The present invention relates to labels, and more particularly to an expanded content label and a method for making the same.
Generally, an expanded content label is a label that provides an increased amount of printed information that can be included with a product or its packaging. ECLs increasingly are used to replace leaflets, booklets, manuals, tags and other materials otherwise packaged with products to provide information about those products.
A conventional ECL includes a multi-page booklet that is secured directly to the product or to a base label which is secured to the product. Information about the product is printed on or in the booklet. Different types of information about the product, for example warnings and use instructions, can be printed on different pages throughout the booklet. Additionally, information can be printed in different languages in different sections throughout the booklet so that the product can be distributed in countries where different languages are used, or to provide product information to a multilingual consumer base. In such multilingual ECL booklets, the first few pages of the booklet are printed with information in a first language, for example, English. The remaining pages are printed with identical information in a second language, for example, Spanish.
Although conventional ECLs can provide additional information and/or multilingual information, they suffer several shortcomings. As one example, to access certain information about a product, or to access information in a specific language, a user must thumb through multiple pages of the booklet to find the text that they require. This can be time consuming and something frustrating. As another example, some consumers may be offended when information in their language is printed in the last pages of the booklet, rather than on the first pages. This can alienate the consumer, and possibly prevent them from purchasing the associated products. As another example, some consumers desire to remove the information that is not in their preferred language from the ECL. Conventional ECLs fail to provide this feature, and therefore some users resort to tearing out excess information from the ECL. This can lead to damage of the ECL, or can render it aesthetically unappealing.
The aforementioned problems are overcome in the present invention wherein an expanded content label includes an expanded content device including a first panel, a second panel and an intermediate panel, and further defines an aperture. The intermediate panel is slidable relative to at least the second panel and accessible through the aperture. An overlaminate is secured to the expanded content device, and includes a margin with an adhesive thereon extending beyond a side of the expanded content device for optionally securing the expanded content device to an article or other label component.
In another embodiment, at least a portion of the intermediate panel is of a width that is less than a width of the aperture. The portion can slide through the aperture so that the intermediate panel is movable between a stored mode and an accessed mode. In the accessed mode, information optionally printed on the intermediate panel is exposed.
In a more specific embodiment, the expanded content label includes a base label to which the expanded content device is secured. The margin of the overlaminate can include an adhesive that secures the label to the base label. Additional margins can be supplied to provide additional securement to the base label.
A method for manufacturing the label is also provided. The method includes: cutting label material to form an aperture across at least a portion of a width of the material; cutting the material so that a portion is of a second width less the first width; folding the material to form a first panel, a second panel and intermediate panel, the intermediate panel positioned between the first panel and the second panel, the first panel and second panel connected by a fold line, the fold line being adjacent and/or near the aperture; cutting the second panel and the intermediate panel so that the intermediate panel is free to slide relative to the second panel. An optional step includes securing an overlaminate to the first panel and/or another portion of the expanded content device formed by the first panel, second panel and intermediate panel. Another optional step includes securing the expanded content device to a base label via a margin of the overlaminate extending beyond the expanded content device.
The present invention provides a simple and inexpensive expanded content label that readily provides multiple information fields that are easy to access and readily provide additional information. Where the information fields on the panels of the expanded content device are provided in different languages, products labeled with the present expanded content label are readily accepted in multilingual cultures and by multilingual consumer bases.
These and other objects, advantages and features of the invention will be more readily understood and appreciated by reference to the detailed description of the invention and the drawings.
I. Overview
A first embodiment of the expanded content label (ECL) of the present invention is illustrated in
As shown, the intermediate panel 62 is physically separated from the second panel 66 along the cut 40. The intermediate panel 62 thus is free to slide relative to the second panel 66 and/or first panel 64 to a stored mode (shown in broken lines) and to an accessed mode (shown in full lines). With this construction, the intermediate panel 62 can be accessed by a user to expose information field 34. In one example, the ECL information field 32 can include product instructions written in English, and the information field 34 can include identical instructions written in Spanish. With such an ECL, a Spanish-speaking user can easily find and access the information field 34.
As will be appreciated, multiple expanded content devices 14 can be included in a single expanded content label 10 to provide multiple, accessible intermediate panels and the information associated with the same. The expanded content devices can be offset so that a portion of one is above another, thereby providing a user with a view of, and access to, the multiple devices.
II. Construction
With reference to
The overlaminate 12 includes an adhesive 13 on its underside. The overlaminate is secured over the expanded content device 14 to secure it to the base label 16. More specifically, the overlaminate as shown extends beyond the sides of the expanded content device 14 at margins 22 and 26. In those margins, the adhesive 24 secures the overlaminate to the base layer 16. In this manner, the expanded content device is sandwiched between the base and the overlaminate. Optionally, the adhesive on the margins can be a releasable and/or resealable adhesive so that those portions can be easily removed from the base 16. The base can also optionally be coated with a release composition on one side corresponding to the location of one or both margins to facilitate release of the overlaminate from the base 16. Although the overlaminate as shown in the figures is transparent, it can be opaque or colored as desired. Furthermore, the dimensions of the overlaminate relative to the ECL can be altered as desired.
The expanded content device 14 shown in
With reference to
As shown by the arrows in
In the embodiment shown in
With further reference to
In use, a user can contact the intermediate panel 62 through the access recess 72, and slide that panel in the direction of the arrows to selectively view information field 34. Where the intermediate panel includes a base 68, that base acts as a stop to prevent intermediate panel 62 from being fully removed from the expanded content device. For example, the base 68 engages the portion of the panels 66 and 64 that extend beyond the aperture 70, and prevents the intermediate panel 62 from being withdrawn.
Additionally, where the ECL 10 includes a base label and a releasable overlaminate, a user can open the expanded content device relative to the base layer 16 and expose information fields 36, 38 and 39. This provides access to an amount of information.
III. Method of Manufacture
A method of manufacturing an embodiment of the ECL of the invention will now be described with reference to
The outlined expanded content device 14 is folded in step 104 with conventional machinery. Intermediate panel 62 is folded toward the second panel 66, and the first panel 64 is folded over the intermediate panel 62. Accordingly, the intermediate panel 62 is sandwiched between the first panel 64 and second panel 66.
In the folded configuration, the expanded content device 14 is applied with an adhesive 74 to a base 16. The base can be in the form of a continuous web and further secured to a release liner 80. In an alternative construction, the base layer 16 can be entirely absent such that the expanded content device 14 is secured directly to the release liner 80. The web 73, including the liner, base and expanded content devices, is advanced to an overlaminate applying station 106. There, overlaminate 12 is adhered over the expanded content device 14 to further secure it to the base 16.
At station 108, the overlaminate 12 and base label material 16 are cut to outline the footprint of individual ECLs 10. The waste matrix 107 is removed from the release liner 80. Additional cutting machinery 109 cuts the cut line 40 through the overlaminate 12, and at least the first panel 64 and intermediate panel 62 of the expanded content device 14. Accordingly, the intermediate panel 62 is freed from the second panel 66 so that it can be moved. The continuous web 73 can be wound into a spool for further distribution. Individual ECLs can be applied to articles from the web using conventional machinery.
The aforementioned process may be modified to accommodate various embodiments of the expanded content label contemplated by the present invention. One such alternative embodiment of the expanded content label is shown in
The above descriptions are those of the preferred embodiments of the invention. Various alterations and changes can be made without departing from the spirit and broader aspects of the invention as defined in the appended claims, which are to be interpreted in accordance with the principles of patent law including the doctrine of equivalents. Any references to claim elements in the singular, for example, using the articles “a,” “an,” “the,” or “said,” is not to be construed as limiting the element to the singular.