How to Add Glue Tabs to a Wig Cap - Simple and Easy!
What are glue tabs? Glue tabs, also known as tape skin pads, are pieces of foundation that are made from polyurethane. The glue tabs can be purchased pre-cut or customized from a full poly skin sheet.
OVERVIEW
What are glue tabs? Glue tabs, also known as tape skin pads, are pieces of foundation that are made from polyurethane. The glue tabs can be purchased pre-cut or customized from a full poly skin sheet.
Glue tabs are typically used by individuals that have suffered hair loss. The tabs are attached to a wig in the areas where no hair is present for attachment. Tabs are sewn into a wig…
Quick Pak Packaging Tape Pads are ideal for protecting labels, sealing envelopes and small packages, recuperate repair, and miscellaneous packaging applications. Available in seven different stock sizes. Pre-cut for in-field repair of damaged packages, shipping label protection, and other packaging applications where convenient carrying and easy application are necessary.
Most used in food and beverage, general industrial, delivery shelf stocking, commercial, home, and garden industries. Weather-resistant and long aging for indoor/outdoor use.
Features & Benefits:
-High strength tape pads ideal for in-field repair of damaged packages.
-Transparent, polypropylene backing with strong synthetic rubber adhesive sticks to bags, boxes, plastic film, metal, and glass.
-Pads are convenient and portable, requiring no dispenser for ease of use. Padded format allowed for blade free, no knife operations.
-Most used in food and beverage, general industrial, delivery shelf stocking, commercial, home, and garden industries.
I'm so excited to finally be able to launch these adorable sticky notes and washi tape! These are small batch prints so stock is very limited. If I'm lucky enough to sell them out, I'm not 100% sure I’d be able to restock before in time for Christmas after factoring in shipping times 🎄
They are now available for purchase at my shop on Etsy - as always, I would be very grateful if you could shop via the link in my bio or below as I get a discount on processing fees.
🗒️ Shop Pedro sticky notes & washi tape ✂️
Eagle-eyed Narcos girlies will probably spot the no context Javier Pena notebook - currently in development! These are stamped by hand so I'm still tweaking my process. I'm hoping these will be available for purchase soon 🗒️
P.S. Fuck Yeah Paper Co. is now on Instagram! It's still pretty sparse but please do give me a follow ✌🏼
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Hey, can I ask you a lightbox question? Idk how much use you've had of it, but it seems really useful! I'd love to trace my sketches, but im worried about blaring light right in my eyes because I'm super sensitive to light and get migraines even from doing digital art. How hard is it on your eyes?
so, i've only been using it for an afternoon, but i think i would immediately say my main concern on the lightbox is more about ergonomics than eye strain (and my concerns about eye strain are more about struggling to see through the paper than about the light itself). for reference the model i'm using is this one, it's about €20.
the light itself is not actually that blinding — instead of being direct it's like a sheet of LEDs covered in tiny holes, and the light from all those holes together combines to be bright enough to see through the paper. also, you're always going to have paper on top of it, so unless the paper you're working on is much smaller than the pad itself, you're not going to spend much time staring directly into the light anyway. i can definitely imagine that seeing the little strip of it on the sides out of the corner of your eye as you work could eventually cause a headache, though.
^ like that.
also, it has three different brightness settings; i've quickly found that all three of them are useful in different contexts, even within the same drawing! the brightest doesn't hurt my eyes so far (it'll depend on what kind of paper you're using; in these pics my sketch is on regular printer paper, and the final is on bristol, which blocks out more of the light than two sheets of printer paper would).
here's where my concern about eye strain comes in: on the brightest setting, it's easy to see the sketch (the paper underneath), but hard to see what you're doing on the final (the paper on top). on the lowest setting, i can see more detail in what i'm actually drawing, but it's harder to make out the sketch underneath. i can easily see these different types of strain taking a toll on your eyes over time, especially if you really get in the zone and stop remembering to adjust the brightness based on what your eyes need.
^ my solution so far has been like this! you can fuss with the positioning of a regular lamp until it bounces off the top paper enough that u can see what ur doing, but it's not so direct that it cancels out the light from below. if i need to see more detail from the undersketch, i can quickly cup my hand to throw some shadow on it or set up a barrier (like my pencil bag).
besides that the main issue im foreseeing is the ergonomics thing i mentioned, the pad is so flat and thin that i'm really folding over my desk to see what im doing — but that's a bad habit i have when working on paper anyway. the cord is long enough that u could pick it up to work in your lap etc, i just find that awkward so i'd rather work flat.