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[It's not a 'programming question' by the normal definition, but there's no Management SO trilogy site .. yet, and it's about programming from a meta POV]

We've previously used electrical tape and painters tape to create our story board but both will remove paint when (re)moved. We've just had the office painted and I'd prefer to find a tape with the adhesive properties of a Post-it note.

So I ask for the collective wisdom of programmers and their leaders: does such a product exist?

I've asked 3M (owners of Post-it) if they have a product, and I'll report back here when (if) I get an answer.

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There are different types of painter's tape - some of them are designed to have extremely low stickiness. – Andrew Hare Oct 19 at 23:06
use blue light-duty painter's tape - the glue won't set for 14 days – Steven A. Lowe Oct 20 at 0:37
This is not appropriate for stack overflow. – cdiggins Oct 20 at 0:38
It's a pity this isn't considered 'appropriate for stack overflow'. There's no forum that I'm aware of for asking questions related to the environment a programmer works in, other than SO. – RickMeasham Oct 20 at 10:00

closed as not programming related by sth, Luke, Steven A. Lowe, James Black, Sinan Ünür Oct 20 at 3:15

3 Answers

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Look for low tack artist tape. Like 3M Scotch Brand Artist Tape - http://www.utrechtart.com/dsp%5Fview%5Fproduct.cfm?item=82999

Art supply store are a great place to look for misc stuff like this.

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Thanks for the tip, looks good. – RickMeasham Oct 20 at 9:59
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Why not get a metallic whiteboard or sheet of thin ferrous metal (which you can paint the same color as the rest of the office) and use magnets?

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no need to use magnets, tape etc comes of a whitebaord well – Ian Ringrose Oct 20 at 10:57
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Would something like masking tape work? This is used to mask areas that you do not want to paint when painting. There are different strengths, but you can get some masking tapes that have low adhesive and peel off easily without leaving marks.

An alternative is to have a large whiteboard put up and then use tape on the whiteboard instead of the wall. This gives the added benefit of also being able to annotate/draw on it.

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Unfortunately masking tape is too adhesive. Normal masking tape removes the paint after an hour of being on the wall and painters tape will do the same after a few weeks on some paint -- though that's currently the leading choice. – RickMeasham Oct 19 at 23:20
Why not make the outline of the storyboard a feature on the wall and leave it there permanently? You then only need to use post-it notes to fill in the details. – adrianbanks Oct 19 at 23:33

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