Design seam lines for garden counters, confidently. Enter sizes, obstacles, and slab limits to plan. See seam positions, piece cuts, and waste instantly today.
| Scenario | Top (L×D) | Slab (L×W) | Pieces | Seams | Typical note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Potting bench | 180×60 | 320×160 | 1 | 0 | Single-piece, easy transport. |
| Outdoor prep station | 290×65 | 320×160 | 2 | 1 | Keep seam away from basin cutout. |
| Long greenhouse counter | 420×70 | 320×160 | 2–3 | 1–2 | Balance handling limits and waste. |
Outdoor countertops move with temperature swings and moisture. Plan seams so each section stays within a safe handling length while keeping joints away from corners, heavy potting zones, and openings. Place seams over cabinet rails or cleats, and avoid spanning gaps wider than 450 mm without added support. On garden benches, align seams with base partitions every 600–900 mm for stiffness and leveling.
Slab length and width set your maximum seam‑free span. After trimming edges, usable slab size shrinks, reducing the longest cut. A 10 mm trim on each edge removes 20 mm from both directions, which can push a long run into an extra piece. For a 3200×1600 mm slab, a 15 mm trim yields roughly 3170×1570 mm usable.
Transport and lifting limits govern seam count. The calculator compares usable slab length with your carry limit and preferred seam‑free limit, then estimates pieces using ceiling division. Example: a 4200 mm counter with a 2000 mm carry limit becomes 3 pieces and 2 seams. Fewer seams simplify polishing; more pieces reduce breakage risk over uneven ground.
Seams over cutouts increase crack risk and visible glue lines. When you enter a cutout location and width, the planner creates a safety buffer and shifts seam positions to the nearest safe point. Keep 75–150 mm clearance from cutout edges, increasing the buffer for brittle materials. If a seam must approach an opening, add underside plates or mesh reinforcement.
Each seam consumes material for kerf and adhesive alignment. The calculator adds seam allowance and blade kerf across the depth to estimate effective area, then divides by usable slab area to estimate rough slab count. A 3 mm kerf plus 2 mm seam allowance adds 5 mm per seam across full depth, noticeable on 700–800 mm benches. Use the CSV to review lengths and improve nesting.
They are planning marks based on your limits and safe zones. Always verify against cabinet layout, support rails, and real cutout templates before fabrication.
Common allowances range from 1–3 mm for alignment and cleanup. Use larger values when edges are rougher or when you expect extra sanding and dressing.
Centering is a good starting point for balanced piece lengths. In practice, shift seams to land on supports and away from cutouts, corners, and concentrated loads.
Plan each run separately, then ensure the corner joint has continuous support. If the corner is a miter, keep seams at least 150 mm away from the corner line.
No. The slab count is a rough coverage estimate. Add contingency for veining, chips, and layout preference, typically 5–15% depending on material.
Then slab size becomes the limiting factor. The calculator will favor fewer pieces, but you can set a stricter seam‑free limit to force shorter, easier-to-handle sections.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.