Seaming Tape For Artificial Grass

  • Common Width: 10 cm, 15 cm, 20 cm
  • Common Length: 5 m, 10 m, 15 m, 20 m, 50 m
  • Color: Green, black, white liner, custom available
  • Backing Material: Non-woven fabric or PP cloth
  • Adhesive Type: Hot melt pressure-sensitive adhesive
  • Use Area: Backing-side artificial grass seam connection

Seaming Tape For Artificial Grass is made for joining two turf pieces from the backing side, so the finished seam can stay flatter and less visible when the edges are cut and aligned correctly. Both Side Tape Company manufactures this artificial turf seaming tape for gardens, patios, balcony turf, pet zones, and temporary display areas. A good seam does not depend on tape strength alone; clean ground, matching pile direction, centered tape placement, smooth liner removal, and firm pressing all affect the final result.

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Product Package

Product Overview

Seaming Tape For Artificial Grass is used underneath two pieces of artificial turf, not on the visible grass surface. During installation, the tape sits below the meeting line of the turf pieces, with one half bonded to the first backing edge and the other half bonded to the second edge. This balanced contact helps the seam sit flatter and reduces the chance of one side lifting after regular use.

For a cleaner invisible seam, both turf rolls should be laid flat before joining. If one piece is still curled, stretched, or slightly twisted, the seam may look acceptable at first but open after foot traffic or temperature change. This artificial grass joining tape is suitable for many common turf backing types, including PP backing, non-woven backing, and latex-coated backing after a short test. Dust, moisture, loose latex powder, oil, and trimming scraps can reduce adhesive contact, so the ground and turf back should be checked before installation. For wholesale rolls, width tolerance, liner release stability, adhesive coating evenness, and clean slit edges should also be confirmed before shipment.

 Benefits

  • Cleaner seam appearance: A less visible seam depends on straight cutting, matching pile direction, centered tape placement, and firm pressure from the backing side.
  • Practical self-adhesive use: For common landscape turf seams, the self-adhesive backing reduces the need for a separate heavy glue system.
  • Stable backing contact: The fabric carrier helps the tape lie flat under the joint and gives both turf backs an even bonding area.
  • Controlled liner removal: The release film can be peeled gradually, helping installers avoid early adhesive contact with loose grass fibers.
  • Consistent roll quality: Regular rolls can be checked for +/-1 mm width tolerance, clean slit edges, low fray, and smooth liner release.
  • Flexible roll supply: Width, length, color, adhesive thickness, liner type, and packaging can be adjusted for wholesale distributors, turf installers, and private-size supply.

How Do You Use Seaming Tape For Two Pieces Of Artificial Grass?

Clean the ground first and remove loose sand, dust, oil, water, and trimmed grass scraps. Lay both turf pieces flat and make sure the grass pile runs in the same direction. Fold the two edges back slightly, then trim any rough backing edge before joining. Place the tape under the seam line with the adhesive side facing upward, keeping it centered so both turf backs have enough bonding area. Peel the release film slowly while lowering the grass edges onto the adhesive. Loose grass fibers should not fall into the adhesive line.

 

TDS

Item

Typical Value

Product Name

Seaming Tape For Artificial Grass

Product Type

Self adhesive turf seam roll

Carrier Material

Non-woven fabric or PP cloth

Adhesive Type

Hot melt pressure-sensitive adhesive

Release Liner

PE film or release paper

Common Width

10 cm, 15 cm, 20 cm

Common Length

5 m, 10 m, 15 m, 20 m, 50 m

Total Thickness

280 um-500 um

Adhesive Coating

Single side coating

Initial Tack

Medium-high tack for turf backing contact

Recommended Pressing Time

20-30 seconds per section

Working Temperature

5 C-45 C

Short-Term Heat Resistance

<=60 C

Backing Compatibility

PP backing, non-woven backing, latex-coated backing after testing

Product Production

Applications

  • Joining two pieces of artificial grass in gardens, patios, and small landscape areas
  • Balcony turf seams where a flat joint is needed under light foot traffic
  • Pet area turf where the seam should stay neat after normal cleaning
  • Exhibition turf, display flooring, and temporary indoor grass decoration
  • Residential lawn repairs when replacing one turf section beside another
  • Turf installation kits that require pre-cut rolls or private-size packaging

Why Do Artificial Grass Seams Become Visible After Installation?

A visible seam is usually linked to installation details, not only to the tape. If two turf pieces face different pile directions, the color and texture can look uneven even when the backing is bonded well. If the edges are not cut straight, a wave-shaped line may appear after pressing. If the tape is not centered, one side can have weaker contact than the other. Grass fibers caught in the adhesive may also create small gaps along the seam. Another common issue is poor backing condition, especially when the turf back carries dust, moisture, or loose latex powder. For safer installation, a short sample seam should be pressed and checked after 24 hours before using the same tape on a full area.

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FAQ

  • Can this tape create a fully invisible seam?

    It can help create a clean seam, but the result depends on straight cutting, matching grass direction, accurate edge alignment, and firm pressing.

  • Is it suitable for all artificial grass backing?

    It is suitable for many common PP, non-woven, and latex-coated backings, but unusual, dusty, wet, or powdery backing should be tested first.

  • Should the tape be placed on top of the grass?

    The tape should be placed under the two turf pieces, with the adhesive side facing the backing, not on the visible grass surface.

  • What usually causes seam lifting?

    Seam lifting often comes from dirty surfaces, poor tape centering, weak pressure, wet backing, curled turf, or moving the grass before the adhesive has settled.