Your cart is empty.
Your cart is empty.Barry
Reviewed in the United States on March 30, 2025
I use landscape fabric all the time and this is the worst and weekest fabric I’ve ever used, installing it trying to put staples through it it would tear like paper . This stuff is 4 oz but is more like 2 oz.
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on March 30, 2025
Is working great for paths in my vegetable garden when I am not able to get enough cardboard. I am no looking forward to removing it when that time comes.
SHARONA10
Reviewed in the United States on March 28, 2025
Did the job! Huge roll! Great value!
John Wakefield
Reviewed in the United States on March 23, 2025
Used as under and overlayment for rubber pond liner. Frays a little but it’s a good thickness to protect from rocks and stone.
miles w harper
Reviewed in the United States on April 4, 2025
Falls apart if the wind catches any part that is exposed while covering and while cutting endes off
Jamie
Reviewed in the United States on June 18, 2024
Easy to install and maintain, be careful when cutting at the edges tho, I recommend melting cut edges with a torch as you go to prevent unraveling. Easy to staple and covers well. Oveall great product!
Russ G.
Reviewed in the United States on March 27, 2024
In the past, I’ve used many mediums for weed barriers in both flower beds and the garden – newspaper, brown kraft paper, and polyethylene sheeting, all covered with pine straw; also, I’ve used just a thick layer of mulch. Both newspaper and kraft paper are an economical way of blocking weeds in our flower and raised beds for about a year when its time to clean the beds out for new straw anyway, and they deteriorate feeding the soil – so those are good traits. Newspaper can be easier to work with around a lot of perennials because you’re working with smaller sized sheets, but not what I want when doing larger areas like the garden. Polyethylene sheeting is my least favorite option for blocking weeds. Not only can it get pricey if you get it thick enough to not disintegrate quickly, but it pools water and is so slick that high winds easily blow the straw cover. We’ve also found that when you find polyethylene in a 6 mil and up, it’s in wider sheets which require more cutting when installing it. So, I was up for a different option this year that would hopefully last longer but be easier to install, and ordered this 2.5’ x 500’ of woven PP fabric. At the current price of $79.99 for 1250 sf of coverage its about the same price per sf (.06) as 6 mil polyethylene so I’m not realizing savings in cost, but I have in labor so far due to less cutting. I am a big fan of the 2.5’ width. I also like how the weave of the fabric allows water to penetrate and not stand. The texture of the weave also grabs the pine straw cover better than the slick plastic, keeping it in place. I’m hoping that the weave doesn’t allow weed penetration. So far, I’m satisfied with this product just from the install aspect but will need to update later when I see how long it lasts and if it sufficiently blocks weeds.
Julez
Reviewed in the United States on December 8, 2024
We grow strawberries on elevated rows in our backyard. We covered the entire patch with the Forimo weed barrier. We spill and drain a lot of water on the ground, but nothing—I mean absolutely nothing—grows through this fabric. It’s tough & durable too. We walk on it everyday. It is definitely serving its intended purpose. I’ll buy it again.
Recommended Products