Business form with integrated lamination

5837337
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Inventors

Schnitzer, David H.

Application #

660818

Filed

Jun-10-1996

Published

Nov-17-1998

Current US Class

281/2
281/5
283/81
428/202
428/203
428/40.1
428/41.9
428/42.1
428/42.2
428/42.3
428/43
462/2

International Classes

G09F 003/10

Field of Search

428/40.1 428/42.3 428/42.2 428/42.1 428/41.9 428/202 428/203 428/43 283/81 281/2 281/5 462/2

Assignee

The Standard Register Company (Dayton, OH)

Examiners

Ahmad; Nasser

Attorney, Agent or Firm

Killworth, Gottman, Hagan & Schaeff, L.L.P.

US Patent References

5230938   Protected fold and...
5279875   Label-equipped bu...
5518787   Construction for a l...
5637369   Business form with...

Referenced by:

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Citation

Cite This Patent

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Abstract
A protectible form including a base ply having a printable face and a release face, a clear ply secured to the base ply release face by an adhesive, and a boundary cut defining matching selected portions of the base ply and the clear ply, whereby the clear ply selected portion may be removed from the base ply release face and adhered to the base ply printable face in a printing protecting position over substantially all of the base ply selected portion. A method of forming a protected individualized card is also shown, including the steps of (1) providing a base ply with first and second faces, with the first face being adapted for receiving printing and the second face having at least a portion with adhesive release material, (2) releasably securing a clear ply to the base ply portion with an adhesive, (3) cutting the base ply and the clear ply to define matching overlying card portions in the base ply and the clear ply, (4) printing information on the first face of the base ply card portion, and (5) removing the clear ply card portion from the base ply second face and adhering the clear ply card portion to the base ply card portion first face.
 
Claims
I claim:

1. A protectible form, comprising:

a base ply having a printable face and a release face;

a clear ply secured to said base ply release face by an adhesive, said clear ply having a greater adherence to said adhesive than said base ply release face such that said adhesive will remain with said clear ply upon separation of said clear ply from said base ply; and

a boundary cut defining matching and aligned selected portions of said base ply and said clear ply, such that said clear ply selected portion is removed from said base ply release face and adhered to the base ply printable face in a printing protecting position over substantially all of the base ply selected portion with said clear ply selected portion being substantially the same size as said base ply selected portion.



Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Technical Field

The present invention is directed toward protecting printed information, and more particularly toward protecting cards having individualized printed information thereon.

2. Background Art

Business forms are in many cases important documents which will be handled extensively and therefore are subject to being tattered or otherwise worn, frayed, soiled or damaged so that the printing thereon might be made unreadable. For example, certificates or the like which are intended to be used over a period of time might be damaged in such a manner. Identification badges are a particularly common form of this, as they might be used only a relatively short period of time but handled in a manner which would be highly susceptible to damaging. Membership cards are another common form of this, which cards might be handled somewhat less frequently but over a longer period of time.

A typical manner of protecting such documents is to subject them to a lamination process which secures a protective lamination over the form. This can be effective, but has significant drawbacks. First, it is difficult to accomplish in cases where there are a large number of such forms to be laminated. Further, since the protective lamination must overly the form and printed material to be protected, it invariably requires that the process be done after printing of the form. Since variable information (such as the names on each identification badge) is usually printed on the forms by the form user rather than the form manufacturer, the separate process is typically required to be done by either the printer of the variable information or the recipient of the form (since lamination prior to printing would inhibit the ability to print and any printing on the lamination would obviously not be protected by the lamination).
 
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