The invention relates to an embossed decoration provided with an attachment enabling it to be fixed to a part.
It is known to fabricate index times in the form of appliqués, that is to say solid parts that are machined and then attached to the dial for example by riveting the feet of each appliqué into the body of the dial.
The necessary individual fabrication of such appliqués is complicated in particular because of the difficulties of colouring and finishing the visible faces.
The aim of the present invention is to alleviate some or all of the disadvantages cited above by proposing a method of fabrication that can be automated, uses less material, makes possible a greater variety of materials whilst guaranteeing colours and a finish adapted to reduce the reject rate.
To this end, the invention relates to a method of fabricating a decoration provided with an attachment including the following steps:
It is therefore clear that the method allows the fabrication of an embossed decoration provided with at least one attachment the envelope of which forms a material “skin”, that is to say a predetermined thickness of material, the rest of the volume being empty of said material, which enables very significant reduction of the cost of the material and the weight of the decoration.
It is therefore possible, for example, to fabricate an appliqué the visible embossed surface of which is based on a precious metal, such as gold, whilst limiting its intrinsic cost by using the material based on a precious metal only for the thickness of the envelope and not for the entirety of the decoration.
Moreover, in accordance with the invention the material used for said at least one attachment may advantageously be totally independent of the material used for the envelope. It is therefore possible, for example, to fabricate an attachment in a more usual metal such as brass or polymer material enabling varied shaping.
Finally, the method including fewer steps, it can be automated, that is to say that fabrication may be partly or totally carried out with the aid of automata in order to reduce the cost of the decorations.
According to other advantageous variants of the invention:
Other particular features and advantages will emerge clearly from the following description thereof given by way of nonlimiting illustration with reference to the appended drawings, in which:
The invention relates to a method of fabricating an embossed decoration provided with an attachment able, for example, to form all or part of a bezel, a dial, an appliqué or a hand of a timepiece. In fact, for reasons of aesthetics and durability, these decorations are generally produced from materials that are relatively insensitive to the oxidizing atmosphere of the air. It is relatively frequent in top of the range timepieces that the index hours, the dial or the hands are formed from precious metals, such as gold, which makes the casing of the timepieces very costly.
With the aim of making decorations more affordable even when based on precious metals, the present method includes a first step a) intended to form an envelope of material the external surface SE of which forms the visible embossed part of the decoration.
It is therefore clear that the decoration includes an embossed envelope that forms a “skin” of material, that is to say a predetermined thickness of material, the rest of the volume being empty of said material, which enables very significant reduction of the cost of the material and the mass of the decoration. It is therefore possible, for example, to fabricate an appliqué the visible embossed surface of which is based on a precious metal, such as gold, whilst limiting its intrinsic cost by using the material based on a precious metal only for the thickness of the envelope and not for the whole of the decoration.
In a first embodiment, the first step a) may include a first phase a1) intended to form an imprint 3 of said decoration in a substrate 1 as can be seen in
In the first embodiment, step a) continues with a second phase a2) intended to cover the imprint 3 with a layer 7 of material intended to form the envelope 9 of the future decoration. The layer 7 of material may, for example, be deposited by galvanic growth, by physical vapour phase deposition (PVD), by chemical vapour phase deposition (CVD), by atomic layer deposition (ALD) or by any other additive method.
As shown in
As shown in
Of course, depending on the deposition method, the layer 7 may be deposited on all or part of the upper surface of the substrate 1 and at least in such a manner as to cover without necessarily completely filling the imprint 3 of the future decoration 15.
In a nonlimiting manner, the example from
Of course, as explained above, types of deposition other than galvanic growth may be used. Moreover, it is instead equally possible to deposit the layer 7 directly and only in each imprint 3, that is to say to go directly from
For example, it is therefore possible to use a sacrificial layer not covering the imprint 3 which, after depositing the layer 7, will be removed leaving only the layer 7 in the imprint 3. This technique is known as “lift-off”. Another alternative technique may be to use a stencil mask on the trajectory of the material to be deposited, sometimes referred to as “stencil lithography”.
In a second embodiment, step a) includes a first phase a4) intended to provide a sheet of the material intended to form the envelope 9 of the decoration 15. The step could then continue with the second phase a5) intended to deform the sheet of material in such a manner as to form said material envelope. In a similar manner to the first embodiment, a plurality of different or identical envelopes 9 could be produced on the same sheet of material, i.e. the envelopes 9 could be mass produced. The film could equally and advantageously be used as a support.
For example, a sheet of amorphous metal alloy based on precious metals, such as based on palladium or platinum, may be employed. In fact, an amorphous metal alloy of this kind is easy to deform when it is heated between its glass transition temperature and its crystallization temperature. Moreover, it advantageously has a very high elastic limit enabling it to be particularly indicated for an application to a casing part.
Accordingly, in the case of an amorphous metal alloy, the second phase a5) could, for example, be conducted by stamping or by blow moulding.
Finally, in a third embodiment, the step a) includes a first phase a7) intended to form a mould for said decoration, for example using photolithography in order to form a plurality of levels of photosensitive resin structured according to the pattern of the future decoration. This third embodiment could be a positive alternative to the first embodiment, that is to say instead or creating an imprint 3 destructively, it is formed in an additive manner, for example by photolithography.
In the third embodiment, the step a) includes a second phase a8) intended to cover the material mould in order to form directly or indirectly the material envelope 9. In fact, depending on the shape of the decoration 15, either the mould is covered with the layer 7 of similar material to the first embodiment or the mould is filled to form a massive blank that is thereafter hollowed out to obtain the envelope 9 indirectly.
Regardless of the embodiment of the first step a), the method enables provision of an external surface SE of the envelope 9 that will have a colour and a finish that will depend on the method of deposition, the material deposited and the roughness of the substrate 1, the sheet or the mould, in a highly reproducible manner.
Regardless of the embodiment of the first step a), the method continues with the second step b) intended to mount at least one attachment 13 adapted for fixing the decoration 15 against the internal surface SI of the envelope 9.
According to the invention, the material used for said at least one attachment 13 may be totally independent of the material used for the envelope 9. It is therefore possible, for example, to fabricate an attachment 13 in a more usual metal such as brass or in polymer material enabling varied shaping without modifying either the colour or the finish of the external surface SE of the envelope 9.
In a first embodiment, the step b) includes a first phase b1) intended to form said at least one attachment 13 and then a second phase b2) intended to fasten said at least one attachment against the internal surface SI of the envelope 9 formed during the step a) as shown in
Phase b1) in accordance with the invention may advantageously be carried out by any preferred type of method. Indeed, because the attachment (or the attachments) provided is (or are) not dependent on the material chosen for the envelope 9, no restriction is to be endured as to the material of said at least one attachment 13 or as to the method of fabricating said at least one attachment 13.
For example,
Phase b2) according to the invention may advantageously be carried out using a plurality of types of preferred method. Indeed, according to the attachment (or the attachments) provided and the envelope 9 provided, a plurality of types of fastening may be envisaged. In a nonlimiting manner there may be envisaged gluing, welding or brazing each attachment 13 against the internal surface SI of the envelope 9.
The nonlimiting example of
Note that this advantage is preserved even for the other two embodiments of step a), that is to say respectively using the same sheet or the same mould.
In a second embodiment, step b) may instead include a phase b3) intended to fill the internal surface SI of the envelope 9 with a material forming said at least one attachment 13. Indeed, there may be imagined, for example, the injection of an adherent polymer material against the internal surface SI of the envelope 9 the injection stalk or stalks of which enable formation of said at least one attachment 13. Of course, said at least one attachment 13 may be obtained by using a matrix over the envelope 9 enabling a predetermined shape to be imparted to the injection.
Note therefore that the method includes fewer steps than the fabrication of a traditional appliqué. It is also immediately obvious that the use of the substrate 1, the sheet or the mould, respectively, renders the method automatable, that is to say that fabrication may be partially or totally carried out using automata in order to reduce the cost of the decorations 15.
In the nonlimiting example from
The decoration 15 further includes an attachment 13 fastened against the internal surface SI of the envelope 9 by means of a glue 11. Once fixed, for example by riveting it in the hole in a dial, the attachment 13 will be totally masked and only the external surface SE will remain visible without it being possible to distinguish the decor 15 from a traditional appliqué in terms of its colour and its finish.
Of course, the present invention is not limited to the example shown but lends itself to various modifications and variants that will be apparent to the person skilled in the art. In particular, at the end of step a), the envelope 9 could be removed from the substrate 1, the sheet or the mould before carrying out step b).
Moreover, the internal surface SI of the envelope 9 could equally include a shape, such as a groove or a rib, intended to improve the adhesion and/or the positioning of said at least one attachment.
Finally, in the case of a coating, as shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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16193773 | Oct 2016 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2017/074084 | 9/22/2017 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2018/069023 | 4/19/2018 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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3410699 | Peters | Nov 1968 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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201862 | Dec 1938 | CH |
260124 | Feb 1949 | CH |
60-235086 | Nov 1985 | JP |
2006-29976 | Feb 2006 | JP |
Entry |
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International Search Report dated Dec. 4, 2017 in PCT/EP2017/074084 filed Sep. 22, 2017. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20190210402 A1 | Jul 2019 | US |