These Patio Pavers Turned Into Concrete Planters That Look High-End
  1. Homedit
  2. How To, Tips, and Advice

These Patio Pavers Turned Into Concrete Planters That Look High-End

Modern concrete planters often come with designer price tags and complicated molds, but this project, shared by Brittney Smart, started with simple patio pavers, landscape adhesive, feather finish, and concrete sealer. Once assembled, coated, and sealed, the square boxes stopped looking like stacked pavers and started resembling custom concrete planters built for modern entryways and patios.

These Patio Pavers Turned Into Concrete Planters That Look High-End

The project started with four square concrete pavers attached into a hollow cube shape using landscape adhesive alone. But instead of stopping at exposed seams and rough joints, Brittney added a full skim coat of feather finish across the exterior before sealing the entire planter.

That extra layer changed the project completely.

Landscape Adhesive Held The Entire Structure Together

The planters started with basic square pavers positioned upright and glued edge-to-edge using heavy-duty landscape adhesive.

Landscape Adhesive Held The Entire Structure Together

Instead of using forms, screws, or poured concrete, the square structure came together from four vertical pavers pressed into 90-degree corners.

Once assembled, the planters already looked functional

Once assembled, the planters already looked functional. But the exposed seams still revealed where each paver connected.

The transformation happened after the finishing coat covered those joints.

The Concrete Coating Hid The Paver Seams Completely

The Concrete Coating Hid The Paver Seams Completely

After the adhesive cured, feather finish spread across the entire planter surface.

That coating filled the cracks, softened the edges, and removed the stacked-paver appearance almost completely. Instead of reading like separate concrete slabs glued together, the planter started looking like one solid poured form.

The feather finish also introduced subtle texture variation across the surface, which helped the planter resemble cast concrete instead of smooth factory-made containers.

Some spreader marks remained visible after drying, which added more industrial character to the final finish.

The Sealer Changed The Surface Again

The Sealer Changed The Surface Again

After sanding and drying, the project added a concrete sealer across the entire planter.

That final layer deepened the color slightly and helped unify the finish across all sides. The sealed surface also gave the planters more protection outdoors against water exposure and changing temperatures.

Sealing the concrete planters interior also

Without the sealer, the feather finish would have looked more chalky and unfinished over time.

The sealed version looks closer to architectural concrete planters used around patios and entryways.

The Square Shape Changed The Entryway

The Square Shape Changed The Entryway

One of the strongest parts of the project came from the proportions themselves.

The taller square form gave the planters a heavier architectural look beside the small wood ramp and front door. Because the walls stay thick and straight instead of curved, the containers feel more permanent than lightweight plastic or resin planters.

Patio Pavers Turned Into Concrete Planters That Look Custom-Poured

Patio Pavers Turned Into Concrete Planters That Look Custom-Poured

The concrete texture also contrasts against the grass, mulch, and flowers without competing with the landscaping around them.

The Finished Planters Look More Expensive Than The Materials

The biggest surprise is how little the final planters still resemble patio pavers.

Before and After Pavers Patio Turned into Planters

Once coated and sealed, the seams disappear into the finish and the structure starts reading like poured concrete containers instead of assembled slabs. The soft texture variation across the sides also prevents the planters from looking too smooth or factory-made.

The final result looks closer to modern landscape planters found outside boutique hotels and contemporary homes than a weekend project built from pavers and adhesive.

I’ll admit, I probably prefer the raw paver version without the feather finish because the exposed seams and rough concrete edges give the planters a stronger industrial look. But the added coating and sealer make more sense outdoors long term since they help protect the joints from moisture and give the surface a cleaner finish.

Would you keep the raw stacked-paver look, or add the concrete coating and sealer like Brittney did?