Features
- 【COLOUR】Each pack contains 9 different colored electrical tape - red, orange, black, white, brown, yellow, blue, grey, and green.
- 【EXCELLENT VALUE FOR MONEY】With every purchase you will receive a pack of 9 colors of colored electrical tape, each roll of colored electrical tape is 10 meters long and measures 19x18x1.8cm.
- 【VERSATILE APPLICATION】Electrical tape colors are suitable for indoor and outdoor use, wires and harnesses in the automotive industry, electrical insulation, and various other uses around the home, and electrical insulation protection. In life, electrical tape colors can be used to mark different items in different colors so that they can be easily identified when needed and can be removed from the packaging for quick use.
- 【 HIGH-QUALITY MATERIAL】Our colored electrical tapes are flame retardant, acid resistant, alkali resistant, UV resistant, oil resistant, abrasion resistant, and moisture resistant. Electrical tape has excellent adhesion but on top of that won't damage your items and will make you feel good value for money!
- 【PROFESSIONAL SERVICES】We are confident in offering a 100% satisfaction guarantee as we are sure you will be satisfied with our colored Electrical Tape. Please feel free to contact us if you have any questions about this product and we will resolve them for you within 24 hours!
Specifications
Color | RedOrangeBlac WhiteBrownYellowBlueGrayGreen |
Unit Count | 9 |
A pack of nine colored electrical tapes for insulation, wire identification, and general-purpose marking in domestic, commercial, and industrial settings. The pack contains nine colors: red, orange, black, white, brown, yellow, blue, grey and green, with each roll 10 meters long. The tapes are flame-retardant and resistant to UV, oil, water, acids, alkalis, abrasion and moisture, and feature an adhesive intended to hold securely without damaging surfaces.
Romeda 9 Pack Coloured Electrical Tape, Electrical Tape Colours Water, Sun, and Oil Resistant, Electrical Tape is Suitable for Most Domestic, Commercial, and Industrial environments. Review
A colorful, practical tape set that earns its keep
I put the Romeda tape set through several weeks of everyday use—on cables in my home office, wiring and fixtures in the workshop, a few outdoor labeling tasks, and a handful of craft and organizational jobs. It’s not trying to be a premium electrician’s vinyl for high-heat or mission-critical applications, but as a general-purpose, color-rich kit for identification and light insulation, it delivers good performance and strong value.
What you get
The set includes nine vinyl rolls in distinct colors: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, black, white, brown, and grey. Each roll is roughly 19 mm (3/4 in) wide and 10 meters long. That length is shorter than trade rolls, but the palette breadth more than makes up for it in day-to-day labeling and color-coding work. The cores are consistent, and every roll I used unwound cleanly without telescoping or blocking.
Handling and application
This tape feels like a medium-gauge vinyl with a modest stretch. It conforms well around cable jackets, small connectors, and the occasional odd-shaped handle or garden stake. It tears cleanly by hand when needed, though I usually prefer snips for square ends. The adhesive is a pressure-sensitive type that benefits from a firm rub-in and a small overlap on wraps. I didn’t notice a strong odor, and there was no plasticizer bloom on the rolls during testing.
On clean PVC cables and smooth plastic housings, adhesion was reliable. On powder-coated metal and painted drywall, it was fine for labeling and short-term marking. On rough or dusty surfaces, it’s less convincing unless you wipe down first. That’s normal for vinyl tape, but the difference here is noticeable—surface prep pays off.
Adhesion and durability
Adhesion strength sits in a middle lane: secure enough for bundling light harnesses, color-coding hand tools, and insulating minor joins, but not the bulldog grip you get from premium electrical tapes. That’s a trade-off I sometimes prefer for labeling since it makes removal tidier.
- Heat: On warm summer days in a garage (90–100°F / 32–38°C), the tape stayed put on cable jackets and tool handles. Over a couple of weeks, I saw a little edge lift on wraps that had been stretched hard around tight bends. Backing off the stretch and using a longer final lap reduced this.
- Cold: In a basement around 50°F (10°C), application was a bit stiffer, as expected. Warming the tape briefly in hand before wrapping brought back conformability.
- Moisture and oils: It shrugged off occasional splashes of water and a bit of motor oil on a tool handle without losing tack. On a lightly oiled surface that wasn’t wiped, adhesion predictably suffered; once cleaned, it stuck fine.
- UV/outdoors: I used green and yellow on garden stakes and irrigation markers for several weeks in direct sun. The colors remained bright and the wraps intact. I did see some edge flagging on stakes with a rough, splintered surface; sanding or choosing a smoother area fixed it.
Removal was generally clean on plastics and varnished wood. On unfinished wood, a faint adhesive trace remained after a couple of weeks, but it rolled off with a thumb or a little citrus cleaner.
Electrical use
For basic electrical tasks, it behaved as expected. I used it to insulate pigtail joins in low-voltage circuits, dress small harnesses, and mark conductors by color. The vinyl has enough stretch to create a snug wrap, and it layers smoothly without bunching. I wouldn’t use any general-purpose tape as a band-aid for damaged mains cords or high-heat engine-bay repairs; heat-shrink tubing, proper splicing materials, or higher-temperature-rated vinyl are better choices. But for identification, bundling, and supplemental insulation in typical domestic and light commercial contexts, it’s well suited.
The manufacturer notes flame-retardant and chemical resistance properties. I didn’t perform destructive tests, but in normal shop use the tape didn’t soften under mild solvents or household alkaline cleaners, and it didn’t show chalking or brittleness after indoor UV exposure. As always, follow local electrical codes and use tape as part of a proper assembly, not as a substitute for appropriate connectors or splices.
Colors that work for real labeling
The nine-color spread is the star of this set. The hues are saturated and distinct enough that I could assign clear meanings: phase, neutral, ground, test status, tool ownership, irrigation zone, and so on. The white tape was especially useful for quick hand-written labels with a fine-tip permanent marker; ink stayed legible and didn’t smear after a short dry time. The blue and yellow popped on black cables for easy identification inside a rack. Being able to keep a consistent color vocabulary across the shop, office, and garden simplified my labeling habit more than I expected.
Where it shines beyond wiring
- Tool and parts organization: Color-coded hex keys, sockets, and adapters stayed easy to spot and sort. The tape endured handling without scuffing off.
- Temporary fixes and marking: Tagging camera batteries and chargers, labeling moving boxes, and marking test prototypes were straightforward and residue-light.
- Hobby and craft: Wrapping pen barrels, flagging tripods, and creating clean edges in simple craft projects worked fine. The stretch helps create neat bands without wrinkles.
Limitations to keep in mind
- Not a permanent outdoor fix: For long-term outdoor wraps on rough materials, edges can lift over time. A smoother base surface, more overlap, and a finishing wrap of a stronger tape or heat-shrink improve longevity.
- Moderate adhesive: If you need maximum stick on textured surfaces or in high-heat areas, a premium tape (e.g., pro-grade vinyl rated for higher temperatures) will outperform it.
- Shorter roll length: At 10 meters per color, heavy users will chew through favorites quickly. The trade-off is breadth of color without buying multiple bulk rolls.
These aren’t faults so much as boundaries of the category and price point, but they’re worth noting to pick the right jobs.
Tips for best results
- Clean first: A quick wipe with isopropyl alcohol noticeably improves adhesion on plastics and metals.
- Don’t over-stretch: Stretch lightly for conformability, then finish the last wrap with minimal tension to reduce edge lift.
- Overlap smartly: A 50% overlap on insulation wraps yields a uniform, durable layer.
- Press and hold: Burnish the final lap for a few seconds to help the adhesive flow and set.
- Choose the right medium: For long-term, high-heat, or structural bundling, use heat-shrink tubing, cable ties, or a higher-spec vinyl.
Value and who it’s for
This set is about versatility and clarity. Nine distinct colors let you build a consistent marking system across multiple spaces, and the rolls handle the typical rotation of home, office, workshop, and hobby tasks without fuss. If you’re an electrician working daily in hot mechanical rooms or industrial environments, you’ll want a heavier, higher-temp-rated tape as your primary. If you’re a homeowner, maker, IT tech, teacher, or anyone who benefits from quick, readable labeling and light insulation jobs, this pack makes a lot of sense.
Recommendation
I recommend the Romeda tape set for general-purpose electrical identification, light insulation, and everyday organization where a broad, vivid color palette is more important than industrial-grade adhesion. It handles clean surfaces well, removes without drama, and stands up to typical household moisture and sunlight. For long-term outdoor wraps on rough materials or high-heat environments, step up to a premium vinyl or use heat-shrink; for most daily tasks, this set is practical, tidy, and cost-effective.
Project Ideas
Business
DIY tape craft kits (online retail)
Assemble themed kits (furniture stripe kit, jewelry kit, wall mural kit) including tape rolls, templates, instructions and basic tools. Sell one‑off kits or a subscription box with new project ideas each month to crafters and renters who want low‑commitment decor solutions.
Small‑business cable‑labeling service
Offer a mobile service to organize and color‑code cables for offices, studios, cafes and event venues. Provide a standardized color key, laminated maps/photos of installations, and a maintenance pack (extra tape rolls) so clients can keep things tidy.
Upcycled furniture pop‑up shop
Launch a seasonal line of inexpensive upcycled furniture and homewares transformed with tape art. Low material cost and quick turnaround make this ideal for markets, consignment stores, or social media flash sales — emphasize repeatable collections and custom orders.
Workshops, parties and corporate team builds
Host beginner classes teaching tape crafting (wall art, jewelry, organizers) at community centers, craft fairs or corporate team‑building events. Provide all materials and charge per participant or offer private bookings for events and kids' parties.
Event branding and short‑term decor service
Use tape to produce fast, removable event graphics: photo‑booth backdrops, branded table accents, signage and directional markings. The tape's durability and removability make it ideal for pop‑ups, product launches and festivals where quick install and teardown matter.
Creative
Color‑blocked furniture makeovers
Use the tape to create bold stripes, checkerboards or color‑blocked panels on tables, drawers and chair legs. The tape's UV, oil and moisture resistance makes these makeovers durable for indoor and outdoor furniture; designs can be changed later without sanding or paint.
Geometric wall murals & removable art
Design large geometric murals or temporary accent walls by applying crisp tape lines directly to painted surfaces. Great for rentals or seasonal decor — remove cleanly and reposition colors to refresh a room without paint fumes.
Tape jewelry and accessory range
Make bracelets, cuff rings, phone skins, watch bands and wallet embellishments by layering and folding tape on lightweight bases (leather, fabric, thin wood). The flame‑retardant, abrasion‑resistant finish gives a polished, resilient look that photographs well for markets or Etsy.
Stylish cable management & tech organizers
Create color‑coded cable bundles, braided cord sleeves, and labeled power strips for home studios. Use distinct colors for device types and add small tape flag labels at connector ends for quick identification — both functional and visually tidy.
Outdoor garden markers & durable labels
Wrap tape around stakes, plant labels, garden tools and hose connectors to create weatherproof, color‑coded markers. Because the tape is acid/alkali and moisture resistant, labels last through watering and sun exposure.