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Oenophilia Label Lift - 50 Pack, Beer & Wine Bottle Label Remover

Free shipping on orders over $29.99

$24.99

$ 11 .99 $11.99

In Stock

About this item

  • REMOVE LABELS EASILY: These Clear label lifts removes wine labels easily from Wine Bottle, Champagne Bottle, Beer Bottle and more
  • NO SOAKING OR SCRAPING NEEDED: The Label Lift splits the Printed surface of the paper from the adhesive backing
  • GREAT GIFT IDEA: These Label lifts are a great gift idea for any wine or beer lover
  • 50 PACK: This includes 50 clear Oenophilia Label Lifts
  • GREAT TO SAVE AND STORE IN WINE DOSSIER BINDER: Creates a laminated label to place in your Oenophilia Wine Dossier Binder or any similar book to collect labels


Perfect for the wine lover or serious cellar master, this Oenophilia Label Lift offers a great way to remove and save your wine labels. Label Lift splits the printed surface of the paper from the adhesive backing leaving a laminated label to place into wine journals. Contents of this pack will remove 50 labels, and it makes a great gift.


Saskia Joosse
Reviewed in Singapore on May 20, 2023
These label removers worked perfectly for me, so much so that I have just ordered a few more packets as not all the brands actually work.
Andrea
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 13, 2022
I have tried several similar products. This is better than most of them.
P.H.
Reviewed in Singapore on February 26, 2021
There were only 30 sheets in the pack, not 50 as advertised. Will the seller please reply.
Customer
Reviewed in Canada on February 26, 2021
Easy to use and does the job.
Customer
Reviewed in Canada on December 22, 2020
Good quality wine label lift. Been using it for 3 years! Will continue to use them.
Nacky D Moose
Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2020
I have actually brought this item twice for my bottles and once as a gift so a friend's wife could get rid of bottles they were saving cause of the label.Full disclosure, I was terrible at doing this. I did a couple of practice labels for bottles I didn't care about...it turned out badly. So I asked a friend who frankly has more patience and a better touch than I do to help me out. Holy cow, she is amazing at it. There are 50 labels in a box and I believe she has used 60-70 with zero "failures" or missed spots. She even successfully used one and three quarters of these things on a label that fully wrapped around horizontally. I will say, however, that we have both noticed that labels with a sort of metallic flake on top can definately be trickier since said flake is not necessairly permanently part of the label like an ink printing would be. So you need to really make sure you rub the label lift onto the non-flake part of the label to help trap the flake in place. Realistically, this is not a situation likely to come up a lot...more of an FYI.These also work on labels from other beverages such as Bacardi Rum Bottles and various Micro-Brews.If you don't want to lose the labels for some reason or another but also don't want a bunch of bottles taking up space, these are a great solution. Just remember to be patient and perhaps use something more pliable than a spoon but sturdier than a spatula. I'd reccomend one of those smoother things that come with cell phone screen protectors.
Brett F
Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2014
We bought a pack a couple weeks ago after reading some of the reviews and decided to give it a try. After some experimenting with technique in order to determine the best method for adhering the laminate to the labels, we think we found an adequate method for getting labels off the bottle.We first applied the laminate to the labels (one person holding the bottle flat on its side in place while the other ensured a flat application against the label on the bottle and no air bubbles) and instead of using a spoon as in the instructions, we rolled the bottles on a wooden cutting board to ensure the laminate was flat on the label. We then took a few of the bottles and used a hair dryer on high heat setting to heat the laminate on the label, hoping to activate and set the adhesive, for about a minute and rolled the bottles again. We let the laminate set on the labels overnight.The next day, we started with the labels that were blow-dried and were able to successfully remove and save 70% of the labels. We then moved to the non-blow-dried bottles and had a success rate of about 50%. We stopped pulling labels off of the non-blow-dried labels since we were not happy with the high failure rate and applied the blow-drying technique to these bottles. We then let them sit overnight again and tried the next day. Our success rate with these bottles was 95% successful removal. So we essentially apply the laminate, heat blow-dry, roll and wait two days and had reasonably good success.Other removal notes would be slowly removing the label lift initially to ensure that the edge of the label lifts from the bottle and does not tear. Once you start and continue to pull evenly, the label generally comes off of the bottle easily (unless there's an air bubble). If it starts to tear, either re-apply or use an exacto razor to get the edge started off the bottle. Also, working the label lift from the opposite side will also help if the first side starts to tear. Lift the label off at 90 degrees from the bottle and slowly spin the bottle. All labels are different so each one will come off differently. But overall, we're happy with the product and will order again.
Christopher Barrett
Reviewed in the United States on January 20, 2013
Here is what the issue is: some labels just don't work well with label removers. I peeled the label off several bottles just fine. Pride Vineyards wine? Just fine. Kistler however? Not so good. The heavier parchment style labels seem to split a little less evenly. I figure it is the fibrous nature of the parchment. But standard paper labels are a cinch.Follow the instructions. Apply the label remover evenly. I start at one side and press it down firmly as I turn the bottle slowly. Then use the back of a spoon to smooth the label, thereby increasing the adhesive strength. Then I wait 10 minutes or so for the adhesive to start drying. Then poof! Works pretty well. I then trim the label and stick it in a book. Voila!Just note: The labels will not come off perfectly most of the time. This is a great way of saving labels for those fun wine logs, but not something that will peel labels well enough for display. If you want to display labels, you can always contact the winery and offer to buy a couple of their extra labels in exchange for $$$. Some wineries will accommodate, others will probably say they don't have any. But if you call and say "I really loved this bottle, do you have a label I can buy so that I can frame it and display it" then I'm sure they will be nice.Note: I bought this pack for around $12 straight from Amazon with Prime shipping. Whole Foods sells the smaller pack for about $11 and it contains 10 removers. The math is simple. Buy the 50 pack. It's about $0.26 per label as opposed to $1 each in the retail pack.
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