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Removing Vinyl?

124K views 35 replies 26 participants last post by  mrvixx  
#1 ·
This is kind of an unusual request, but I just had a customer ask me if there is any way to remove vinyl from their shirts. They are a baseball team and had their sponsor put on the back of their uniforms. Evidently the deal went bad with the sponsor and they do not want it on their jerseys any more. He told me somebody told him that some kind of chemical exists that will remove the vinyl, but I've never heard of anything. Do any of you know of anything.
 
#2 ·
This is kind of an unusual request, but I just had a customer ask me if there is any way to remove vinyl from their shirts. They are a baseball team and had their sponsor put on the back of their uniforms. Evidently the deal went bad with the sponsor and they do not want it on their jerseys any more. He told me somebody told him that some kind of chemical exists that will remove the vinyl, but I've never heard of anything. Do any of you know of anything.
Stahls carries a chemical to do this or you can stop by your local hardware store and ask for an acetone based solvent. Apply lightly to the inside of the shirt where the letters are...Use a spray bottle or a cotton swab. Let sit for a few minutes and then the letters should peel off. It will leave a adhesive residue and a smell (so use in a well ventilated area). The residue should come out in the first wash.
 
#26 ·
Stahls carries a chemical to do this or you can stop by your local hardware store and ask for an acetone based solvent. Apply lightly to the inside of the shirt where the letters are...Use a spray bottle or a cotton swab. Let sit for a few minutes and then the letters should peel off. It will leave a adhesive residue and a smell (so use in a well ventilated area). The residue should come out in the first wash.
I was curious about this also. What if its been longer than 48 hours that the vinyl was pressed on the garment? I'm making jerseys and noticed that in a few area there were pieces of vinyl that were overlooked during the weeding process. I tried fingernail polish removal and nothing happened.
 
#7 ·
I had never thought about this before, but this really is good to know, assuming the vinyl can be taken off successfully without leaving any trace. For example, just yesterday I had a girl tell me she was mad because she went to another shirt shop and had them put her name on the back of her hoodie, and they put it right under the hood where nobody can see it. So I could tell her that we can take that off and put it in a better spot.
Or also if we have any vinyl that is coming off of a shirt, we could take it all off with the acetone and redo the vinyl without replacing the shirt. That could be very helpful. Thanks!
 
#9 ·
Actually, yes, I did just recently try to remove some vinyl. I bought a can of Acetone from Home Depot. I started out dabbing it on the back, and then put quite a bit on it. I was able to peel the vinyl off, but it was not very easy at all, and if I had done it all, it would have taken a LONG time. And it left a cloudy residue on the shirt. I was hoping it would come out in the wash like Josh suggested, but it didn't. So the answer is No, I was not able to remove vinyl successfully. I tried it on 2 different shirts, one with SpectraCut II and one with SportFilm, and neither came off cleanly.

If anybody else has had any luck, please let us know.

Rusty
 
#13 ·
acetone is a comon finger nail polish remover...
I don't have experience on this (nail polish and removing transfers ;-)) but I would like to remember that dealing with solvents can damage the cloth if it has some kind of syntetic component (even small percentages), same caution applies to long exposure to "high" temperatures, you have to do some trials (and errors) to find out if this task is feasable, or worthwhile.
 
#15 ·
Rusty, I've not used the spray as I don't have the plotter/cutter yet but according to the supplier's information you spray the back of the garment, this loosens the adhesive allowing the garment vinyl to be peeled off.

Jim
 
#16 ·
Rusty, I've not used the spray as I don't have the plotter/cutter yet but according to the supplier's information you spray the back of the garment, this loosens the adhesive allowing the garment vinyl to be peeled off.

Jim
If you ever get a chance to try it out, and it works, please let us know.

Thanks,
Rusty
 
#18 ·
I hate to suggest this as it is a NASTY chemical but its methaline chloride.Stahls sells it and you must read the MSDS sheet that comes with it.You dab it on and within a minute the vinyl bubbles and pulls off.It will leave a adhesive residue but you can blast it out with a spray-out solvent like albatross SPIF.SPIF 2 will not work.The first one has a little methaline chloride in it.
 
#22 ·
If the vinyl to be removed is not large, and you have a iron-on vinyl that matches the shirt color, I have simply scissor cut a rectangle piece of iron-on vinyl to cover the offending message, and/or name, and printed a new name/message on the rectangle vinyl. Nobody has ever complained about this "fix" coming off in the wash.
Smith
 
#24 ·
Hey METHYLENE CHLORIDE Works Great, It smells so use it in a well ventilated area and where gloves but the stuff is amazing, at times you will still see some slight ghosting of the old image but it usually comes out when you heat press the new image on wor when you wash it out, I had a customer send me a layout,that they wanted after all the shirts where done they realized they mispelleda name.. paint in the but but was worth the time to just remove the one name then having to redo all the shirts .
 
#27 ·
We've used some plastisol remover we picked up to clean up some screen printed items that a previous vendor had screwed up.

Found out the just a small amount applied to the vinyl side (not the adhesive side) would bubble the vinyl and let you remove it very easily.

We normally washed the garment before re-applying new vinyl. We save a football jersey this way where we were given the wrong name and number for the player.
 
#31 ·
I removed a vinyl heat press shirt number from my son's football shirt by turning it outside in, placed a clean dry dish towel inside to stop anything soaking though to the other side of the shirt, lay on a flat surface and soaked the area with Acetone (not nail polish remover) pure undiluted Acetone, any hardware store, chemist, supermarket etc sells it, as it is regarded as a general household solvent, and costs about 1 or 2 pounds?, I then pulled the soaked number area stretching back and forwards to loosen vinyl, after about 5 mins the vinyl number peeled off no problem, however I was left with a glue residue in the shape of the number??, well I turned shirt inside out again, placed in a plastic bag and put in the freezer for 24hrs, the cold freezes the glue making it brittle, after 24hrs I took the shirt and lay it on a flat surface and with a blunt butter knife (or something similar) and scrapped off the glue residue while it was still frozen, only took a couple of attempts but worked a treat if your patient and persevere.

Sam