Contributing Member Ferg Posted September 2, 2010 Contributing Member Report Posted September 2, 2010 Okay..... I applied rubber cement to the back of the piece of leather I am/was tooling and stuck it to a piece of 1/4" plexiglass, never again. How in tarnation do I get that glue off the back of the leather so I can glue a liner to it. Don't tell me to use rubber cement for that because it is not a good idea. The plexiglass shrunk up into a concave, not a lot but enough that it won't lay down on the granite to carve on. I n all the years I have tooled leather I never done any of the suggested methods to keep the leather from stretching. I simply never had a problem. Believe me, I will go back to the way I always done it from now on. I still need to get that blasted rubber cement off the back ferg Quote
Members albane Posted September 3, 2010 Members Report Posted September 3, 2010 Ferg, Will the cement reactivate it's self? By this I mean If you apply More fresh adhesive will it soften the old stuff? If so consider applying a small amount of fresh adhesive (just enough to loosen up the excess and scrape as much as you can away.. Work a small area so it doesn't dry up before you finish. after line your piece like you normally would. Good luck, Quote Al Bane<br />Al Bane For Leather<br />818 209 7945 <br />www.myspace.com/albaneforleather<br />www.facebook.com/albaneforleather<br />www.albaneforleather.etsy.com
Members Tina Posted September 3, 2010 Members Report Posted September 3, 2010 I whish I had a good idea to help you out here... But for the sake of argument, should the glue be applied directly to the leather or to the plexiglass (then dry up a wee bit) before mounting the leather and glass together? I have always wondered this??? Quote "He who works with his hands is a laborer. He who works with his hands, and his head is a craftsman. He who works with his hands, and his head, and his heart, is An Artist" http://vildkorpens-laderlya.deviantart.com http://tupali.deviantart.com/
Members Aggiebraider Posted September 3, 2010 Members Report Posted September 3, 2010 If youre going to put a liner on anyway, why do you need to remove the rubber cement? If there is ALOT of cement, maybe carefully cut it away with a razor blade to smooth things up. I thought you could just rub the rubber cement off with a little friction (may be heat activated as well). If you were able to just peel the plexiglass off, you should be able to remove the remaining cement fairly easily. But these are all suppositions as I have yet to start tooling and havent run into this problem Quote
terrymac Posted September 3, 2010 Report Posted September 3, 2010 Ferg, I think you missed one little step, and that is to apply packing tape directly to the leather, and then apply the glue to the packing tape and stick to the plexiglass. 3M packing tape seems to work best. Terry Quote
Contributing Member Ferg Posted September 3, 2010 Author Contributing Member Report Posted September 3, 2010 I had thought of the packing tape but it would not stick to the leather. I had to apply two coats of rubber cement to get it to even think about sticking to the plastic. BTW: I had waited until the leather was ready to carve before doing any of these so it was not excessively wet. It doesn't want to rub off. My past experience with applying any liner with rubber cement has been a total disaster. I also thought abut applying the glue to the plastic but I would need to make a mark around the piece to keep glue from getting every where else. A marker would probably be needed and that could get on the face of the leather. I am going to try a small amount of the cement over what is there and see what happens but I doubt it will loosen the stuff. Thanks for all suggestions. Will post what happens. ferg Quote
Members Somawas Posted September 3, 2010 Members Report Posted September 3, 2010 I don't think you can get rubber cement off the back. Maybe contact cement the liner over it. Quote
Contributing Member Ferg Posted September 3, 2010 Author Contributing Member Report Posted September 3, 2010 I don't think you can get rubber cement off the back. Maybe contact cement the liner over it. I thought of that also, I don't think they are compatible. We have glued up thousands of feet of laminate with contact cement and it is a breed all it's own. Thanks, ferg Quote
King's X Posted September 3, 2010 Report Posted September 3, 2010 Have you tried a "gum" easer? It works for me. Also, try some Emery cloth sand paper you can find at wally mart in the automotive section. It will take it off, but be care full. Good luck Quote Greetings from Central Texas! The Grain Side Up blog #TheGrainSideUp
Contributing Member Ferg Posted September 4, 2010 Author Contributing Member Report Posted September 4, 2010 Have you tried a "gum" easer? It works for me. Also, try some Emery cloth sand paper you can find at wally mart in the automotive section. It will take it off, but be care full. Good luck Never thought of the gum eraser, I will try that. Thanks, ferg Quote
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