View allAll Photos Tagged MaskingTapes
Paint a thin layer of Mod Podge that evenly covers the entire strip of masking tape. Carefully attach a section of pattern paper, tissue paper, or other thin paper.
The green in the image is leftover crepe streamer from a kid's birthday party and has a fun wrinkled texture when it dries.
Cute massage washi tapes
made in Japan
orange- Thank you, For you
White-Love,Good, Smile, wonderful, special, great'
mint-Happy birthday
Some changes to my web site -- This photo & other August Break posts are on my blog: jesshibb.posterous.com. (If you visit jesshibb.com, you can still get to my blog ... It's a fancy launch page now!)
Here I'm laying out patches of 3M Scotch F9460PC very high bond strength (VHB) adhesive transfer tape as Dave has laid them out on the back of the front-facing corrugated plastic. The tape will hold four HVST.echnology X43 audio exciters in each box.
First I unrolled a little more than an inch of tape for each audio exciter, snipped it off with scissors, and laid it out on the plastic. Then I burnished it with the back of a spoon for good adhesion, before peeling off the backing paper and pressing an audio exciter down on it.
The F9460PC has almost the same characteristics as the F9473PC I've used before, except that it's thinner and less expensive. My guess was that a thinner layer of tape could only improve sound transfer between the audio exciters and the corrugated plastic. A temperature rating of only 400 degrees Fahrenheit instead of the other tape's 500 degrees doesn't worry me. I won't be around to experience the shame of that failure mode.
Even this less expensive tape cost about $5 a yard. To use it more economically, I could have traced X43-sized circles in a close-packed arrangement, and then quickly cut them from the two-inch tape as isosceles triangles. (Optionally, I could have trimmed the triangles further, to reduce the amount of excess, exposed tape, which can only create problems: by catching dirt, sticking to wandering wires, etc.) But as the event approached, we optimized for speed, not material consumption.
Note that we diverged from best practice in not using the polymeric positive temperature coefficient (PPTC) fuses in series with the audio exciters. Instead, we chose to push harder on the tradeoff of failure risk for sound output, with minimal resistance between the X43s and our little Lepai LP-269FS amplifiers. Consistent with this approach, we used 18 gauge speaker wire, which is the largest size the X43 connectors will accept.
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Use scissors, a guillotine cutter, or a rotary cutter and ruler to cut the tape out. Make sure you leave some wax paper on the end of the strips so that it is easier to peel the tape off later.
I got a extra set of mt ex Bangkok (5 patterns limited ed. brand new!). If you have mt limited from mt store at Anthropologie in New York and would like to swap, please leave a comment! thank you!!
Cute set of 3 Japanese Washi tape with numbers, icons, and typewriter lettering in Pink/Burgundy. Great for scrapbooking, art journaling, and card making! Acid free and archival safe. They are made of japanese washi (rice paper) and are semi transparent so they work great for layer effect.
An handmade mini notecard is perfect for all occasions. Let us go back to the most simple way of communication, write down how much they mean to you, reasons why you love them, how they make you feel.
Available in my ETSY now :)
Lay a piece of wax paper on your work surface and attach strips of masking tape. Make sure you leave space so there is room to work on each piece individually.
Set of 3 Japanese Washi Tape in green with number, typewriter lettering, icons - great for scrapbooking, art journaling, and card making!!
Copyright 2017 Hilde Heyvaert.
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No unauthorized use, reproduction or distribution without prior permission.
...are wheelie good. Compwheat wiff wed wuts.
Someone's been busy with the masking tape. Spotted on a 2004 Skoda Octavia RS.
I wonder what they look like in motion?
Probably just rubbing it with my thumb would have done the job, but why not make sure? I included the spoon in the shot, because everyone's got a spoon, and that's good enough. However, after the first panel, I invoked the Bitchin' Tool Rule and got my Speedball baren.
Barens are used by printmakers to make prints without a press. You lay the paper down on top of an inked block and rub the back of the paper with the baren, pushing down. Rubbing and pushing? Exactly what this job called for. And as cheap as this tool was, it needs all the amortization it can get. I bought it in preparation for freestyle printing projects that have yet to see the light of day. (I've stuck to small format stuff, using my Speedball press. Plenty of photos of that here, if you're interested.) Not surprisingly, it worked quite well.
However, it's not a particularly helpful suggestion. Barens and common electrician's tools come from widely separated branches of the phylogenetic tool tree. You won't often find a baren and a soldering iron on the same bench. For the one person in a million who's got both: Here you go. For everyone else: Don't worry about it. Use a spoon. Unless this opens up a new life for you. In that case, use a spoon until you're sure; then buy the baren.
Ironically, I may have thought of the spoon because I've seen William T. Vollmann use one as a baren. I knew this was a baren-type job, but there was a slight conceptual barrier to overcome.
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