The technical field of this invention concerns printing on flocked paper and films.
Flocking is the well-known process of adhering one end of a relatively short length of fiber, generally acrylic, nylon, rayon, other plastic or cotton to the substrate to be flocked. In the typical flocking process, the substrate is unwound from a roll, an adhesive is applied to a surface and pre-cut flock fibers are sifted onto the adhesive coated surface under an electrostatic charge so that the flock fibers stand on end. The flocked substrate is then dried and wound into a roll. The resulting flocked surface has a soft, velvety feel that is frequently used as linings for display cases for personal items such as jewelry, perfume and writing instruments and for packaging, upholstery, apparel and other industrial applications.
Flocked material also can be printed. Known practices typically print on flock adhered to fabric, paper and vinyl and polyester film substrates. Most known printing techniques generally require expensive high speed large volume printing operations and require investment in machinery and labor that is beyond all but significant commercial operations. Currently known practices do not permit such commercial operations or others to conveniently or inexpensively make small runs of printing on flocked paper or films, and do not permit non-commercial operations to print on flocked paper or films.
The present invention concerns a new type of flocked substrate and method of printing in black and white or color using common non-impact printers, including laserjet, desktop printers attached to work stations, or personal computers, as well as on photocopy machines. The substrate preferably is 40 to 60 pound kraft paper, or 4 to 9 point Latex saturated paper, 9 to 20 point coated one side paperboard or a vinyl or polyester film. The flocked substrate may include a pressure sensitive adhesive applied to the back of the substrate. If a pressure sensitive adhesive is used, it preferably is an acrylic or solvent based adhesive, and preferably will be covered with a removable protective sheet, preferably made of lightweight kraft paper.
As in traditional flocking process, the substrate is coated with a flocking adhesive, such as an acrylic, flocked with common fibers, such as acrylic, cotton, rayon, polyester or nylon, dried in a curing oven and wound into rolls. The sheets are cut into sizes commonly used in printers. The user then may print on the flocked side of the substrate using a non-impact printer, such as one attached to a computer, including a desktop personal computer. The flocked substrate also may be printed using a photocopy machine. The user can then remove the protective sheet and adhere the printed flocked substrate to a variety of surfaces.
The invention includes a jigsaw puzzle custom made by the user by printing on the flocked substrate, adhering the printed flocked substrate to a pre-cut jigsaw puzzle and cutting the printed flocked substrate along the lines in the pre-cut jigsaw puzzle. The invention thus provides an inexpensive method for users to print on flocked substrates, and to custom make jigsaw puzzles. The material the user can print on the flocked substrate is virtually limitless, and includes images, digital photographs and virtually any image or data that can be sent to a computer printer or copied on a photocopy machine. The user can personalize jigsaw puzzles and other items with images or logos created by or for the user, such as personal photographs, slogans or designs. An advantage of this invention is that the images can be presented on a flocked surface, which previously has been too costly for a customized or a small number of prints, and inaccessible for all but large-scale commercial operations.
These and other features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with reference to the following description, appended claims and accompanying drawings where:
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Flocking fibers 12 also include a wide range of materials, including acrylic, cotton and polyester, but nylon and rayon work well. As described below, various trials were run with rayon flocking fibers, some of which were random cut and others which were precision cut, and mixed in different ratios of precise and random cut fibers. Flocking fibers of nylon, with precision cut, and cotton flocking fibers were also used. Blends of random and precision cut fibers were found superior to purely precision cut flocking, as the precision cut nylon produced poor quality prints with visible resolution lines. Similarly, cotton, while less expensive than other flocking materials, produced poor print quality, with visible resolution lines.
The poorer print quality with cotton may be caused by greater absorption of the printing ink in the cotton fibers, resulting in a blurring of the ink dots from the printers. While many uses require more precise printing, as with diagrams or designs having distinct lines, or with photographs of realistic images, the blurring may be useful in printing of other works, such as some types of fine art, or images displaying blurred or unfocused presentations.
The flocking fibers 12 are adhered to the substrate 11, with a flocking adhesive 13, which typically is a white acrylic latex adhesive, though a variety of adhesives, including ethyl vinyl acetate and others, are available and known to those experienced in the flocking art. The flocked substrate is prepared using well known techniques of sifting the pre-cut flocked fibers onto an adhesive coated substrate under an electrostatic charge so that the flocked fibers stand on end. As also is well know, the flocked substrate preferably is dried and wound onto a roll, or may be sent directly to be cut to size, without winding.
The flocked substrate preferably is cut into standard printer sizes. When manufactured for use, this invention contemplates production of a wide variety of sizes for use in printers and photocopy machines, including standard 8½″×11″, A-4, 11″×14″, 11″×17″ and larger sheets as can be used in home and office printers and photocopy machines. Smaller size sheets may also fit into printers and photocopy machines, and, preferably within the limits of known printers and photocopy machines, the flocked substrates can be cut to appropriate sizes.
Known printers used with computers and in offices are classified generally as impact and non-impact printers. This invention for printing on flocked substrates is intended to be used with non-impact printers, since impact printers, such as dot matrix printers and traditional typewriters could disrupt or damage the flocking fibers, and may not produce satisfactory results.
Non-impact printers include bubble jet printers, in which ink is ejected from bubble ports by heating of the fluid until it expands out a port, and by piezoelectric based printers, which eject printing ink from the print head by piezoelectric vibration of crystals. Non-impact printers also include laser jet printers, which use electrostatic charge to selectively deposit a dry powder on the print surface, and fixes it using heat. Photocopy machines also print using electrostatic charge to selectively deposit dry powder on the print surface, which is fixed using heat. All non-impact printers, including bubble jet, piezoelectric, laser jet and photocopy machines have been applied successfully in this method of printing on flocked material.
In this invention, printers and copies are used with standard manufacturer's supplies, including ink cartridges or toner, as recommended by the respective printer or copier manufacturers, and are used with standard printer settings, though printers and copier may be adjusted to accept thicker flocked substrates if the particular machine has such flexibility. A flocked substrate is fed into the particular printer according to the printer manufacturer's instructions, and can include manual single sheet feed, multiple sheet automatic feed, as is standard in most personal computer printers and photo copy machines.
Details of specific examples of printing on flocked substrates are described below:
Results: Pre-print: very white appearance and soft, low pile hand. Printability: washed out look, macroscopic voids. Had some jamming in the printer due to the high coefficient of friction between the flock and the backside of the sheets. Similar results were obtained using an 18 Pt. C1 S, SBS board (C1S means clay coated one side, and SBS means solid bleached sulfate) substrate, except there was difficulty in automatic sheet fed machines.
Results: Pre-print: very white appearance and soft, higher pile. Printability: crisp lines, no jamming.
Results: Pre-print: very white appearance and soft, higher pile. Printability: crisp lines, no jamming, however the crushed flock produced shadowing. (Shadowing is a slightly different color variation when the sample is viewed from different angles).
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As shown in
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