*BIG WARNING to other shellac users, based on this experience I would 
highly recommend only using clear shellac on anything painted*

as stated in earlier post, the cotton tape, twine, adhesive gunk, all came 
off, with flakes and chunks of shellac coming off as well.

what i am now left with is a smooth as glass surface that looks like the 
photo i posted, pretty positive this is stained clearcoat

i have read some success from other car/bike forums using; polishing 
compounds, and/or very fine sandpaper 2000-5000 grit, and/or magic eraser. 

i'm going to start with the suggestions for least invasive/abrasive first, 
and see how far i get. testing inside of chainstay first

another mystery to me; some rogue splatters of amber shellac came off, with 
no stain underneath, i believe the newbaums was dark red, maybe a reaction 
of the fabric dye+shellac+clearcoat? the adhesive backing seemed to protect 
the paint.

updates to come once i try some more removal methods



On Sunday, April 12, 2026 at 9:13:18 PM UTC-7 Guy Jett wrote:

> Alcohol is the solvent of choice for shellac.  It's what you use to thin 
> shellac or to create a liquid by adding to shellac crystals.  That is also 
> why a cocktail spill on a shellacked table top will damage the finish!
>
> Try a small bit of alcohol on a cotton swab on the paint but I couldn't 
> imagine alcohol damaging the paint.  Also put a drop onto the cotton tape 
> -- it should become slightly sticky.  If not then something other than 
> shellac was used and you've got larger problems.  
>
> If both tests pass then soak the cotton tape with the alcohol and unwrap.  
> Finish up by wiping the tubes with an alcohol dampened rag until all traces 
> of the shellac are removed.
>
> Note that I have never tried this on a bicycle, but I have successfully 
> restored many pieces of furniture with a shellac-linseed oil finish (a 
> "French Polish") over the years.
>
> On Sun, Apr 12, 2026 at 9:32 AM Brent Eastman <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
>
>> heya,
>>
>> i just bought a pre owned clem frame and there are some areas of the 
>> frame wrapped with cotton tape and shellac (top tube curve and chainstay). 
>> I'd like to start fresh on this build and i am afraid of messing with the 
>> paint during removal. 
>>
>> anyone done this successfully? is it easy? risky?
>>
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