This invention relates to multiple ply paper products and their manufacture. In particular aspects, the invention relates to multiple ply card products such as business cards.
It is desirable to produce multiple ply papers of high quality, particularly for business card design. It is particularly desirable to be able to produce papers of this type which can be printed effectively with a digital press (for example, one of the digital presses in the HP Indigo product family). Conventional processes can be used for printing business cards on a digital press, but high quality multiple ply papers cannot be handled effectively in a conventional digital press. Other printing technologies consequently have to be used to print to such papers, so the many processing advantages of a digital press (high speed at high quality with sheet-to-sheet customisation) cannot be used in creating business cards on such papers.
Accordingly the invention provides a method of producing a printed multiple ply paper comprising providing a first paper stock having a first surface and a second surface, applying a pressure activated adhesive to the second surface, printing upon the first surface, and bringing together two portions of the second surface under pressure in registration to form a multiple ply product.
In a particularly preferred arrangement, the step of printing upon the first surface comprises printing, separately, on a first sheet of the paper stock and a second sheet of the paper stock, and the step of bringing together the two portions of the second surface under pressure in registration comprises bonding the second surfaces of the first sheet and the second sheet. This is particularly effective as an approach for printing a stack of multiple ply sheets. This approach can be used to print a stack of first sheets and second sheets in sequence, such that on bringing together the two portions of the second surface under pressure in registration the second surfaces of each first sheet and its corresponding second sheet are bonded together to form a stack of bonded sheets.
This approach is particularly effective for preparing a stack of business cards. A plurality of discrete card stacks can be formed by the following approach. Each first surface is divided into a plurality of discrete card stack areas, and wherein after formation of the stack of bonded sheets the discrete card stack areas are separated to form a plurality of discrete card stacks.
Preferably the first paper stock is a duplex stock, preferably with one layer of the duplex stock having one colour and the other layer having another colour. This method is particularly appropriate for the production of business cards. For example, if the layer providing the first surface is white and the layer providing the second surface is coloured, then the method can be used to produce a business card with a coloured stripe effect.
Preferably, printing said first surface comprises printing on the first surface in a digital press. Where a stack of sheets is to be formed from separately printed sheets, preferably printing said first surface comprises printing in a duplex mode, such that printed content is printed on the first surface and no content is printed on the second surface.
It is particularly preferred that the pressure activated adhesive is activated at a pressure of 300 psi or greater. When a digital press is used, this activation pressure is sufficiently high to ensure that activation will not occur during paper handling or printing within the digital press itself.
In another aspect, the invention provides a multiple ply paper article comprising a first paper stock and a second paper stock, wherein both the first paper stock and the second paper stock have a first printed surface and a second adhesive surface, wherein the second adhesive surface has a pressure activated adhesive applied thereto, and whereby the first paper stock and the second paper stock are bonded together in registration by their respective second adhesive surfaces. Preferably the multiple ply paper article is a business card, or a sheet comprising a plurality of business cards.
Specific embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, of which:
The remaining elements are here provided at a printing facility 25. A printer 26 (for example, an HP Indigo digital printer) prints on the glueless paper surface and produces a stack of printed paper. A registration device 27 is used to bring the sheets into stack into proper registration with each other, and a press 28 is used to apply pressure and so bond the two ply sheets into four ply sheets. The bonded sheets are then fed into a cutting and packaging apparatus 29 which cuts the bonded sheets into the desired end product and organises and packs them appropriately. The printer 26 and cutting and packaging apparatus 29 may for example be comprised in a system adapted to produce business cards according to the applicant's “Printfinity” process, as described in the applicant's earlier WO 2007/129102. The organisation of printed content may be determined by processes indicated in WO 2007/129102 by appropriate software applications running on suitable servers and clients—represented generically here by computer 30 and network connection to the printer 26 and cutting and packaging apparatus 29.
In step 31, two paper plies are formed by conventional processes—in this case, these two plies are a white ply 311 and a coloured ply 312 (though there is no particular functional significance to the use of white and coloured plies—these are described here because the combination creates a desirable product type). In step 32, as also shown in
In step 33, as also shown in
This approach is needed as the four ply QuadPlex product is too thick to be fed through a conventional digital press for printing. The approach taught here, in which the front face and the rear face of the product are printed separately, with the other faces of each product half glued together, allows products of this type to be produced without modification to a conventional digital press. A prior art approach is known for producing a postcard product—as described at http://www.convertiblesolutions.com/products/fold-n-go/double-thick-impact-card, this approach uses a single printed sheet which is then folded at a perforation line—but this does not provide the degree of registration required for a high quality business card product and constrains the available post-processing of the assembled paper.
In step 34, as shown in
In step 35, the printed duplex stock is brought into registration, as is also shown in
If the pressure sensitive glue is only activated above a certain pressure threshold (say 300 psi—there are suitable pressure sensitive glues activated at this pressure), then digital printing can take place effectively if pressures experienced by a sheet in the printing process are sufficiently far below the pressure threshold that the glue on the sheet will not be activated. This is the case for a conventional digital press.
For some embodiments of the invention, this will be the final step, as the finished product will be formed after the QuadPlex paper is assembled. However, in other embodiments there will be further post-processing steps, as the result of the assembly step 36 is to produce a stack of QuadPlex sheets. These may for example be separable into separate stacks of business card products using the
Printfinity process described in WO 2007/129102—the printed content is organised over all the QuadPlex sheets in a stack so that, as shown in
As the person skilled in the art will appreciate, many modifications and variations may be made to the embodiments described here while remaining within the scope of the invention as claimed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1117544.5 | Oct 2011 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/GB2012/000786 | 10/11/2012 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2013/054081 | 4/18/2013 | WO | A |
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5098129 | Haber | Mar 1992 | A |
5229190 | Clement et al. | Jul 1993 | A |
5529345 | Kohls | Jun 1996 | A |
6235139 | Vichinsky, Jr. | May 2001 | B1 |
20030141373 | Lasch | Jul 2003 | A1 |
20120050813 | Gaash et al. | Mar 2012 | A1 |
20120326429 | Fischer et al. | Dec 2012 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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1425593 | Jun 2003 | CN |
04-222300 | Aug 1992 | JP |
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Entry |
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Office Depot Office Max, Hammermill Laser Print Paper, Jun. 24, 2015. |
GB Search Report dated Apr. 18, 2012 as received in Application No. 1117544.5. |
Cindy Major, “Encre, papier, ciseaux: Tutorials / Tutoriels”, available from Internet Archive Wayback Machine http://web.archive.org/web/20091220194106/http://cindymajor.typepad.com/encre_papier_ciseawdtutorials_tutoriels/ available Dec. 20, 2009 [viewed Apr. 16, 2012] See especially “Album Cover Tutorial” posted Apr. 23, 2009, in particular tip for step 6. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20140227497 A1 | Aug 2014 | US |