Claims
- 1. A security paper defined by a consolidated mass of interrelated paper fibers, said security paper comprising a light-colored base paper having first and second opposing major surfaces, a non-protection area of a first thickness between the first and second major surfaces, and a protection area of a second thickness between the first and second major surfaces, wherein the first thickness is greater than the second thickness, a limited quantity of colorant being disposed on at least one of the first and second major surfaces, including in both the protection area and in the non-protection area, the colorant being substantially limited to surface areas of said security paper, such that the protection area exhibits a lighter color, relative to the non-protection area, when viewed using transmitted light, and exhibits the colorant as a darker color indication, relative to the non-protection area, when viewed using reflected light, the consolidated mass of fibers having substantially no fiber density variation between the protection area and the non-protection area.
- 2. A security paper as in claim 1, the thickness of said protection area being sufficiently thin that sufficient transmitted light can pass therethrough to establish color intensity difference between the non-protection area and the protection area.
- 3. A security paper as in claim 1, the thickness of said protection area being sufficiently thin, and fibers of said protection area being sufficiently dispersed, that at least some transmitted light can pass therethrough.
- 4. A security paper as in claim 1, said colorant being applied to only one major surface of the base paper.
- 5. A security paper as in claim 1 wherein the colorant is disposed on or close to a major surface of the base paper, and selectively congregated in depressions of the protection area, said depressions being defined by the differences in thickness between the non-protection area and the protection area, thus to concentrate the colorant at the protection area.
- 6. A security paper as in claim 1 wherein transmission of light through a combination of paper fibers and the colorant, both being disposed at the protection area, is discernibly different from transmission of light through said non-protection areas of the base paper, when viewed with a human eye.
- 7. A security paper as in claim 1, quantity and opacity of the colorant at the protection area being sufficiently intense that reflected light attenuation at the protection area is greater than reflected light attenuation at the non-protection area, so as to appear to leave a darker reflected image at the protection area than at the non-protection area.
- 8. A security paper as in claim 1, the second thickness of the protection area being established while solids-content of a precursor web mass of fibers of said base paper is 10% by weight or less, thus enabling lateral movement of fibers while the protection area is being established.
- 9. A security paper as in claim 1, said colorant being applied to the base paper when such base paper is substantially dry.
- 10. A security paper as in claim 1, said colorant comprising at least one of pigments, dyes, and chromogenic materials, such colorants developing color indications under controlled conditions.
- 11. A security paper as in claim 1 characterized in that the protection area has the form of at least one of letters, numbers, and symbols.
- 12. A security paper as in claim 1, said base paper comprising a protection area on both major surfaces thereof.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is a Divisional application claiming priority under 35 U.S.C. 120 to application Ser. No. 09/870,886 filed May 31, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,368,455 which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
US Referenced Citations (15)
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
| Number |
Date |
Country |
| 406272198 |
Sep 1994 |
JP |
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
| Entry |
| Modern Pulp and Paper Making, John B. Calkin, 1957, Reinhold Publishing, pp. 312-313. |