Paver Patterns and Colors — A Designer's Guide for AZ Yards
Herringbone vs running bond vs European fan. Single color vs blend. Here's how pattern and color actually read once they're installed and weathered in.

Herringbone (45° or 90°)
Strongest interlock — the only pattern engineered to handle vehicle traffic. Mandatory on driveways. 45° is more dynamic; 90° reads cleaner and modern. Our driveway default.
Running bond
Simple staggered rows. Clean and contemporary, especially in large-format pavers. Best for patios and pool decks where the look is the priority and there's no vehicle load.
European fan
Cobblestone curved-fan layout. Old-world, premium, labor-intensive. Best for courtyards and entry walkways where the pattern is the design statement.
Random / ashlar
Mixed sizes laid in a non-repeating layout. Looks natural, hides cuts well around curves. Our default for travertine pool decks.
Color: single vs blend
Single color reads modern and architectural. Blends (2–3 colors mixed on install) hide debris and read more natural. AZ sun fades single-color blocks more obviously than blends — most yards benefit from a subtle 3-color blend.
What ages well in AZ sun
Earth tones (tans, sandstones, light grays) hold color best. Deep charcoals and pure whites show fade fastest. Belgard's Pavestone and Mirage lines have the best color-stability ratings in the Valley.


