Awhile back I seem to recall seeing an ad for a tool that could cut masking tape into thin strips. I have searched and have come up empty. Has anybody out there seen this and perhaps can tell me where I can obtain it? I need to mask off a very thin line. Any other suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Apply the tape to a sheet of clean glass, use a new #11 hobby blade & a metal ruler to cut many strips. Choose just the ones that turn out perfect. The glass will remove a bit of the adhesives ‘tack’
BTW~ I hope you are using paint specific green or blue tape. AVOID the generic ‘white-yellow’ stuff.
And if you don’t want to lose any of the tape’s adhesion, cut a strip of tape and apply to a piece of silicon baking paper before using the aforementioned #11 blade and metal straight-edge to cut your narrow strips.
Alternatively, one can buy rolls of micro-masking tape down to a width of 0.5mm. [proplr]
Tried baking cookies but they fell through the BBQ grill? I will check out the baking section in the local grocery store to see what we have that is comparable to what is described. [^o)]
There is a tool, but I don’t recall the manufacturer, perhaps “Excel”. Alternatively, you could use two # 11 blades, and superglie them to the outside of a strip of Evergreen plastic the width that you want your strips. Make the strip long enough to give you the leverage to comfortably cut your strips. Hope this helps.
Second on the suggestion by Pawel. After looking unsuccessfully for really thin, really good masking tape (I like Tamiya, but it’s too wide for tight curves), I was recently at a local quilt store (hey, my wife accommodates my hobby and I accommodate hers) and I found a parallel cutter by Olfa that cuts my Tamiya tape into perfect 2.0mm strips that are just right for masking curves (a bit over 1/16" ). Micro Mark also advertises a parallel cutter, but it’s really expensive compared to the Olfa. Should have thought of them earlier— my wife previously gave me an 18mm Olfa rotary cutter, and I use it often for cutting camo masks, scribing panel lines in certain situations, and I even used it to “re-texture” one of my dinosaur models. Actually, I have several modeling tools that I’ve picked up at the quilt store— check it out sometime (c’mon, I dare ya).
It is always best to buy tape for a few dollars more as modern formulas are always improving the original. I have always associated the white stuff with a horror story of sorts masking a 1/1 scale Camaro in 93’ Kind of a mess of my own making the mask was on the vehicle too long and a bugger to remove, wax & grease remover was needed to get the adhesive off. Good old sun cured tape…[bnghead]
I think I know what you are talking about. Looks like an xacto knife handle but holds two blades parallel to each other? If so, take my advise and don’t buy it–just a gimmick.
What you need to do is go to a glass supply store and have them cut you a nice piece of glass for a cutting surface–min is about 12"x18"x3/8" and they even glued little rubber squares on the bottom to keep it from sliding around and beveled to corners for me. Just apply a nice length of tape and cut with xacto knife using metal ruler as a guide. If you find the xacto knife dulls to fast, use a Tamiya utility knife (little black one with snap off blades—looks just like a small box cutter). The Tamiya knifes stays sharp about 10 times longer than an xacto knife blade.
Testors sells tape 1/16 inch wide. In previous threads folks have mentioned brands even thinner. I have cut masking tape with a straightedge and #11 knife, but sure prefer to use the thin stuff.
Model Expo sells extremely thin tape (I think down to 1/64). It is not intended as masking tape, but I have used it for that. One has to use a pretty thin coat though to keep from “melting” the tape (I use enamels).