Patents Assigned to Letraset USA Inc.
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Patent number: 4389473Abstract: Transfer material is prepared by applying to a substrate a layer of a photosensitive material which is insoluble but swellable in the solvent used to develop the image and whose adhesion to the substrate increases on exposure to light, imagewise exposing the material and developing the so-exposed material by treatment with a solvent fully to remove unexposed material from the substrate and, if necessary, treating the remaining areas of the exposed material to render them transferable from the substrate. In this manner the full thickness of the photosensitive material layer may be retained in the final transfer material. In particular, adhesive material may be applied to the layer photosensitive material before imagewise exposure, and the adhesive coated material imagewise exposed and developed to remove photosensitive material and adhesive in the non-exposed areas only to leave adhesive coated image indicia.Type: GrantFiled: November 3, 1980Date of Patent: June 21, 1983Assignee: Letraset USA, Inc.Inventors: Simon L. Scrutton, William F. G. Marwick, David R. Wilson
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Patent number: 4344994Abstract: Sign lettering materials are described which consist of plastics film letters releasably adhered to a split backing tile, e.g. of silicone coated card, by a permanently tacky pressure-sensitive adhesive. In order to assist proper spacing of these letters (and numbers) when they are set up to form words, in the case of at least some of the letters of the alphabetic set, one or more corners of the tile has a stepped notch with one or more steps. The inmost vertical sides of the notches are abutted to give the desired spacing, consistent with the letters not overlapping. The system allows visually even spacing to be rapidly achieved over a range from closely spaced letters to wide spacing.Type: GrantFiled: February 21, 1979Date of Patent: August 17, 1982Assignee: Letraset USA, Inc.Inventors: Mark J. Batty, Thomas Groth
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Patent number: 4283484Abstract: Relief printing plates are described in which the raised printing areas are concave or dished. This gives, on printing, a more even ink distribution over the image area. Photographic methods for producing such plates are described.Type: GrantFiled: January 19, 1979Date of Patent: August 11, 1981Assignee: Letraset USA, Inc.Inventors: Michael J. B. Fairhead, Nicholas R. Jung
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Patent number: 4254211Abstract: Transfer material is prepared by applying to a substrate a layer of a photosensitive material which is insoluble but swellable in the solvent used to develop the image and whose adhesion to the substrate increases on exposure to light, imagewise exposing the material and developing the so-exposed material by treatment with a solvent fully to remove unexposed material from the substrate and, if necessary, treating the remaining areas of the exposed material to render them transferable from the substrate. In this manner the full thickness of the photosensitive material layer may be retained in the final transfer material. In particular, adhesive material may be applied to the layer photosensitive material before imagewise exposure, and the adhesive coated material imagewise exposed and developed to remove photosensitive material and adhesive in the non-exposed areas only to leave adhesive coated image indicia.Type: GrantFiled: November 9, 1978Date of Patent: March 3, 1981Assignee: Letraset USA Inc.Inventors: Simon L. Scrutton, William F. G. Marwick, David R. Wilson
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Patent number: 4177309Abstract: Dry transfer materials, e.g. dry transfer lettering sheets, are made from a transparent or translucent carrier sheet indicia thereon (e.g. in printing ink or produced photographically) and a layer of adhesive over the indicia and on the carrier sheet in the areas between the indicia. By incorporating a suitable amount of a detackifying polar wax in the adhesive, when the adhesive is deposited from a solution and/or dispersion in an organic solvent, the adhesive dries down to be stickier over the indicia than in the areas where it is directly on the carrier sheet.Type: GrantFiled: October 26, 1977Date of Patent: December 4, 1979Assignee: Letraset USA Inc.Inventors: Philip Shadbolt, Helen Ganszczyk