick that will set you apart from other installers...get yourself a couple cans of flat "camo" colored spray paint (like a tan, grey, olive green) depending on the color stone you are working with and use the paints to touch up any cut end or edge that is visible. Having these cans of paint in your bag of tricks will improve the look of your work, especially interior work that will be looked at closely for years. Keep up the great work, I enjoyed this vid very much!
I wanna see how you return this from the corner of a house to the next side of the house, or is this just a front facial? What he’s working on has different siding on the return.
Do the same thing. Thought I was the only guy. lol Im not ready to spend the $ on the saw he uses and am interested to hear what others are using. Ive got a very nice tile saw but reluctant to take it out on a siding job
@@analynelliott577 I always used a 4 inch Dewalt angle grinder with diamond blades. The saw costs about 90 bucks and the blades are fairly cheap and last for a long time. The diamond blades cut "faux" stones like butter.
This is a good book. Does provide a step by step introduction to how to build things ruclips.net/user/postUgkxhgbP-6hUnXu_QRaoHgLztgsI0YF3HqR0 , also does offer some steps. Includes pictures to give you ideas for layouts and such. If you are looking for a guide, this is not exactly what you want. But if you are trying to familiarize yourself with the way that pole barn building and other out buildings, are made, then this will work just as you need it to. A few things in this book are a barn (of course), detached garage, storage building, and coops.
Excellent demonstration/tutorial on Versetta Stone repair, installation, and how it works. Just one small but maybe not as small as you think issue. I know you are a serious proponent of the proper issue and wear of PPE. I see that you are taking measures to avoid/mitigate silica dust inhalation but even a small amount of silica dust inhalation can be deadly serious. Respirators are a pain in the neck sometimes but they ARE entirely worth the hassle. 10 or 20 years from now, you and your crew will be thanking yourself for it. Great video! Learned a LOT! Looking forward to your next video. Sure wish your crew covered Tennessee.
I have never seen this product before. I crapped my pants when he removed the top layer, and when he started unscrewing the other layers, I was sold on the product! I like this look and want to dress up my old house with this for curb appeal! I may even use some of it in creative landscaping and fencing! Amazing!
Installed a small amount of this. I like it. Recent reports have shown the traditional "lick and stick" is holding moisture and rotting the substrate. Versetta stone leaves an air gap, to aid in drying.
I love how you describe why you do stuff and your attention to detail helps me build stuff properly and take pride in my work like you do. Thanks partner!
It would definitely be cool to see how it is made, but also some long term installs to indicate how well it stands up to the elements in various parts of the country.
Been using this product for several years now, really like working with it, and of all the different brands I've used over the last 20+ yrs this one looks the best by far.
I'm finishing my garage. I used Coronado stone, which does require glue up and grout/masonry work. I also installed a 15000 BTU minisplit heatpump head in the garage, and insulated the garage walls to R-23...the apartment over the garage is nearly R-60 at the roofline. That said, I am getting ready to finish, and am looking at epoxy floor finishes, I am also just about set on the New Age garage cabinets that are shown in this video as well. Good to see an interior that is finished the direction I am heading with my project.
I would love to see this manufactured. I'm not a contractor, but a fairly skilled home owner that also has a rental. This looks like it could very reasonably be installed by the end user. I love the fact that it is screwed into place and doesn't require any mortar.
Hey Kyle I do masonry up in Wisconsin and we use a wet tile saw on any dry stack panels instead of our IQ saw. It has less chip out and you can still rip the panels down a little more accurately than a German saw. Also the tile saw keeps the dust down on rips. We mostly only do dry stack panels on fireplaces indoors and we personally have never used the Versetta products but they seem like a good alternative.
Looks good Kyle. Love your channel. Love Versetta stone. Did a large project about 4 years ago that looked exactly like this front. We bought an old bowling alley building and converted it to 7 condo units. The only difference to the look compared to yours was we used horizontal Hardy board to finish the exterior above the flashing of the the Versetta !!
Yes absolutely! I’d love to see how all aspects of your materials are made. Brackets, lumber, rafters, steel, stone. Could be a really cool series I agree.
Between you and Matt Risinger, I think you joining in the "How its made" would be phenomenal. Matt provides many of the top tier products which are often outside the price range for the areas I work. But these products you use are bang on and I would love to see the factory tours! Hopefully these folks are excited to involve you.
Versetta stone teached me good at speaking right. It gived me a solid rock in life stuff. On the real. Your videos are a huge inspiration to me. Thanks for doing you.
I've watched a good 2 years worth of your videos now and both your tool and product selections are wonderful. It'd be super awesome if you had a resource/listing for what your materials are called, what they look like, and where they can typically be found. Thank you RR team!
Kyle, as a fellow craftsman, it would be a real pleasure to work with you on a job. Preferably an historic house renovation. Your level of craftsmanship is rare these days and I, for one, thoroughly enjoy watching you, as a 21st Century Carpenter, create these high quality videos, which showcase high quality results in your projects. Your attention to detail is par excellence. Keep up the great work. You’re really nailing it! 😉😁 (Yes, I had to!) P.S. you should call out the sloppy work of the paving company to give others a heads-up about their shoddy work. There is no excuse for over-spray on the stone other than pure laziness. Companies that operate to such inadequate standards need to be recognized for their failure to properly care for the customer’s property.
You could always try a wet tile saw cutter, like the ones from DeWalt and Ridgid. They can easily cut natural stone (marble, granite, etc.), bricks (although it will shorten the lifespan of the blade) and glass (using a diamond blade)! The overspray of water, from the pump meant to cool the blade, will keep whatever you're cutting moist, keeping dust to a minimum.
On the dry cut saw your helper can use shop vac to pickup most of the dust as you are cutting, or get a bottle of water on blade unless you don't want water on your saw.
I've ordered three shipments of this to Oregon, twice arriving with every single panel broken in half of severely scuffed. It is a very soft concrete mix. Remember how far its going to be shipped and how fragile it is if you're not in Illinois. Great vids Kyle and team, appreciate the video quality and editing.
Would love to see how the stone is made, also would like to see how your metal is made for your buildings. Love your channel and all the tips and tricks you offer.
Yes I would like to see how they are made. We too have a shop going up this summer and are looking for some sort of stone look in front of our building.
James here good to see someone take pride in their work I'm a finish carpenter so i appreciate your attention to detail i bought a house in Clyde Texas and this is something I'm extremely interested in this look along with the metal siding nice job
I used this product. Short learning curve, easy install. Used it for exposed foundation and porch columns with copper corners that worked flawlessly. Best of all it looks Killer.
Beautiful pole building! Personally, I would silicone just about every joint. Maybe not the horizontal if it's designed to drain towards the face of the stone and not back wash towards the building, but for damn sure, the vertical seems. I realize there's house wrap and felt behind it, but I don't believe any siding should rely on an underlayment. The siding should do it's job of keeping rain away from the structure. Keep in mind those few days a year when it rains sideways for hours and hours! Also the homeowner that likes to use a garden house to clean their building. Heaven forbid a pressure washer, lol. I built plenty of pole buildings many years ago, then moved on to stick building and eventually hung up the tool belt for railroading. Keep up the great work! I would definitely hire a fella like you to build my building.
a factory tour would be very interesting. I'm planning to replace the siding on the front of my house with a product like that. I like the coloration a lot. Blows my mind that they are hand painted. That detail might just seal the deal. Great video content, by the way.
Definitely would be interested - from everything from lumber mills to cement manufacturing plants to concrete batch plants to quarries. People don't get to see how 'stuff is made'.
I'm pretty sure, with a nice widescreen tv and beer fridge, I'd be happy living in there! Great job and I'll be incorporating the Versetta Stone and metal siding into my garage remodel!!
At around 15min mark you say you’d like to know a better way.... how about laying out your height of siding/trim to correspond with a full row of stone? Love the cordless mini quickcut though!
I would absolutely love to see how the versetta stone is made, among any other company you use. You ask very good questions during the time you are talking to a manufacture.
That Milwaukee cutter has built in system for attaching a water hose to it for dust suppression. Versetta Stone is nice and I would also love to see it been made. Cheers for the up load good quality video as always
I have never seen this product before but this is awesome. The closet supplier i have found so far with a quick search is over 100 miles away. I would love to have this product as an option in my business. See how this is manufactured would be awesome
I'm about to install this on a house I'm building now thanks for the info.. Also I've been wearing a belt for 27 years and admire the set up of yours and you helpers. Gonna retire mine in 3 more years.. getting worn out lol
Local supplier had a rep from versetti stone give a demonstration. The rep said to nail on mesh and glue the top course. Another contractor mentioned that he drills two holes and uses trim head screws to secure the top course. Multiple ways to skin a catfish.
It’s very easy to install, I did it for the first time and it was one of the easiest jobs I’ve ever done. Rent a decent watersaw, start off level, be sure there’s no debris where they lock together and have a ball. There’s nothing to it, it is pricy, but it’s awesome!
I build in Michigan and this product is great considering we only have one week of "summer" and or favorable Temps to install stone. And also having a challenge of finding masonry subcontractors to do the work. So I choose to do it myself with this product.
I like how he says that it's virtually impossible to put similar Stones next to each other because of the lineal feet that is capable before it repeats but then he happens to put two matching stones right on top of each other.
“80 sq’ with no repeats” First 2 pieces placed look almost identical lol 😂 Looks amazing regardless and definitely a product I’ll be using in the future
Thanks for showing this stuff. My wife and I have fiber cement and the bottom pieces are cracking and breaking in some spots. We are wanting to use something like this and install it ourselves. We just priced it and it will cost over $5,000! Definitely not cheap. I can’t imagine how much real stone would cost to have installed.
Hey guys ! Love your work! Really enjoy watching , but most importantly learning from you guys. But I would be curious to know what brand tool belt you use and explain your set up. Thanks.! Keep up the good work. Also thanks for keeping the language clean and professional. I watch these videos with my 5 year old son so I appreciate that as well. God Bless!
Man, I am about to install this versetta stone tomorrow. I was looking on internet for some guidance on that, and than boom 💥, you show up. I am a big fan of you on Instagram, and actually, I saw this product on one of yours stores. What I am trying to say is: thank you man, I learned a lot today. Ps. Sorry about my inglês, I am a Brazilian, and I don't know much English yet. I am learning a little be of everything. Tkx bro
“BEST looking” should be hyphenated in your video title. With the way you have the title written now, you are talking about something called looking faux stone and describing this type of it as the best.
Versetta Stone is a great cost effective way to enhance the look of your building very simply.
Great video on this product
What is the price per square foot?
We've had great luck with Versetta stone. Used it on our last 8 houses. Saves use from waiting on a specialty trade to come in and mortar the real stone on. Only downside is, there are limited colors currently.
@@skliros9235 He said $12.50 per sq ft in the video, I believe
24 square feet at Home Depot is like 360 before tax here in New York
I installed "faux" stone for many years. Here is a trick that will set you apart from other installers...get yourself a couple cans of flat "camo" colored spray paint (like a tan, grey, olive green) depending on the color stone you are working with and use the paints to touch up any cut end or edge that is visible. Having these cans of paint in your bag of tricks will improve the look of your work, especially interior work that will be looked at closely for years. Keep up the great work, I enjoyed this vid very much!
That's cheating!
Tee hee.
I used to use that textured "stone" paint too on granite and similar stone.
I wanna see how you return this from the corner of a house to the next side of the house, or is this just a front facial? What he’s working on has different siding on the return.
Do the same thing. Thought I was the only guy. lol Im not ready to spend the $ on the saw he uses and am interested to hear what others are using. Ive got a very nice tile saw but reluctant to take it out on a siding job
Uhm this is my wifes utube subscription lol I own Alaska Homes and Interiors she has a diner.
@@analynelliott577 I always used a 4 inch Dewalt angle grinder with diamond blades. The saw costs about 90 bucks and the blades are fairly cheap and last for a long time. The diamond blades cut "faux" stones like butter.
This is a good book. Does provide a step by step introduction to how to build things ruclips.net/user/postUgkxhgbP-6hUnXu_QRaoHgLztgsI0YF3HqR0 , also does offer some steps. Includes pictures to give you ideas for layouts and such. If you are looking for a guide, this is not exactly what you want. But if you are trying to familiarize yourself with the way that pole barn building and other out buildings, are made, then this will work just as you need it to. A few things in this book are a barn (of course), detached garage, storage building, and coops.
Excellent demonstration/tutorial on Versetta Stone repair, installation, and how it works. Just one small but maybe not as small as you think issue. I know you are a serious proponent of the proper issue and wear of PPE. I see that you are taking measures to avoid/mitigate silica dust inhalation but even a small amount of silica dust inhalation can be deadly serious. Respirators are a pain in the neck sometimes but they ARE entirely worth the hassle. 10 or 20 years from now, you and your crew will be thanking yourself for it. Great video! Learned a LOT! Looking forward to your next video. Sure wish your crew covered Tennessee.
I'm a installer in Tucson. This is beyond hard core doing this in the winter. Tough as nails glad to see this
I have never seen this product before. I crapped my pants when he removed the top layer, and when he started unscrewing the other layers, I was sold on the product! I like this look and want to dress up my old house with this for curb appeal! I may even use some of it in creative landscaping and fencing! Amazing!
Installed a small amount of this. I like it. Recent reports have shown the traditional "lick and stick" is holding moisture and rotting the substrate. Versetta stone leaves an air gap, to aid in drying.
I love how you describe why you do stuff and your attention to detail helps me build stuff properly and take pride in my work like you do. Thanks partner!
It would definitely be cool to see how it is made, but also some long term installs to indicate how well it stands up to the elements in various parts of the country.
Been using this product for several years now, really like working with it, and of all the different brands I've used over the last 20+ yrs this one looks the best by far.
What's the life of this type of product?
I'm finishing my garage. I used Coronado stone, which does require glue up and grout/masonry work. I also installed a 15000 BTU minisplit heatpump head in the garage, and insulated the garage walls to R-23...the apartment over the garage is nearly R-60 at the roofline.
That said, I am getting ready to finish, and am looking at epoxy floor finishes, I am also just about set on the New Age garage cabinets that are shown in this video as well. Good to see an interior that is finished the direction I am heading with my project.
I'd love to see how the versetta stone is made.
Philip Ruhland it’s just concrete poured into moulds
I’d like to see the hand painting of each concrete moulded stone.
Philip Ruhland hey do you know what those boots are called
Philip Ruhland and what kinda pants are those
You won't be able to see as is made in Taiwan and is a sweat shop where these Artisans get paid 10 cents a day
I've never done any building stuff I my life but watching this stuff is so fascinating, I think I may try to go out and learn some stuff
I would love to see this manufactured. I'm not a contractor, but a fairly skilled home owner that also has a rental. This looks like it could very reasonably be installed by the end user. I love the fact that it is screwed into place and doesn't require any mortar.
We have installed a fair amount of this. I like it. I feel it is much better, in the long run, than lick and stick.
Hey Kyle I do masonry up in Wisconsin and we use a wet tile saw on any dry stack panels instead of our IQ saw. It has less chip out and you can still rip the panels down a little more accurately than a German saw. Also the tile saw keeps the dust down on rips. We mostly only do dry stack panels on fireplaces indoors and we personally have never used the Versetta products but they seem like a good alternative.
My husband and I retired, now we are learning to build, because of you. Thank you
Are you seriously serious that's a great idea
Looks good Kyle. Love your channel. Love Versetta stone. Did a large project about 4 years ago that looked exactly like this front. We bought an old bowling alley building and converted it to 7 condo units. The only difference to the look compared to yours was we used horizontal Hardy board to finish the exterior above the flashing of the the Versetta !!
We always cut with a skill saw and a diamond cut blade. Or a grinder with a diamond cut blade. Great stone. Love the black they got. Nice work guys
Yes absolutely! I’d love to see how all aspects of your materials are made. Brackets, lumber, rafters, steel, stone. Could be a really cool series I agree.
Best panelized stone veneer I have seen... way more seamless look than the other options I have seen in the field.
Between you and Matt Risinger, I think you joining in the "How its made" would be phenomenal. Matt provides many of the top tier products which are often outside the price range for the areas I work. But these products you use are bang on and I would love to see the factory tours!
Hopefully these folks are excited to involve you.
I think we can make
It work
There is something very satisfying about seeing tools and products that just work.
Absolutely would love to see how that stuff is made. Love the look of it. Great product.
Versetta stone teached me good at speaking right. It gived me a solid rock in life stuff. On the real. Your videos are a huge inspiration to me. Thanks for doing you.
I would love to keep watching a new series of yours on “HOW ITS MADE.” I really like watching your install magic. Thank you!
Thanks for showing the inside finish. The white walls and ceiling really brighten the place up. Thanks again.
Nice concise to the point video full of great information. Super excellent, thanks!
I been using a stihl 420 saw for all the cuttin. Works great. Was just on here looking at the different types of stone.
I've watched a good 2 years worth of your videos now and both your tool and product selections are wonderful. It'd be super awesome if you had a resource/listing for what your materials are called, what they look like, and where they can typically be found. Thank you RR team!
Oh hell yes, seeing how it is made would be amazing. Do it for all the major products you use, people will love it and it will be good for everyone.
I remember when u guys built this originally...cool to see it finished on the inside...I also like the exposed conduit very easy to add on to
Kyle, as a fellow craftsman, it would be a real pleasure to work with you on a job. Preferably an historic house renovation.
Your level of craftsmanship is rare these days and I, for one, thoroughly enjoy watching you, as a 21st Century Carpenter, create these high quality videos, which showcase high quality results in your projects. Your attention to detail is par excellence.
Keep up the great work. You’re really nailing it! 😉😁 (Yes, I had to!)
P.S. you should call out the sloppy work of the paving company to give others a heads-up about their shoddy work. There is no excuse for over-spray on the stone other than pure laziness. Companies that operate to such inadequate standards need to be recognized for their failure to properly care for the customer’s property.
Yes would love to see how that product is made. I’m very interested in putting this on my house when I reside it
This guy's a great worker nothing was wrong with that felt paper and still replace it with a new one that's great quality work.
You could always try a wet tile saw cutter, like the ones from DeWalt and Ridgid. They can easily cut natural stone (marble, granite, etc.), bricks (although it will shorten the lifespan of the blade) and glass (using a diamond blade)! The overspray of water, from the pump meant to cool the blade, will keep whatever you're cutting moist, keeping dust to a minimum.
On the dry cut saw your helper can use shop vac to pickup most of the dust as you are cutting, or get a bottle of water on blade unless you don't want water on your saw.
I've ordered three shipments of this to Oregon, twice arriving with every single panel broken in half of severely scuffed. It is a very soft concrete mix. Remember how far its going to be shipped and how fragile it is if you're not in Illinois. Great vids Kyle and team, appreciate the video quality and editing.
Yes please do try and get the factory to provide us a video tour of their product. Thanks for showing us this.
yes definately would like to see how things like this are made.
I would like to say thank you for showing me the Versetta stone by boral this will work for me.and you made it look easy.
Would love to see how the stone is made, also would like to see how your metal is made for your buildings. Love your channel and all the tips and tricks you offer.
Learn new things on every video, keep up the great work. This garage is something I dream of.
Yes I would like to see how they are made. We too have a shop going up this summer and are looking for some sort of stone look in front of our building.
James here good to see someone take pride in their work I'm a finish carpenter so i appreciate your attention to detail i bought a house in Clyde Texas and this is something I'm extremely interested in this look along with the metal siding nice job
Would be cool to see how its made, thanks for the vid !
Thanks stan
Buy a real veneer stone siding, then make mold from it with fiber glass, pour concrete on the mold, color it.
@@fraided88 so basically you’re telling him to become a stone veneer manufacture..
How it’s made video, ask and ye’ shall receive .. ruclips.net/video/dQw4w9WgXcQ/видео.html
this guy is so thorough. from now on whenever customers tells me "good job" I'm going to say "no, no it's really not"
I used this product. Short learning curve, easy install. Used it for exposed foundation and porch columns with copper corners that worked flawlessly. Best of all it looks Killer.
Beautiful pole building! Personally, I would silicone just about every joint. Maybe not the horizontal if it's designed to drain towards the face of the stone and not back wash towards the building, but for damn sure, the vertical seems. I realize there's house wrap and felt behind it, but I don't believe any siding should rely on an underlayment. The siding should do it's job of keeping rain away from the structure. Keep in mind those few days a year when it rains sideways for hours and hours! Also the homeowner that likes to use a garden house to clean their building. Heaven forbid a pressure washer, lol. I built plenty of pole buildings many years ago, then moved on to stick building and eventually hung up the tool belt for railroading. Keep up the great work! I would definitely hire a fella like you to build my building.
I'd like to see how Versetta Stone is made.
ABSOLUTELY....Lets go on a feild trip to the Versetta Stone Manifacturing.
Heck yeah
Yes please , favorite show used to be “ how it’s made”.
me too
Look 's like cleaning the stone would be a lot easier9.
Where can I buy it
a factory tour would be very interesting. I'm planning to replace the siding on the front of my house with a product like that. I like the coloration a lot. Blows my mind that they are hand painted. That detail might just seal the deal. Great video content, by the way.
Yes, I would like to see how the stone is made.
I remember when this stuff started to come out. Looks a lot better than I thought it would
Definitely would be interested - from everything from lumber mills to cement manufacturing plants to concrete batch plants to quarries. People don't get to see how 'stuff is made'.
I'm pretty sure, with a nice widescreen tv and beer fridge, I'd be happy living in there! Great job and I'll be incorporating the Versetta Stone and metal siding into my garage remodel!!
Would like to see how it’s made. Already learned a lot about the product just from this video
At around 15min mark you say you’d like to know a better way.... how about laying out your height of siding/trim to correspond with a full row of stone? Love the cordless mini quickcut though!
I would absolutely love to see how the versetta stone is made, among any other company you use. You ask very good questions during the time you are talking to a manufacture.
As a former mason, my initial thought is that I hate it. But it actually looks really good. The rain screen feature is great. Nice video.
I’d love to see how Versetta stone is made. Also love to see how your steel is manufactured. Great vid thx
That Milwaukee cutter has built in system for attaching a water hose to it for dust suppression. Versetta Stone is nice and I would also love to see it been made. Cheers for the up load good quality video as always
We use a tile saw with water and it goes through it like Kyle says, "like butta!" Great vid. Thanks.
yes that is a great way too...I just don't like dealing with water in winter lol
I have never seen this product before but this is awesome. The closet supplier i have found so far with a quick search is over 100 miles away. I would love to have this product as an option in my business. See how this is manufactured would be awesome
I also would love to see how this stone is made
RR buildings even gets DOT to watch LOL
I'm about to install this on a house I'm building now thanks for the info.. Also I've been wearing a belt for 27 years and admire the set up of yours and you helpers. Gonna retire mine in 3 more years.. getting worn out lol
Yes! That would be great
Local supplier had a rep from versetti stone give a demonstration. The rep said to nail on mesh and glue the top course. Another contractor mentioned that he drills two holes and uses trim head screws to secure the top course.
Multiple ways to skin a catfish.
Yes you can do that for sure... not necessary but I think from a liability stand point you don’t want anything falling off
I'd never even heard of this product, but I am super interested in knowing more about it and would love to see a tour.
It’s very easy to install, I did it for the first time and it was one of the easiest jobs I’ve ever done. Rent a decent watersaw, start off level, be sure there’s no debris where they lock together and have a ball. There’s nothing to it, it is pricy, but it’s awesome!
I build in Michigan and this product is great considering we only have one week of "summer" and or favorable Temps to install stone. And also having a challenge of finding masonry subcontractors to do the work. So I choose to do it myself with this product.
I was just wondering, the other day, if anybody uses this stuff. Good to see a video like this
How It's Made was one of my favorite TV shows. So heck yeah! Any chance you get to tour a factory and see how something is made, please do!
I would like to see how versetta stone is made, it sounds really interesting
Love too see how the rosette stone is made ,great work ,thanks
Love to see a "How its Made" series.
Yes, we would love to see how the versetta stone & other products are made. I love versetta stone!
When it's winter, and it's brutal for building, sure hit the road and bring the channel to the mfrs. Sounds great!
This product is a good product for Florida, especially near the ground. Love to see the product being manufactured
I like how he says that it's virtually impossible to put similar Stones next to each other because of the lineal feet that is capable before it repeats but then he happens to put two matching stones right on top of each other.
Another vote to see how Versetta stone is made. Also, big thank you to the owner for allowing us to see the finished inside.
“80 sq’ with no repeats”
First 2 pieces placed look almost identical lol 😂
Looks amazing regardless and definitely a product I’ll be using in the future
I was gonna say the same thing. The only difference between the two is the color.
Yes, I would like to see a tour of you guys at the Versetta Stone by BORAL stone work.
So it’s a formed concrete? I’m wondering about putting it inside my house on the wall behind my wood burning stove
Lord Marshall - EXACTLY what I’m considering as well. 👍🏻
Thanks for showing this stuff. My wife and I have fiber cement and the bottom pieces are cracking and breaking in some spots. We are wanting to use something like this and install it ourselves. We just priced it and it will cost over $5,000! Definitely not cheap. I can’t imagine how much real stone would cost to have installed.
I’d like to see more cool things like the stone. You’re doing a great job man. Thanks for the content
Great shop, love the Willys pickup too. Thanks great educational video, recommend it to anyone interested in building trades.👍👍👍
"How It's Made- RR Buildings Edition" I'd watch that!
Hey guys ! Love your work! Really enjoy watching , but most importantly learning from you guys.
But I would be curious to know what brand tool belt you use and explain your set up. Thanks.! Keep up the good work.
Also thanks for keeping the language clean and professional. I watch these videos with my 5 year old son so I appreciate that as well.
God Bless!
I'd love t see different options of this stone, aways great ideas!
Really great to see a completely finished job, absolutely first class work.
I want to see the house remodel
Yes !! do a factory tour. I plan on using this on my building and house.
Is there actually anybody that wouldn’t like to see how the Versetta Stone is made? I don’t think so lol
Is asking where its made to much
Looks so much better than Home Depot and Lowe’s cheap looking cultured stone. Glad to have a e discovered this stone.
Can't believe Carson Wentz took the time to help us out
Man, I am about to install this versetta stone tomorrow. I was looking on internet for some guidance on that, and than boom 💥, you show up. I am a big fan of you on Instagram, and actually, I saw this product on one of yours stores. What I am trying to say is: thank you man, I learned a lot today. Ps. Sorry about my inglês, I am a Brazilian, and I don't know much English yet. I am learning a little be of everything. Tkx bro
"it not like the bible i dont have to live by it"-Kyle reminds me of "if its off a bit, life goes on" - Larry Haun
Larry was awesome. Miss his video series. One of the great teachers. Kyle, Check out some of his series if you haven't already.
That shop is gorgeous inside and out.
“BEST looking” should be hyphenated in your video title. With the way you have the title written now, you are talking about something called looking faux stone and describing this type of it as the best.
Makes sense