WISCONSINPhotos: Realtors Home & Garden ShowTyler Repka, 6, of Mukwonago grabs play money in a glass chamber full of the stuff blown about by compressed air. It really did not matter how much he or other children got their hands on as their parents still got a selection of special service offers from Capital Heating and Cooling at the 93rd Realtors Home & Garden Show 2017 at the Wisconsin Expo Center at State Fair Park.Michael Sears / Milwaukee Journal SentinelCraig Pielmeier of Shorewood (front), his daughter Claire, 9, and wife, Helene, learned about Sleep Number beds from Tony Sardo (rear) at the Realtors Home & Garden Show.Michael Sears /Milwaukee Journal SentinelA water feature on display by Aquatica of Wales attracted a lot of attention at the Realtors Home & Garden Show.Michael Sears / Milwaukee Journal SentinelWilliam Dossett, the wizard behind Wizards of Concrete in Waukesha, shows examples of his firm's textured, stenciled and stained poured concrete. All the artwork and finishes are permanent. Wizards work from a client's photographs and create this type of work for outdoor living spaces, patios, walks, floors, basements and entries.Michael Sears / Milwaukee Journal SentinelRichard Clement of Do It Yourself Bathroom Center tweaks his display of a shower stall that can fit in the same space as a bathtub.Michael Sears / Milwaukee Journal SentinelBirdhouses designed by students from The Milwaukee High School of the Arts are on display at the Home & Garden Show. People attending the show are encouraged to vote for their favorite. The winning student design gets a $500 scholarship.Michael Sears / Milwaukee Journal SentinelGreg Chesney of Kettle Moraine Heating & A/C, a Lennox dealer, speaks with Jean Williams of West Allis at the Realtors Home & Garden Show.Michael Sears / Milwaukee Journal SentinelVince Dattilo (left) of Weather-tek Windows and Doors in Waukesha shows Eric Grunewald of Pewaukee (center) and his wife, Heidi, a windows at the Home & Garden Show.Michael Sears / Milwaukee Journal SentinelBarb Hayden of Oconomowoc works on an oil painting of a weather vane atop a structure at the show. She is a member of Wisconsin Plein Air Painter's Association, a group of outdoor painters. Fellow painter Nathan Brandner (rear) of Green Bay is working on another painting of a garden setting at the show. People stop to admire their work. A group painters were working on the show floor.Michael Sears / Milwaukee Journal SentinelMason Vahl (left), 3, and his brother Gavin, 6, played with their electronic tablets while parents Sara aand Chris Vahl with James Schumacher (right) of Landscape Master in Sussex about outdoor living spaces.Michael Sears / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel