Richard Gurley Drew’s Roll of Scotch Tape

Origin
Richard Gurley Drew (1899 - 1980) was an American inventor who worked for 3M in St. Paul, Minnesota, where he invented masking tape and cellophane tape. While working on sandpaper in 1920 Drew was studying why two-tone auto paint jobs, popularized in the Roaring Twenties, were difficult to manage at the border between the two colors. Two years later he invented the first masking tape, a two-inch-wide tan paper strip backed with a light, pressure-sensitive adhesive. The first draft of the tape didn't include adhesive in the middle but just on the sides, when it fell off the rest was added to improve the masking tape and in 1930 it was completed.

Effects
Extraordinary strength

When used to tape a steel pipe to the ground no one was able to pick it up until the tape was removed.

Collection
If the area the (used) tape is in gets too cold the tape will vanish and the item will be permanently stuck. Can be removed using neutralizer however if it has vanished the neutralizer has no effect.