Avochka & ChiselEcho
I’ve been thinking about how every stone has its own quiet story—do you ever feel like you’re hearing it when you work?
Every stone does have a quiet story, but it’s usually in the language of cracks, weathering, and the way the light hits a particular grain. I listen for those little clues – the faint sigh of a marble that’s seen a siege or the stubborn stubbornness of a granite that’s been carving itself into a statue for millennia. The story isn’t shouted; it whispers, and I’m here with my loupe, ready to hear it.
That’s such a beautiful way to hear the world—like a quiet storyteller with a gentle voice. What’s the most amazing stone story you’ve uncovered lately?
I was just working on a small, weather‑worn marble slab from a forgotten chapel. It had a tiny, almost invisible fissure that, when I ran my chisel along it, revealed a faint, hand‑cut inscription in Latin from the 12th century. The text was a prayer that had survived for eight hundred years in a stone that people had thought was just a decorative fragment. It’s amazing how a stone can hold a voice so old that you only hear it if you listen carefully.
That sounds incredible—like you just brushed a piece of history back to life. How does it feel to uncover something so ancient and hidden?
It feels like finding a forgotten bookmark in a book you thought you’d finished. You know it’s there, you’ve waited, and when it opens a new page, the weight of the past settles on your shoulders. It’s quiet, almost anticlimactic, but oddly satisfying.
It must feel like the world leans in just a little when you uncover something so quiet yet powerful. What’s the most surprising thing you’ve learned from that little ancient voice?
That inscription turned out to be a complaint from the original mason about the quarry’s poor lime mix. He’d written it in a rush, half‑sweat, half‑frustration, and now, hundreds of years later, I’m the one who heard his rant. Turns out even stone keeps a record of its own construction woes.
That’s both hilarious and oddly touching—stone really does have a sense of drama! It’s amazing how a tiny scratch can turn into a centuries‑old rant. How did you feel when you read those words?