Get the job done We run a plant nursery and use these by the thousands (literally). They work great and are long lasting. If you are overlapping landscape fabric to make a wider piece, however, use construction adhesive on the seams instead of these. The adhesive will hold better and be cheaper in the long run. These are better used for holding down the fabric and for non-overlapped edges. Only precaution is that after a particularly hard winter with lots of freeze/thawing, you will need to make sure the pins haven’t heaved. You may need to push them back into the ground. Other than that they’re great.
The best I’ve found I write very few reviews, but make an exception for this product. These fabric anchor pins are by far better then what I’ve ever found locally. They are a heavier gauge wire and they are at least an inch and a half longer. And to top it off they are around $7/100 vs. $12/75 from the local big box home improvement store. I ordered 1000 and the two boxes were 40lbs total, so $13 in shipping is worth it.
Excellent for Landscape Fabric at Home I purchased these because they were less expensive than buying the little packs that come with landscape fabric at the local hardware stores; particularly because I have been putting down about 300 linear feet of landscape fabric. These are so much better than those from Home Depot or Lowe’s because the wire is thicker and the prongs are longer. They take hammering into the ground much better and also they are easily straightened and reused after hitting rocks in the ground and bending (I live in a very rocky area). Do your math; if you plan to put down more than 200 feet of landscape fabric, purchase these for good coverage; it will also be much cheaper in the long run than buying those little bags of anchors from the hardware store you buy your landscape fabric from.
Get the job done We run a plant nursery and use these by the thousands (literally). They work great and are long lasting. If you are overlapping landscape fabric to make a wider piece, however, use construction adhesive on the seams instead of these. The adhesive will hold better and be cheaper in the long run. These are better used for holding down the fabric and for non-overlapped edges. Only precaution is that after a particularly hard winter with lots of freeze/thawing, you will need to make sure the pins haven’t heaved. You may need to push them back into the ground. Other than that they’re great.
The best I’ve found I write very few reviews, but make an exception for this product. These fabric anchor pins are by far better then what I’ve ever found locally. They are a heavier gauge wire and they are at least an inch and a half longer. And to top it off they are around $7/100 vs. $12/75 from the local big box home improvement store. I ordered 1000 and the two boxes were 40lbs total, so $13 in shipping is worth it.
Excellent for Landscape Fabric at Home I purchased these because they were less expensive than buying the little packs that come with landscape fabric at the local hardware stores; particularly because I have been putting down about 300 linear feet of landscape fabric. These are so much better than those from Home Depot or Lowe’s because the wire is thicker and the prongs are longer. They take hammering into the ground much better and also they are easily straightened and reused after hitting rocks in the ground and bending (I live in a very rocky area). Do your math; if you plan to put down more than 200 feet of landscape fabric, purchase these for good coverage; it will also be much cheaper in the long run than buying those little bags of anchors from the hardware store you buy your landscape fabric from.
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