concept Glossary 5 min read

String line: the set-out reference line

A string line is a taut line stretched between two points to mark and check alignment and level. Why tension matters, and how it differs from a chalk line.

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A string line is a taut line stretched between two reference points to mark or check a straight line, an alignment, or a level on site. It is the simplest set-out tool there is, a length of line and two anchors, and it is on every job from the first peg to the last course of brick.

What it is for

A string line gives a physical straight edge in space that trades work to:

  • Slab edges and footings: the line off the profile boards sets the edge of the slab or the footing trench.
  • Brickwork: the brickie’s line, hooked on line blocks or pins, keeps each course straight and level, and the bed height consistent.
  • Framing: a line along a wall plate or a row of stumps checks the run is straight before fixing.
  • Fencing, paving, retaining: posts, pavers, and wall units are aligned to the line.

Because it can be re-strung at any time, it is also a check tool: stretch it along a finished run to see the bow or kick in it.

Tension is the whole point

A string line is only true if it is taut. A sagging line dips in the middle, so anything aligned to it follows a curve, not a straight line. The longer the run, the more a slack line sags under its own weight, and the more it matters.

Practical points:

  • Pull it tight and anchor it so it cannot creep loose.
  • Keep it clear of obstructions. If the line rests against a peg, a brick, or a clod mid-run, it is pushed off the true line at that point.
  • On long or windy runs, support or re-tension it; wind bows a line sideways.
  • Use good braided line that does not stretch or kink; a stretched, knotted line will not pull straight.

Not a chalk line

A string line and a chalk line are different tools:

  • A string line marks a line in space, a reference you build to or measure from.
  • A chalk line (a reel of chalk-coated string) is snapped against a surface to leave a chalk mark on it, transferring a position onto a slab, sheet, or wall.

One holds a line in the air to work to; the other prints a line onto a face.

For a builder

  • Check the sag before you trust it. Sight down a long line; if it dips, re-tension before anyone works to it.
  • Mind what it touches. A line brushing a peg or a high spot reads false exactly there. Keep the run clean.
  • Offset lines are common. A line is often run a set distance off the true face (off the profile mark) so the work does not foul it; know the offset before you measure from it.
  • It is a reference, not the mark. For a line that has to stay on the surface, snap a chalk line; the string line is for working to, then it comes down.

Also known as: stringline, builder’s line, brickie’s line.

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-25. Verified: 2026-05-25. Quarterly review for currency.