Specifications
- Overall Dimensions: 37" diameter x 22" high
- Bowl Dimensions: 37" diameter x 18" deep
- Base Dimensions: 12" diameter
- Iron Finish / Color: Natural / Rusted
- Material: Recycled Iron
- Indoor / Outdoor: Outdoor
- Suitable for: Gas, Wood, or Charcoal fires.
Product Overview
The Fiery Fleur-de-Lis Modern Firebowl is a
tour de force in
fire and steel that adds a regal flair to any setting. Whether you are
hosting an intimate gathering of your inner circle, plotting an award
winning landscape design or seeking an intriguing focal point for a
trendy new French Bistro, bring a touch of royal elegance to your
outdoor setting with the Fiery Fleur-de-Lis. Leaping from the coals you
can clearly see the fiery steed of a chevalier manifesting the ancient
symbolism of faith, wisdom and chivalry associated with this design.

I'm best known as an artist and designer, but relaxing makes me tense, so I tend to put in a lot of hours on diverse projects.
I've been making art professionally since about 1995, and have made a full-time living as an artist since 2000. On the way to a successful art career I've been a poet and writer, a tech geek, a print and web designer, illustrator, industrial designer, musician, teacher, actor, set designer and even a paid guru once.
I like to joke that I'm the world's most well-educated self-taught artist - I've learned pretty much everything I know by doing it. I work in a lot of different styles using a wide variety of materials. I find that each new medium informs all which have come before.
It's all the same thing in the end - I wake up most days thinking about how I want to change, fix or improve some aspect of the world. And after a couple cups of coffee I get started on it. My specialty is impossibility remediation: if it can't be done, I'm on it.
Art has been good to me, and I feel very lucky to have been able to pursue what interests me on my own terms. As an artist, I am also a small business owner who supports a family, pays taxes, and supports other local businesses through the sale of my fire pits. I have a part-time assistant who depends on the income I provide him to make his house payment. I buy the materials for my firebowls at the scrapyard, paying a premium to have them cut and delivered (I've spent over $10,000 at the scrapyard this year alone). I am one of the larger customers for my local freight company and am pleased to be able to pass along my 75% savings to you.
There are not a lot of successful businesses or job opportunities in the area of Michigan where I live, and the income I make from my art and spend in the community is important to the people I support. The fact that I am able to sell my work globally and bring money into the Michigan economy (one of the worst in the nation) is something that I am very proud of and I feel pretty good about the fact that I can help people pay their bills while larger corporate companies are laying people off left and right.