Tissue double sided tape
- Common thickness: 70um-160um
- Carrier: lightweight tissue paper
- Adhesive: acrylic, hot melt, or rubber PSA
- Color: translucent tape with white or yellow liner
- Formats: jumbo roll, log roll, slit roll, die-cut parts
- Use: paper, plastic film, foam, label bonding
Double Stick Tape Company is a manufacturer of Tissue double sided tape for thin bonding, label backing, foam insert fixing, roll converting, and die-cut adhesive parts. This tissue carrier double sided tape uses a lightweight paper carrier coated with pressure-sensitive adhesive on both sides and protected by a controlled release liner. It is suitable for low-profile bonding work where slitting stability, liner peeling, clean edges, and 24-72h sample validation need to be checked before mass production.
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Product Overview
Tissue double sided tape is used when the adhesive layer must stay thin, flexible, and easy to process. It does not behave like a thick mounting tape. Its value comes from the tissue carrier, which gives the adhesive enough internal support for rewinding, slitting, lamination, and kiss cutting, while keeping the finished bond line low and neat.
A typical construction includes a 10um-20um tissue carrier, adhesive coating of about 30um-70um per side, and an 80um-120um release paper liner. Total thickness is usually 70um-160um, depending on adhesive grade, liner choice, and the surface being bonded. For paper board, PET film, PP film, foam skin, and coated label stock, we normally check initial tack, 180-degree peel strength, edge lifting, and dwell performance after 24-72h.
This double coated tissue tape can be supplied as log rolls for secondary converting, narrow slit roll double sided tape for line-side placement, or die cut adhesive parts for manual pick-and-place assembly. In actual converting work, the release liner matters as much as the adhesive. If the liner releases too tightly, it may tear during peeling. If it releases too easily, small adhesive parts may shift during matrix stripping, kiss cutting, or pickup.
Benefits
- Creates a thin bonding line behind paper tabs, plastic overlays, foam inserts, and label layers.
- Tissue carrier helps the adhesive keep shape during slitting, rewinding, lamination, and die cutting.
- Supports jumbo roll, log roll, narrow slit roll, sheet, and die-cut part conversion.
- Release liner helps control peeling, part placement, liner tracking, and manual handling.
- Adhesive grade can be selected according to paper dust, plastic surface energy, foam skin texture, and label coating.
- Helps reduce visible edge build-up where a thicker mounting tape would be too noticeable.
- Production checks can include edge ooze, telescoping, liner shift, burr condition, and adhesive lifting.
- 24-72h dwell testing helps confirm initial tack, final bond strength, edge lifting, and adhesive transfer before mass production.
What should be checked before using tissue double sided tape for slit rolls or die-cut parts?
Before converting tissue double sided tape into slit rolls or die-cut parts, the release liner and adhesive layer should be tested together. For narrow slit rolls, check edge ooze, telescoping, liner tracking, burr condition, and adhesive lifting after rewinding. For die-cut parts, test matrix removal, part spacing, part pickup, and whether the thin tissue carrier keeps the adhesive shape stable after kiss cutting. The same tape may perform differently on dusty paper, coated label stock, PET film, PP film, or textured foam, so testing on the real substrate is more reliable than judging only from standard peel data.
Product Production

TDS
Item | Typical Value |
Product type | Tissue carrier double sided tape |
Carrier material | Lightweight tissue paper / non-woven paper |
Total thickness | 70um-160um typical |
Tissue carrier thickness | 10um-20um typical |
Adhesive coating | 30um-70um per side, depending on grade |
Adhesive system | Acrylic PSA, hot melt PSA, or rubber PSA |
Release liner | White release paper, yellow glassine, or PE-coated paper |
Release liner thickness | 80um-120um typical |
180-degree peel adhesion | Tested on stainless steel, paper board, PET film, PP film, and foam surface |
Static shear | Checked after 24h dwell at room temperature |
Liner release force | Smooth peel, no liner tearing, no adhesive lifting |
Slitting observation | Edge ooze, liner shift, telescoping, and burr condition checked |
Die-cutting behavior | Matrix stripping, part pickup, edge stability, and adhesive transfer checked |
Application temperature | 15 C-40 C recommended for bonding |
Heat resistance | 60 C-100 C typical, depending on adhesive grade |
Sample validation | 24-72h dwell test before mass production |
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Applications
- Label backing where a thin bonding tape must stay hidden under the facestock.
- Foam insert fixing for lightweight pads, separators, cushioning strips, and small assembly pieces.
- Paper tab bonding for display cards, folders, sample books, and packaging inserts.
- Plastic film overlay positioning on PET, PP, coated film, or printed film surfaces.
- Small die cut adhesive parts for manual placement, kiss-cut sheets, and pick-and-place assembly.
- Narrow slit rolls for line-side bonding where clean unwinding and roll tracking are important.
- Paper-to-film or label-to-foam lamination where edge thickness must stay controlled.
- Temporary placement before final lamination, stitching, pressing, or light assembly work.
How does a tissue carrier help create a thin bonding line for paper, plastic, foam, and labels?
The tissue carrier gives the adhesive layer enough support for slitting, lamination, and die cutting, while still keeping the bond line thin and flexible. This helps when the adhesive needs to stay hidden behind label layers, paper tabs, plastic film overlays, or foam inserts without adding visible thickness at the edge. The final adhesive grade should still be checked on the real material because coated paper, low-surface-energy plastic, open-cell foam, and label facestock can show different tack, liner peel, and dwell-time results.
FAQ
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Is this tape suitable for narrow slit rolls?
Yes. It can be slit into narrow rolls, but liner tracking, edge ooze, telescoping, and rewinding tension should be checked.
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Can it be made into die-cut adhesive parts?
Yes. The tissue carrier helps small parts keep shape during kiss cutting, matrix stripping, and pickup.
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Which adhesive grade should be selected?
It depends on the substrate. Paper dust, plastic surface energy, foam skin texture, and label coating all affect adhesion.
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Why is sample testing needed before mass production?
A 24-72h dwell test helps confirm initial tack, liner peel, edge lifting, adhesive transfer, and final bond stability.












