Not applicable.
This invention relates to labels and methods of making labels.
Grocery store and other retail customers are known to make their purchasing decisions in three to seven seconds among different brands of the same product. An important attention-grabbing feature of the product is its labeling. Therefore, it is desirable for a manufacturer competing against manufacturers of the same general product to label their products in such a way as to attract the attention of the consumer.
It is known in labels to use techniques such as hot melt stamping to provide a reflective film to all or parts of a product label. In that type of a process, a web of metallic film is die cut and laminated onto the top surface of a base layer to produce the metallic or reflective portions on the label. For example, the features of a design or certain letters of a word may be die cut out of the metallized film and laminated to the top of the base sheet.
This process is relatively wasteful of metallic film material and also is so common that its attention-getting value is diluted. In addition, because the hot stamp graphics become flush with the top surface of the label, there is no depth or three-dimensional aspect to the label.
The present invention provides a label and method of constructing it in which a base label has a window die cut out of it in a particular shape and another layer of material is laminated to the back of the base layer over the cut-out window opening. The other material is preferably a metallic film so as to present a highly reflective, attention-getting surface in the area of the window. Since the other material laminated over the cut out is not flush with the top surface of the label, a sense of depth is given to the label as well.
In a preferred method of making labels of the invention, a swatch of the other material which is used to cover the window is adhered to the back side of the base label adjacent to the periphery of the window. The base label is larger than the swatch on all sides of the swatch so as to fully encapsulate the swatch between the base label and the product to which the base label is adhered, all the way around the swatch.
In another preferred aspect, the base label has a pressure sensitive adhesive covering its rear surface, and the pressure-sensitive adhesive of the base label laminates the swatch to the base label.
In a further desirable aspect, the base label stock, provided in roll form, with a continuous pressure-sensitive adhesive-backed base label carried on a continuous release liner has windows cut out in line and swatches applied over the windows, also in line. This is accomplished by separating the base label web from the release liner and placing individual swatches in registration over the previously cut out windows on the back of the base label web. After placing of the swatches, the same release liner or a different release liner is reapplied to the back of the base label web.
Preferably before, but possibly after, the cutting of the windows and placing of the swatches, the base label web can be printed with other graphics for the labels, and after placing of the swatches and reapplication of a release liner to the base web, individual labels are cut out from the base web and the waste matrix is removed.
The above described objects and advantages, and other objects and advantages, of the invention will be apparent from the following detailed description and from the drawings.
Referring to
The layer 18 is adhered to the back side of the layer 16 around the perimeter of the window 14. This can be accomplished with a separate adhesive which is pattern printed onto the swatch 18 or onto the back side of the layer 16, but is preferably accomplished by adhering the swatch 18 to the back side of the layer 16 by pressure-sensitive adhesive which is normally provided on and covers the entire area of the back side 20 of the layer 16. Also as is normal, a silicone release liner 22 is normally provided adhered to the pressure-sensitive adhesive on the back side 20 in strip form. When the label 10 is applied from the liner 22 to the product 12, the pressure sensitive adhesive on its back side, in the attachment area 21 which extends outwardly from the swatch 18 and is not covered by the swatch 18, adheres the label 13 to the product 12, at all areas of the label except where the swatch 18 is located.
Preferably, the sheet material 18 is a metallic or other highly reflective film or foil material.
Since the top surface of the sheet 18 is adhered to the bottom surface of the sheet 16, the edges of the window 14 remain exposed and the sheet 18 is actually behind the sheet 16. As such, the top surface of the sheet 18 is flush with the rear surface of the sheet 16 and is below the top surface of the sheet 16. This gives a depth effect to the label, particularly when a reflective surface is provided on the front surface of the layer 18, which is visible through the window 14.
Referring to
From station 38, the release liner 22 which is stripped from the continuous sheet 16 is fed to a stripping station 40 at which the “holes” 42 are stripped off and vacuumed up by a vacuum system pipe 44. The base label web 16 is directed to an applicator 48 which unrolls material for making the swatches 18 from a roll 50. If necessary, for example if pressure-sensitive base stock was not used, a glue applying station 52 could apply glue to the areas of the material 50 which become the swatches 18 in a pattern around the border. However, with the use of pressure-sensitive backed stock, the glue is typically not required to be applied by station 52 so this station normally goes unused.
The web 50 is next fed to a cutting station 54 at which lengths of the web 50 are cut off so as to create the individual rectangular swatches 18, shown in hidden lines in
Roller 60 brings the continuous base label 16 and the continuous release liner 22 back together, and turn bar 62 places the composite web back in the orientation with the base web 16 facing upward. Die cutting and stripping rollers 64 die cut the web 16 into individual labels, as shown in
Thereby, labels of the invention, including a window having exposed interior edges and covered on the back side by a second layer of material, is produced. Preferably, the second layer is sandwiched between the base label material and the release liner until the individual labels are delaminated from the release liner to be placed on product packages by the manufacturer of the products.
It is noted that
An alternate to the production line shown in
Applicators such as the applicator 48 are well-known and commercially available. For example, such applicators are commercially available from Tamarack of Waconda, Ill. 60084 and sold under the tradename “Vista” Patch Application System.
A preferred embodiment of the invention has been described in considerable detail. Many modifications and variations to the preferred embodiment described will be apparent to those skilled in the art. For example, at the cutting and stripping station 38, the cut of the window 14 could extend all the way through the base label layer 16 and also through the release liner 22 and the waste two-layer “holes” vacuumed out or otherwise disposed of at that location. Therefore, the invention should not be limited to the preferred embodiments described, but should be defined by the claims which follow.
This claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/297,379 filed Jun. 11, 2001.
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/US02/17903 | 6/7/2002 | WO | 00 | 12/5/2003 |
| Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| WO02/101694 | 12/19/2002 | WO | A |
| Number | Name | Date | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3921319 | Styers et al. | Nov 1975 | A |
| 5127675 | Moss | Jul 1992 | A |
| 5873607 | Waggoner | Feb 1999 | A |
| 6092843 | Peterson et al. | Jul 2000 | A |
| 20010025442 | Key | Oct 2001 | A1 |
| Number | Date | Country |
|---|---|---|
| 0065560 | Nov 2000 | WO |
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20040174012 A1 | Sep 2004 | US |
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 60297379 | Jun 2001 | US |