Hi Leezy,
My current roll of tape is labeled "painter's masking tape." I've
used it around door and window trim when painting house interiors; I
believe auto painters use it also. I've never heard it refered to as
drafting tape, although they may both be the same thing.
Tom
(Actually, this roll was made by 3M Canada, and in French it is "Ruban
de masquage pur peintre", and Spanish is "masking tape para pintura".)
----- Original Message -----
From: <B2MYOUNG@aol.com>
To: <pinhole-discussion@pinhole.com>
Sent: Saturday, December 22, 2001 12:14 PM
Subject: Re: [pinhole-discussion] loading paper into a cancamera
>
> In a message dated 12/22/01 12:30:29 PM, twmiller@mr.net writes:
>
> << One that I use with paper negatives is to take a strip of
high-quality
> masking tape about 35 mm (1 1/2 inches) long roll it into a tube
with the
> sticking part on the outside. The tube will have a diameter of
about 10mm.
> Then put this between the back of the photo paper and the inside of
the can.
> This works good because there is no tape on any part of the image;
masking
> tape is meant to be removed and good quality masking tape doesn't
leave any
> glue residue; and the tube has a little give in it so you can remove
it
> easier than double-stick tape. >>
>
> I think this is called drafting tape. Is that correct?
> leezy
>
> _______________________________________________
> Pinhole-Discussion mailing list
> Pinhole-Discussion@pinhole.com
> unsubscribe or change your account at
> http://www.pinholevisions.org/discussion/
Received on Sat Dec 22 21:22:40 2001
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Mon 13 Dec 2004 - 23:33:32 PST