RE: duct tape
DEAR JUDY,
INDUSTRIAL PLASTICS!!! My, that brings back memories! When I had
my studio in NYC we had an account with them and used to buy MANY kinds of
plastics as backgrounds from them. Gone, huh?
CHEERS!
BOB
-----Original Message-----
From: Judy Seigel [mailto:jseigel@panix.com]
Sent: Thursday, December 07, 2006 12:03 AM
To: alt-photo-process-l@usask.ca
Subject: Re: duct tape
On Tue, 5 Dec 2006, etienne garbaux wrote:
> There is duct tape, and then there's duct tape. Good duct tape is almost
> as good as real gaffers' tape. (Yes, sadly, lots of folks sell "gaffers'
> tape" that isn't any better than mediocre duct tape.)
Actually, for my purposes (for instance, making a package to hold 6 books
out of a cut-down corrugated box that held 18) duct tape of any sort is
MUCH better than gaffer's tape, in fact gaffer's tape would have tipped me
over the edge mentally, physically & financially. It is HEAVY, THICK and
STIFF, hard to impossible to smooth around corners. The duct tape has a
stretch to it, and a LOT of "sticky" for its thickness, also much easier
to tear by hand, without having to gunk up your scissors and cramp your
hand in the cutting.
We used to buy duct tape, about $2 for a huge roll, down on Canal Street,
though those swell odd lot/ hardware stores are gone, as is Industrial
Plastics, among others, replaced by counterfeit Gucci bags & car
stereos... But I assume when we run out, there will still be hardware
stores somewhere. (Like Scarsdale?)
Anyway, now I cover the duct-taped box with brown paper, fastened with
clear tape & no more problems at the PO. One of the agents, however,
explained about duct tape -- something about it being bought in huge
quantities for construction, used to tape up copper tubing or wire so it
isn't stolen, the excess sold in odd lots.
Judy