Feature

●FrogTape Pro Grade Orange Painters Tape is a high-adhesion painters tape that quickly sticks to a variety of surfaces, even in hot and humid conditions.
●This has a conformable backing that makes it easy to use on interior and exterior applications.
●It is easy to apply and removes cleanly without shredding for three days.
●Designed for use on or for cured painted walls and trim, unfinished wood, glass, masking light fixtures, doorways, windows, metal, stone, hanging poly and more
●Carrier/Backing: fine structured crepe paper. Adhesive: rubber-based. Thickness: 6.4 mils (carrier, adhesive). Adhesion: 39 ounces per inch (to stainless steel test panel). Tensile Strength: 24 pounds per inch (longitudinal). Service/Operating Temperature: 50F to 200F. Elongation: 9%. Core: 3-inch diameter.


Description

FrogTape Pro Grade Orange Painters Tape is a high-adhesion painters tape that quickly sticks to a variety of surfaces, even in hot and humid conditions. This has a conformable backing that makes it easy to use on interior and exterior applications. It is easy to apply and removes cleanly without shredding for three days. Also known as Shurtape CP 199. Designed for use on or for:

• Cured painted walls and trim
- Unfinished wood
- Glass
- Masking light fixtures
- Doorways
- Windows
- Metal
- Stone
- Hanging poly for protection while spraying

Country of Origin: United States.Application Instructions

• Clean the surface to be masked. Make sure it is dust-free and dry.
- If the surface has been recently painted, make sure the paint has cured.
- For accurate placement, adhere FrogTape in short sections to avoid stretching the tape.
- Make sure FrogTape is flush to the edge that you will be painting.
- Using a putty knife or 5-in-1 tool, press the tape you positioned to burnish it to the surface you are masking.

Removal Instructions

• Remove the tape immediately after you are finished painting. This will help prevent paint from bridging over the tape and tearing when you remove it. When latex paint begins to dry, it becomes rubbery (like a rubber band) and has a tendency to pull.
- Remove the tape slowly and pull at a 90-degree angle.
- If the new paint does begin to tear, gently score the edges with a razor blade.
- If the tape begins to tear the wallboard when it is being removed, this likely means you have masked on a poorly bonded surface. Try softening the tapes adhesive with a blow dryer.