Indian Hill Snapped Stone Steps
Indian Hill Snapped Stone Steps are from the uniquely beautiful Indian Hill family of stone that includes wall stone, building stone, patio stone and more. Best described as gray to light brown to tan but with extensive markings and wonderful accent colors. At Wicki Stone Indian Hill Snapped Stone Steps are guillotine snapped on all 6 sides to create a natural looking step with reasonably smooth surfaces and clean edges. Goes great with our Indian Hill wall stone and building stone. A great landscape stone and a Wicki Stone Specialty Product.
Indian Snapped Stone Steps Description and Details
Full Stone Name
Indian Hill Snapped Stone Steps
Formerly called Chapel Ridge Stone Steps
Stone Description
Multiple pieces are sawn from a single boulder to stunning effect. These are exceptionally beautiful and unique natural stone steps. Sawn surfaces are smooth but not slippery. This is a product exclusive to Wicki Stone.
Stone Color
Light gray and light brown are the primary base colors but a range of accent colors can mix in on any given piece.
Stone Finish
Snapped on all 6 sides by a stone guillotine. The result is instantly aged looking steps that are still somewhat dimensional (straight edges). This is easy stone to integrate into a wall, due to thew reasonably straight edges.
Stone Coverage
Steps are snapped to roughly 6" riser heights. Length and width are highly variable and depend on the set. It is not uncommon for each step in a set to be 3-4 feet wide, 2 - 3 feet deep, and 6" tall, but that can vary widely. We have some sets that are much longer, and certain sets can have significantly smaller lengths and widths.
How It Is Sold
By the total square feet of step surface area. Each step is measured at the saw house and pallets are marked with total square footage of all pieces on the pallet.
Frequently Asked Questions
Similar Products - What Goes With This Stone?
The following products go well with Chapel Ridge Stone Steps
- Indian Hill Wallstone - multiple forms
- Indian Hill Boulders and placement rocks