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(3) Smell mold (the digestive gas emitted by mold eating
home or building) and want to test a number of surfaces upon which elevated levels of airborne mold spores may have landed or been deposited, such as on walls, window sills, window and door trim, refrigerator top, kitchen cabinet tops, undusted furniture, heating/cooling duct registers, and
return air filter in
heating/cooling system.
The easy steps involved in tape lift sampling are---
1. Cut a three-inch (3”) long strip of one-inch (1”) wide, transparent sticky tape.
2. While wearing rubber gloves and a breathing respirator mask (with organic vapor filters) from
local hardware or home improvement store, press
tape strip firmly (sticky side down) onto
visible mold growth or onto
surface being tested.
3. Remove (peel back)
tape from
surface.
4. Open up a small ziplock bag (a transparent, easily sealable plastic storage bag), and press lightly
lift tape sample sticky side onto
inside sidewall of
ziplock bag.
5. Close [zip shut]
ziplock bag completely. Tape it shut if necessary to make sure no airborne mold spores can escape.
6. Attach to
outside of
ziplock bag a large adhesive label with
tester’s name, date of sampling, property address,
precise testing location at that address (e.g., “air conditioning duct register in living room”), testing method (“lift tape sampling”), and
name, postal address, email address, phone number, and fax number (if any} of
person submitting
sample to
mold laboratory.
7. Mail or express
collected lift tape samples (including payment of
lab’s analysis fee} to
mold analysis laboratory for mold species identification and quantification.
For more information about mold laboratory analysis and mold species identification, please visit---
http://www.moldlab.biz http://www.moldinspector.com http://www.certifiedmoldinspectors.com http://www.moldmart.net

Certified Mold Inspector, and author of the books Mold Health Guide and Mold Legal Guide.