Our stone fabrication starts at the quarry, the same place the material comes from. The people making cuts know this stone firsthand, allowing them to understand how a particular vein of sandstone splits, where a piece will hold clean, and how thickness affects how it sets once it is mortared or dry stacked. That level of familiarity shapes how each piece is cut before it ever leaves the facility.
On the job site, that preparation shows up immediately. Stone arrives already shaped for its purpose, cap stone with finished edges, steps cut to a consistent rise, veneer pieces sized to the layout. Crews are not spending the first part of a project reworking material or sorting through inconsistent pieces. Tighter tolerances, specific dimensions, and odd angles are handled in-house by the same team, without involving a separate fabrication shop that has not seen the project.
For larger orders, that consistency becomes even more important. Small variations in thickness or edge treatment add up quickly when you are running a long installation or building out a wide hearth. Keeping fabrication tied directly to the source material keeps those variations controlled and helps prevent the kind of slowdowns that can disrupt a timeline.