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A
Abrasion
Resistance: Label surface resistance to
something that rubs against it, including the label
material itself, ink, or a protective coating.
Abrasiveness: The
tendency of a paper, paper coating, or ink to abrade or
dull die edges, slitting blades, and printing plates due
to friction.
Accelerated
Aging: Procedures for subjecting
pressure sensitive label material to special
environmental conditions in order to predict the course
of natural aging.
Acetates: Transparent and cellulose films used as face
materials; cellulose is a plant product.
Acrylic
Adhesive: See: Adhesive: Acrylic.
Acrylic Based
Adhesive: See: Adhesive: Acrylic
Based.
Adhesion/Adherence: A bond established upon contact between two
surfaces.
Adhesive: A
substance capable of holding materials together by
surface attachment.
Adhesive: Acrylic: A pressure sensitive adhesive based on
high-strength, acrylic polymers. It can be coated as a
solvent or emulsion.
Adhesive: Acrylic Based: A pressure sensitive adhesive with
acrylic polymer base.
Adhesive:
Aqueous: A water-based pressure
sensitive adhesive.
Adhesive: Cold
Temperature: An adhesive that adheres
to refrigerated or frozen substrates (generally +35
degrees F or colder).
Adhesive: Dry Lap: See: Adhesive: Pattern Coated.
Adhesive: High
Temperature: An adhesive that
withstands sustained, high temperature (+200 degrees F
or higher).
Adhesive: Hot
Melt: A pressure sensitive adhesive
that is applied to the release liner at an elevated
temperature and then cools into a conventional,
highly-tacky pressure sensitive adhesive.
Adhesive:
Opaque: A darkened adhesive that
restricts printing from showing through the
adhesive-coated side of a label.
Adhesive: Pattern
Coated: Refers to the spacing
arrangement of areas of adhesive on the face material
that are coated parallel to the machine direction. Also
referred to as dry lap, strip coated, or zone coated
adhesive.
Adhesive: Pattern Gummed: An adhesive coating that alternates
strips of adhesive with non-adhesive areas that is
applied parallel to the machine direction. The
non-adhesive areas of the label are frequently used as
lift tabs for order picking labels.
Adhesive:
Permanent: A pressure sensitive
adhesive characterized as having relatively high
ultimate adhesion to a wide variety of substrates. The
label either cannot be removed intact or requires a
great deal of force to be removed.
Adhesive: Removable: A pressure sensitive adhesive
characterized by low ultimate adhesion. The label can be
removed from most substrates without damaging the
surface or leaving adhesive residue or stain.
Adhesive: Rubber
Based: A pressure sensitive adhesive
derived from natural or synthetic rubbers.
Adhesive: Strip
Coated: See: Adhesive: Pattern
Coated.
Adhesive: Strip
Gummed: See: Adhesive: Pattern
Gummed.
Adhesive: Water
Based: A pressure sensitive adhesive
derived from water based materials.
Adhesive: Water
Soluble: A pressure sensitive adhesive
in which all components are water soluble.
Adhesive: Zone
Coated: See: Adhesive: Pattern
Coated.
Adhesive
Bleed: The adhesive migration from
pressure sensitive material and labels. Note: Especially
critical in laser printing. See also: Cold Flow, Flow,
Ooze.
Adhesive Deposit/Adhesive
Residue: The pressure sensitive
adhesive remaining on a substrate when a label is
removed.
Adhesive Splitting: A condition in which portions of
pressure sensitive adhesive remain on the face material
and portions remain on the substrate when the label is
placed under stress or removed. See also: Cohesive
Failure.
Adhesive
Strength: See: Peel Adhesion.
Aging: The
changes which occur to a material with the passage of
time.
Anchorage: The specific adhesion of a pressure sensitive material
to a substrate.
Anchor Coat: See: Barrier Coat, Primer, Sealer Coat, Tie Coat.
Anvil Cut Labels: Pressure sensitive labels that are die
cut through all components of the label stock, including
the liner. Also called steel-to-steel, zero tolerance,
punched out, or blanked out labels.
Application: (1) Placement of a label on a substrate. (2) The
conditions under which a label is to be used; the
life-cycle of the label.
Application
Temperature: Temperature of a label
material at the time of application. All adhesives have
a minimum application temperature rating. Testing is
recommended in minimum and maximum application
temperature situations.
Applicator: A device that automatically feeds and
applies pressure sensitive labels to a substrate or
product.
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B
Backing: See: Carrier, Liner, Release Liner.
Back Splits: Linear cuts put in the liner during the coating process,
or while on-press, to meet specialized end use
requirements. See also: Slit Back, Split Back/Split
Liner.
Bar Code/Bar Code
Symbol: A specific pattern made of
lines (or bars) and spaces, of varying width, which
represent alpha or numeric data in machine-readable
form. The most general format for a bar code consists
of: a lead margin, a start character, data or message
characters, a stop character, and a trailing margin.
There are over 30 bar code symbologies. See also:
Machine Readable, Picket Fence, Scanability, Step
Ladder.
Barrier Coat: A coating applied to a face material
on the side opposite the printing surface that lies
between the material and the adhesive coat. It provides
increased opacity to the face material, and/or prevents
migration of adhesive to the face material, and/or
improves anchorage of adhesive to the face material. See
also: Anchor Coat, Primer, Sealer Coat, Tie Coat.
Battery Label
Stock: A durable, acid-resistant label
material designed for the demanding environment
associated with automotive batteries.
Blocking: Adhesion between sheets or rolls of pressure sensitive
labels usually due to cold flow, improper drying of
inks, or improper curing of coatings and adhesives. See
also: Cold Flow.
Blown-On Labels: A method of label application that
uses air pressure to remove the label from the carrier
and position it on the substrate.
Break: A
tear in a roll of face material or release liner. Such
defects are generally spliced and marked by a flag
during printing.
Brightness: The (blue light) reflectivity of a sheet of paper
measured under standardized conditions on an instrument
designed and calibrated specifically for that
purpose.
Brittleness: That property of a material which
causes it to break or fail when deformed by bending. It
is usually of practical interest only when the
deformation producing failure is small.
Burster: A
mechanical device used to separate cross-web
perforations at intermediate locations between
labels.
Bursting
Strength: The pressure required to
rupture a paper specimen when it is tested with a Mullen
instrument under specific conditions. It is largely
determined by the tensile strength and extensibility of
the paper. Also referred to as Mullen.
Butt-Cutt
Labels: Rectangular, square-cornered
labels in continuous form that are separated by a single
knife cut to the liner. Typically, the matrix is not
removed. See also: Butt Labels, Knife-Cut Labels.
Butt Labels: See: Butt-Cut labels.
Butt Roll: See: Stub Roll.
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C
Calender
Finish: A term applied to a paper with
a glazed surface finish created by means of calenders
(cast iron rollers with chilled, hardened surfaces).
Other terms include machine finish, English finish,
super-calendered and calender friction glazed. Semigloss
litho and high gloss paper are examples of calendered
paper.
Calender Friction
Glazed: See: Calender Finish.
Caliper: The
thickness of a sheet of paper or plastic measured in
units of one thousandth of an inch; the measuring units
are called mils or points. See also: Thickness.
Camera-Ready
Art: Black and white or
color-separated artwork supplied in its final form for
printing preparation. Typically, it requires no
modification other than photo enlargement or reduction.
See also: Mechanical artwork, Line Art, Pasteup.
Carrier: See: Backing, Liner, Release Liner.
Cast-Coated
Paper: A paper coating which is
allowed to harden or set while in contact with a
finishing surface. In general, cast-coated papers
usually have a high gloss finish.
Checking: The presence of hairline cracks in a varnish coating,
lacquer coating, or plastic coating. See also:
Crazing.
Chemical Drum
Label: A label of durable material (
like vinyl, polyester, or Kimdura® which resists adverse
conditions associated with chemical drum containers.
Chemical
Resistance: The resistance of a
pressure sensitive label to the deteriorating effects of
chemicals, under specified conditions.
Clear Coat: A coating that protects the printing and the surface of
a pressure sensitive label from abrasion, sunlight,
chemicals, moisture, or any combination of these.
Varnish and lacquer are examples of clear coats. See
also: Lacquer, Overcoat, Protective Coating,
Varnish.
Coat Weight: The amount or weight of coating per unit area. This is
expressed in various units including grams per square
meter or pounds per ream. Applies to adhesives, primers,
varnishes, and lacquers.
Cohesion: The internal strength of a pressure sensitive adhesive,
its resistance to cold flow, and its resistance to
failure (or splitting) when labels are removed or placed
under stress. See also: Cohesive Strength, Internal
Bond, Shear.
Cohesive Failure: The breakdown of molecular bond by
which particles of a body, or bodies, are united. See
also: Adhesive Splitting.
Cohesive Strength: The internal strength of the adhesive.
The measure of a labels resistance to removal. See also:
Cohesion, Internal bond, Shear.
Cold Flow: The viscous flow of a pressure
sensitive adhesive under stress. See also: Adhesive
Bleed, Ooze, Flow.
Cold Temperature Adhesive: See: Adhesive: Cold Temperature.
Colorfastness: The ability of a pressure sensitive
label to retain its true color under normal conditions
and/or to resist change in color when exposed to light,
heat, or other influences.
Color Separation: The process of separating a color
image into its component primary printing colors.
Computer Imprintable
Labels: Typically, pre-printed or
imprinted utilitarian labels carrying variable
information, such as a bar code, price.
Conditioning: The process of subjecting a material
to specific temperatures and relative humidity
conditions for a stipulated period of time. (American
Society of Testing Material)
Conformability: The
ability of a pressure sensitive label to yield to the
contours of a curved or textured surface. See also:
Flexibility, Pliability.
Core/Core
Size: Refers to the diameter of the
(cardboard) core in a roll of labels.
Coupon Base: The clear base in a dry peel label construction. Usually
used for instantly redeemable coupons, the clear base is
combined with a face material in a specialized
laminating process. When the printed face material ( or
coupon) is removed, the clear base remains on the
substrate. See also: Dry Peel.
Crazing: The
network of small cracks that can appear in a varnish
coat or plastic face material. They are usually caused
by expansion and contraction during weathering or by
excessive solvents in an ink system. See also:
Checking.
Creep: The
lateral movement of a pressure sensitive label on a
surface due to low cohesive strength.
Cross-Direction: The
direction perpendicular ot the machine direction in the
plane of a printing material. See also: Cross-Web.
Cross Web: See: Cross-Direction.
Curl: The
tendency of paper to bend or warp, either by itself or
because of a coating or laminate.
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D
Deboss: Condition in which an image is
depressed below the normal surface of a material.
Embossing has the opposite effect, creating a raised
image.
Declamation: Following application to a substrate, the separation of
a pressure sensitive material into layers in a direction
approximately parallel to the surface.
Decode
Rating: See: Scanability.
Destructible
Label: See: Tamper-Resistant
Label.
Die: The
tool or device used for imparting or cutting a desired
shape, form, or finish from a given material.
Die Cut: The
actual shape of a pressure sensitive label made by the
cutting edge of a die.
Die Cut
Label: Pressure sensitive labels on a
release liner where the matrix, or waste between the
labels, usually has been removed.
Dimensional Stability: The property of a material which
relates to the degree of its ability to retain (or
recall) its original shape or state. See also:
Memory.
Direct Thermal
printing: A specialized printing
technology that uses rapidly-heated pins that
selectively activate a heat-sensitive coating inherent
in the face material, thus forming the desired copy or
images.
Dispenser: A
device that feeds pressure sensitive labels, either
manually or automatically, in pre-determined units.
Dispensers in box form can serve as containers for a
roll of labels.
Dot Matrix
Printing: An economical and versatile
method of printing that produces images by printing tiny
ink dots closely together. First, a computer sends data
which determines the arrangement of pins that are to be
fired against a ribbon. These pins are in horizontal and
vertical rows on the printing head. As the printing head
moves back and forth across the page, the pins fire
(many times per second), forming an image. See also:
Impact Printing.
Dots: See:
Print Resolution.
Double-Coated: A
pressure sensitive product consisting of a face material
with similar or dissimilar adhesives applied to both
sides of the material.
d.p.i.: Dots
per inch; a measure referring to dot resolution in
images created by dot matrix, laser, and thermal
printers and imprinters.
Duo-Imaging
Mateial: See: Encapsulated Ink,
Self-Imaging Liner, Self-Imaging Piggy back.
Dry Peel: A
label construction in which two materials are bonded
together with a dry adhesive. The top ply of the
construction can be removed with no adhesive residue.
the bottom ply is typically made of a clear material, so
the substrate can be seen through it. A common use of
this label construction is for instantly redeemable
coupons or for promotions. See also: Coupon Base, Dry
Tag.
Dry Tag: An
uncoated tag face material designed to separate from a
liner with no functional adhesive on the tag. Typical
uses are clothing tags, temporary I.D. cards, and hang
tags. See also: Coupon Base, Dry Peel.
Dwell/Dwell
Time: (1) The time during which a
pressure sensitive material remains on a surface before
testing for adhesive permanence or removability. (2) The
time during which a hot-stamp, embossing head, or
thermal die remains in contact with the surface of a
material during printing. See also: Residence Time.
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E
EDP/Electronic Data
Processing: Data processing by
electronic equipment. Pressure sensitive labels produced
for imprinting on this equipment incorporate in-line
hole punching.
Edge Lift: The tendency of
the edge of a label to rise off the substrate. This
condition occurs most frequently on small diameter,
curved substrates. Resistance to edge lift is dependent
on the bond strength of the adhesive and the flexibility
of the face material.
Electrostatic Printing: A method of
printing in which the ink is affixed to the face
material by electrostatic methods. See also: Ion
Deposition Printing, Laser Printing.
Elmendorf
Test: A standard
test for determining the tearing strength of
paper.
Elongation: The increase in
length of a material produced by extending it to the
point of rupture. See also: Stretch.
Emboss/Embossing: A condition in which an image is pressed
into a material to create an image that is raised above
the normal level of the material. Debossing creates the opposite effect.
Emulsion System: A dispersion of
fine particles or globules in another liquid. Many
pressure sensitive adhesives are emulsion system
adhesives.
Encapsulated
Ink: Ink
encapsulated in a material surface coating which can be
activated by heat or pressure. See also: Duo-Imaging
Material, Self-Imaging Liner, Self-Imaging
Piggyback.
English
Finish: See:
Calendar Finish.
Exposure
Temperature: The
temperature to which a labeled product is exposed. See:
Service Temperature.
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F
Face Cut Label: A die cut or square cut label from
which the matrix, or waste between labels, has not been
removed.
Face Material/Face
Stock: Any paper, film, fabric, foil,
or plastic material suitable for converting into
pressure sensitive labels. In a finished construction,
the face material is bonded to an adhesive layer and
carried on a liner. It is the functional part of the
construction.
Face Split: A linear cut in face material during coating or
converting to meet specialized end use requirements. See
also: Split Face.
Fade/Fading: A gradual decrease in brilliance of color; often applies
to the change in color produced by prolonged exposure to
light.
Fan-Fold/Fan-Folded
Labels: Pressure sensitive labels on a
continuous backing that is perforated, then folded back
and forth along the perforations, so as to create a flat
pack. See: Put-Up.
Face Material: (1)
Contact between paper and dry foods (175.180). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . (2)Contact between paper and aqueous and/or fatty
foods (176.170)
Feathering: A defect in printing which is characterized by ragged,
uneven, or coarse edges.
Feed Slots: Round or rectangular holes punched
into the edge of a liner to maintain the register of
computer imprintable pressure sensitive labels during
imprinting. Holes can be cleanly cut or in a starburst.
See also: Pin-Fed Holes, Starburst Holes, Tractor
Feed.
File Card: Uncoated tag stock frequently used for
recording information. A common material for ultimate
use as pressure sensitive labels.
Film: Plastic face material manufactured from synthetic high
molecular weight polymers. Examples are: Kimdura®,
polyester, polyethylene, and vinyl.
Finish: The
surface property of a paper sheet determined by its
surface contour and gloss. Terms refering to paper
finish include: antique, eggshell, vellum, machine,
English, super-calendered, and plate.
Fish Eyes: Round or eye-shaped deformations in a coating.
Flag: A
marker, usually made of strips of colored paper, placed
in rolls of pressure sensitive materials during printing
(or converting) to designate a deviation from a standard
-- such as a splice, defect, or specification change. It
can also mark a specific length.
Flexibility: A property of face material, measrued under specified
conditions, that indicates how readily it will conform
to curved surfaces. See also: Conformability,
Pliability.
Flexography: A rotary web letterpress method of printing
characterized by raised-image, flexible rubber plates
and fast-drying inks.
Flow: See:
Adhesive Bleed, Cold Flow, Ooze.
Fluorescent Paper: A paper coated with a pigment which
reflects light in such a way that it has a glowing
appearance or effect.
Foil: A thin
metal sheet used as a face material.
Foil Paper
Laminate: A face material consisting
of metal foil laminated to paper. The foil usually
carries a clear coat to improve ink receptivity.
Food Contact Adhesives: Adhesive meeting specified sections of
the Food and Drug Administration Code of Federal
Regulations. These regulations cover direct food
labeling as well as incidental contact. Special product
recommendations are necessary for specific
applications.
Four Color Process
Printing: Printing and reproduction of
full color images using the four process printing colors
-- yellow, cyan, magenta, and black -- to create an
image with an infinite number of resultant colors.
Frozen Edge: The inability to separate a pressure sensitive label
from its liner along one edge. This is generally caused
by an absence of silicone on that edge.
Freezer Grade Adhesive: See: Adhesive: Cold Temperature.
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G
Ghosting/Ghosts: Indistinct image patterns appearing as solids or reverse
printing, typically caused by poor ink distribution,
inconsistency in plate and/or substrate thickness,
and/or poor base ink formulation. See also: Shadows.
Ghost
Printing: Involves the use of a
low-density screen to print a ghost-like background
image.
Glassine®: A super-calendered, dense transparent or
semi-transparent material manufactured primarily from
chemical wood pulps, which have been beaten to secure a
high degree of density in the stock.
Gloss: That
property of a surface whcih causes it to have a
mirror-like finish or the ability to specularly reflect
light.
Gloss Paper: See: Cast-Coated Paper.
Gravure
Printing: An intaglio printing process
employing minute engraved wells. In general principle,
the deeply-etched wells carry more ink than a raised
surface, and, therefore, print dark values. Shallow
wells print light values. A scraping device, called a
doctor blade, wipes excess ink from the cylindrical
printing surface before the ink is pressed into the face
material. Rotogravure employs etched cylinders and
web-fed stock. Sheet-fed gravure, as its name implies,
involves individual sheet feeding.
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H
Halftone: A
method of screening a continuous tone image (like a
photograph) for printing or reproduction. The dots in
the screen vary in size and density, so as to recreate
the complete range of highlights, lowlights, and
mid-tones of the original image.
Heavy Coat Weight: A higher -than-standard weight of
coating per unit area.
High Gloss Paper: A cast-coated gloss paper that
features high strength material and excellent ink
receptivity.
High Temperature
Adhesive: See: Adhesive: High
Temperature.
Holding Power: The ability to withstand stress,
involving both adhesive and cohesive strength. The term
usually refers to rigid label materials on small
diameter cylindrical objects.
Horizontal
Spaces: The horizontal space created
by the removed matrix, revealing only the liner in a
pressure sensitive label construction.
Hot Melt
Adhesive: See: Adhesive: Hot Melt.
Hot
Stamping: An image producing method
that involves a film carrying a thin leaf of color which
is transferred to a material using heat and pressure. It
is commonly used with gold or metallic leaf, but many
colors, patterns, and finishes of leaf are available. It
is especially popular for labels used in the textile and
apparel markets.
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I
Impact
Printing: A printing method that uses
a hammer striking a ribbon to transfer ink onto a
material. See also: Dot Matrix Printing, Platen.
Imprinting: Technique in which copy is applied to
blank or previously printed labels with a secondary
printing device such as an imprinter, computer printer,
or typewriter.
Ink Jet
Printing: A non-impact printing
process whereby fluid ink is projected from a nozzle
directly onto a material to form the desired image.
Intaglio
Printing: A method of printing in
which an engraved or acid-etched printing plate (or
cylinder) carries ink to the material surface. The
material when pressed against the printing plate,
actually squeezes into the inked grooves and, thereby,
receives the image.
Internal
Bond: See: Cohesion, Cohesive
Strength, Shear.
Inverted Face
Material: A facestock that has the
adhesive applied to the surface normally printed
upon.
Ion Deposition Printing: An electronic printing process whereby
a static charge is created on a printing cylinder,
attracting toner. The toner is subsequently transferred
to a printable surface, creating the image. See also:
Electrostatic Printing, Laser Printing.
J
K
KnifeCut Labels: See: Butt-Cut Labels.
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L
Label: The
functional portion of a pressure sensitive construction
comprised of the face material and adhesive, cut into
various shapes.
Label Height/Label
Length: The vertical measurement on a
label (from top to bottom) when the label is traveling
in the machine direction.
Lacquer: A
coating applied to a face material for protection or
decoration. Lacquer usually requires ultraviolet curing
or drying. See also: Clear Coat, Overcoat, Protective
Coating, Top Coat/Top Coating.
Ladder: See:
Matrix, Skeleton, Waste.
Laminate: A
web material formed by bonding two or more
materials.
Laser Printing: Also known as electrophotographic
printing, a process where light, generated from either a
laser or diode, creates a static charge on a
photographically-sensitive cylinder. The charged
cylinder attracts toner, which is subsequently
transferred to a printable surface, creating an image.
See also: Electrostatic Printing, Ion Deposition
Printing.
Latex
Paper/Latex-Impregnated Paper: Paper saturated with latex during its formation making
it stronger, more resistant to moisture and abrasion,
more flexible, and more durable. See also: Saturated
Paper.
Legging/Legs: The
stringy appearance of adhesive when a pressure sensitive
label is separated from a substrate or its release
liner. It can also occur when the matrix is removed from
a die cut pressure sensitive material.
Letterpress
Printing: A printing process in which
ink is applied to a material from the raised portions of
printing plates or from foundry type.
Life Cycle: The length of time that a label is to be used before it
is ultimately discarded.
Lift Tab: A
label edge that is not coated with adhesive and ,
thereby, allows for easy removal of the label from the
release liner. It is frequently used for order picking
labels.
Line Art: Black and white artwork that can be reproduced as is.
See also: Camera Ready Art, Mechanical Art, Pasteup.
Liner: A
paper or film that is a carrier for pressure sensitive
labels. Typically, it has a silicone coating to allow
easy removal of the label. See also: Backing, Carrier,
Release Liner.
Lithographic Paper: A paper suitable for lithographic (or
offset) printing.
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M
Machine Direction: The direction of paper in its forward
movement through a paper handling machine or printing
press.
Machine
Finish: See: Calendar Finish.
Machine
Readable: Refers to the scanning of
bar code symbology by a laser scanner or similar device.
See also: Scanability.
Matrix: The
face material and adhesive layers of a pressure
sensitive construction surrounding a die cut label which
is typically removed after die cutting. See also:
Ladder, Skeleton, Waste.
Matte Litho: A litho paper with a satin finish -- between high gloss
and dull finish -- that is ideal for bar code
printing.
Mechanical Artwork: See: Camera-Ready Art, Line Art,
Pasteup.
Memory: The
property of a material that causes it to shrink or
return to its original dimensions after being distorted,
die cut, or subjected to temperature change. For
example, vinyl (being very flexible) has more memory
than polystyrene. See also dimensional Stability.
Metallized
Film: A plastic or resinous film that
has been coated on one side with a very thin layer of
metal.
Metallized
Paper: Paper that has a thick deposit
of metallized particles that resemble a layer of foil.
Metallized paper offers reduced stiffness and better
flexibility than metallized film and has an appearance
similar to laminated foil papers.
MICR/Magnetic Ink Character
Recognition: The process of reading
characters by means of magnetic sensing.
Migration: (1) The movement of one or more of the
components of a pressure sensitive adhesive to either a
substrate or face material.
(2) The movement of one or more of the components of
the face material and/or the substrate into the adhesive
and/or ink.
(3) The uncontrolled spread of ink due to improper
printing or curing.
See also: Penetration, Plasticizer Migration.
Moisture
Content: The moisture present in a
material. This is particularly important in liners.
Moisture
Equilibrium: The condition reached by
a material when it shows no change in weight, in
relation to the amount of moisture absorbed or desorbed
by the material.
Moistureproof: The
property of a material which makes it virtually
impervious to moisture. Tyvek® is a moistureproof
material.
Moisture Vapor
Transmission: A measure of the rate of
water vapor transmission through a pressure sensitive
label.
Mottled
Surface/Mottling: Non-uniform
appearance or coloring of a face material --
blotching.
Multiple-Web
Construction: A construction
consisting of two or more face materials and/or
adhesives on the same liner. Example: EDP face material
with permanent adhesive and non-pressure sensitive card
stock side by side.
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N
Natural
Aging: The change, if any, in a
material occurring from exposure to normal environmental
conditions.
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O
OCR/Optical Character
Recognition: An information processing
technology that involves conversion of imprinted or
written data to another language and medium.
Offset/Offsetting: The
partial transference of ink from a freshly printed
surface to an adjacent surface -- as that of another
sheet of paper.
Offset
Printing: A printing process in which
a right-reading image is printed from a plate onto a
blanketed cylinder. this mirror image is then pressed
against a printing surface, thus creating the desired,
final image. The term offset applies because the
printing plate never comes in contact with the printing
material as it does in letterpress printing.
Ooze: See:
Adhesive Bleed, Cold Flow, Flow.
Opacity: the
measure of the amount of light that can pass through a
material.
Orange Peel: The mottled or textured appearance of a label that can
occur from air bubbles trapped between a laminate and
face material.
Overcoat: See: Clear Coat, Lacquer, Protective Coating, Top
coat/Top Coating, Varnish.
Overlaminate/Overlaminating/Overlamination: The application of a clear film to label material for
the purpose of protection or to enhance visual
quality.
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P
Pasteup: See: Camera-Ready Art, Line Art, Mechanical Art.
Pattern Coated
Adhesive: See: Adhesive: Pattern
Coated.
Pattern Gummed
Adhesive: See: Adhesive: Pattern
Gummed.
Patterned Release
Coating: See: Release Coating:
Patterned.
Peel
Adhesion: Peel adhesion is the force
required to remove a pressure sensitive label from a
standard test surface at a specified angle and speed
after the label has been applied according to specified
conditions. See also: Adhesive Strength.
Penetration: The change in appearance of the face material due to
movement of one or more components from the adhesive or
the substrate. See also: Migration, Plasticizer
Migration.
Perforation: Refers to a series of small incisions
made in a material to facilitate tearing or folding
along a pre-determined line. They are measured in TPI's
- ties per inch. Se also: TPI/Ties Per Inch.
Permanency: The measure of an adhesive's ultimate holding power or
bonding strength. A bond that makes label removal
difficult or impossible without distorting or destroying
the face material.
Permanent
Adhesive: See: Adhesive:
Permanent.
Pharmaceutical Litho Stock: A lightweight, uncoated litho stock
with the flexibility and high-performance required for
pharmaceutical applications.
Phosphorescent Face
Material: A face material coated with
a phosphorescent ink. See: Phosphorescent Ink.
Phosphorescent
Ink: An ink that absorbs and reflects
light and remains luminescent after exposure to a light
source has stopped. It is commercially called
Glow-in-the-Dark.
Picket
Fence: A bar code symbology
characterized by vertical bars and spaces. See also: Bar
code/Bar code Symbol.
Piggyback: This type of label consists of a pressure sensitive
label on a pressure sensitive liner. This double-ply
label is carried on a standard release liner. Once the
double-ply is applied to a substrate, the top ply can be
removed and applied to yet another substrate. Typically
this kind of label is used for response labels in direct
mail promotions.
Pin-Fed
Holes: See: Feed Slots, Starburst
Holes, Tractor Feed.
Plasticizer: A substance added to polymeric materials to impart
flexibility, workability, and elongation.
Plasticizer
Migration: The movement of
plasticizers from a plastic into an adhesive or face
material, or both. This can cause degradation of the
adhesive and bleed-through of adhesive components into
the face material. See also: Migration, Penetration.
Platen: The
roller which carries paper through a typewriter or dot
matrix printer and acts as an anvil for impact
printing.
Pliability: See: Conformability, Flexibility.
Polyester: A
strong film that is resistant to moisture, solvents,
oils, and chemicals. It is usually transparent, but is
available with a metallized finish. Mylar® is a
polyester brand name.
Polyethylene: A tough,
stretchy film that is suitable for use in low
temperature applications. It is frequently used for
labeling semi-rigid bottles.
Pressure Sensitive
Label: A self-adhesive label that is
the die cut, usable part of pressure sensitive material
that has been converted through roll-fed production
equipment. The end product can be produced in rolls,
sheets, or fan-folded stacks.
Pressure Sensitive
Material/Pressure Sensitive Stock: The
combination of face material, pressure sensitive
adhesive and release liner from which pressure sensitive
labels are manufactured. Colloquially referred to as a
"sandwich".
Price Mark
Labels: Labels for retail and/or
wholesale use that normally carry alpha or numeric
character information such as: unit price, lot number,
style number, and SKU number. See also: Retail
Labels.
Prime Label/Primary
Label: Usually a descriptive,
decorative product label; the label typically on the
front of a container.
Primer: A
coating applied to face material, on the side opposite
the printing surface, to improve anchorage of the
adhesive and to prevent migration of adhesive components
into face material. See also: Anchor Coat, Barrier coat,
Sealer Coat, Tie Coat.
Print
Resolution: The quality of print; the
level of detail achieved by a printer. Measured in dpi
(dots per inch), typical capabilities are 200 dpi for a
thermal transfer printer and 300 dpi for a laser
printer. It is particularly critical in bar code
printing. See also: Resolution.
Printout: Information in sheet form which has been generated by a
computer and an automatic printer.
Protective
Coating: A coating that protects the
printing and the surface of a pressure sensitive label
for abrasion, sunlight, chemicals (their fumes and
dilute solutions), and moisture, or a combination of
these. See also: Clear Coat, Lacquer, Overcoat, Top
Coat/Top Coating.
Put-Up: The
final form of converted products -- in rolls, fan-folded
stacks, or in bundles.
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Q
Quick
Adhesion: See: Tack.
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R
Ream: A
number of sheets of paper, either 480 or 500, according
to grade. For purposes of physical testing, a ream is
considered as 500 sheets.
Registration: The exact,
corresponding placement of successively printed images
and/or successively die cut pressure sensitive
labels.
Relative
Humidity: The ratio of the amount of
moisture in the air at any temperature to the amount
required at that temperature to saturate the air.
Release/Releasing: .(1) The
act of freeing or separating a pressure sensitive label
form its liner.
(2) The force required to free or separate a pressure
sensitive label from its liner.
Release Coat: The (silicone) coating on a liner that
allows pressure sensitive labels to be easily removed or
dispensed.
Release Coat Transfer: A defect resulting from the transfer
of release coat from the liner to the pressure sensitive
adhesive during release.
Release Coating: Patterned: Selectively applying release coat
beside non-coated areas, in strips tht run parallel to
the machine direction. This results in a permanent face
material/release liner bond in the non-coated areas.
Release
Liner: The component of the pressure
sensitive label material which functions as a carrier
for the pressure sensitive label. Usually silicone
coated, it readily separates from the label when the
label is removed for application. See also: Backing,
Carrier, Liner.
Removability: A relative term applied to pressure
sensitive labels to describe the force or condition
under which they can be removed from a substrate. A
removable label would be one in which little or no
damage occurs to the substrate or the label upon
removal.
Removable
Adhesive: See: Adhesive:
Removable.
Residence Time: See: Dwell/Dwell time.
Resin ribbons: The principal component of the binder
in the ribbons is resin. With superior heat resistance,
abrasion resistance and chemical resistance, materials
printed with resin type ribbons can be stored for long
periods of time. These ribbons, which are principally
used with film labels, are well suited for use with
factory automation labels, name plates, and caution
labels.
Resolution: See: Print Resolution.
Retail
Labels: See: Price Mark Labels.
Roll Labels: Pressure sensitive labels that are packaged in
continuous roll form. See also: Put-Up.
Rotogravure Printing: See: Gravure Printing.
Rubber Based
Adhesive: See Adhesive: Rubber
Based.
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S
Sandwich: Colloquial term for the layered
construction of pressure sensitive material. See also:
Pressure Sensitive Material.
Saturated
Paper: See: Latex
Paper/Latex-Impregnated Paper.
Scanability: The quality of a material that allows
for precise printing of bar codes, so as to ensure
accurate reading or scanning of the bar code data.
Readings (called percent decode ratings) are usually
measured as a percentage indicating the number of
successful scans out of a total of 100. See also:
Machine Readable.
Sealer Coat: See: Anchor coat, Barrier coat, Primer, Tie Coat.
Self-Imaging
Liner: A specially-coated,
pressure-activated liner that reproduces an exact image
of information printed or imprinted on its corresponding
face label. Requires an impact printing method. See
also: Duo-Imaging Material, Encapsulated Ink,
Self-Imaging Piggyback.
Self-Imaging Piggyback: A piggy back label material that can
be imprinted, creating a duplicate label from the second
ply of this double-ply construction. Requires an impact
printing method. See also: Duo-Imaging Material,
Encapsulated Ink, Piggyback, Self-Imaging Liner.
Service
Temperature: See: Exposure
Temperature.
Shadows: See: Ghosting/Ghosts.
Shear: See:
Cohesion, Cohesive Strength, Internal Bond.
Sheeted
Labels: Finished labels furnished in
cut, singular sheets. This format is most poplular for
laser printing. See also: Put-Up.
Shelf Life: The period of time during which a product can be stored
under specified conditions and still remain suitable for
use -- normally 6-9 months. See also: Storage Life.
Skeleton: See: Ladder, Matrix, Waste.
Slit Back: See: Back Slits, Split Back/Split
Liner.
Slit Face: See: Split Face.
Smudge
Resistance: The quality or
characteristic of a paper (or plastic) to resist the
smearing of ink immediately following printing or
imprinting; directly related to the absorption level of
the paper.
Solvent Resistance: The resistance of a material to the
action of specific solvents.
Specific
Adhesion: The force required to remove
a pressure sensitive label from a specific substrate
under specified conditions.
Splice: A
method of joining paper or plastic webs within a
pressure sensitive roll to produce an operational
continuous web.
Split Face: Slits in face material of a pressure
sensitive product usually for the purpose of
facilitating removal. See also: Face split, Slit
Face.
Split Back/Split
Liner: Slits in the release liner of a
pressure sensitive label to facilitate its removal by
hand. See also: Slit Back, Back Split.
Starburst
Holes: Pin-feed holes which are
characterized by jagged edges. See also: Feed Slots,
Pin-Fed Holes, Tractor Feed.
Static Cling
Label: A label that adheres to a
substrate by static electricity -- no adhesive is
necessary.
Step Ladder: A bar code symbology characterized by horizontal bars
and spaces. See also: Bar code/Bar code Symbol, Picket
Fence.
Storage
Life: See: Shelf Life.
Stretch: See: Elongation.
Stub Roll: A
roll of pressure sensitive label stock that is very
short in length. See also: Butt Roll.
Substance/Substance
Number: See: Basis, Basis Weight.
Substrate: The surface to which a pressure sensitive label is
applied or adhered.
Sunlight
Resistance: The ability of a material
to resist the deteriorating effects of sunlight,
especially ultraviolet and infrared wavelengths. Also
referred to as being "fast to light."
Super-Calendered: See:
Calender Finish.
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T
Tack: The
property of a pressure sensitive label which causes it
to adhere to a surface instantly with a minimum of
pressure and contact time (as measured by TLMI Tester or
equivalent equipment). See also: Quick Adhesion, Touch
Tack.
Tamper-Resistant
Label: A pressure sensitive
construction made with a weak face material so that
(attempted) removal of the label usually results in its
destruction.
Tear Strength/Tearing
Strength: The force required to tear a
label specimen under standardized conditions using an
instrument designed to simulate the tearing encountered
under general use conditions.
Tear Tab: An
additional area of face material, next to the release
liner of a pressure sensitive label produced in single
form to facilitate removal of the release liner.
Tensile Strength: The force parallel to the plane of an
applied label required to break a given width and length
of paper under specified conditions.
Thermal Transfer
Printing: An imprinting method that
uses heat and pressure to melt a wax-based ink onto a
label.
Thickness: See: Caliper.
Tie Coat: See: Anchor Coat, Barrier Coat, Primer.
Tipped-On
Labels: A method of label application
in which the carrier is peeled back and the labels fall
or "tip" onto the substrate.
Top Coat/Top Coating: A substance coated onto a label
material that will enhance the printing or the
appearance of the finished label. For example, some
films are top coated to ensure better ink anchorage to
the surface of the material. See also: Clear Coat,
Lacquer, Overcoat, Protective Coating, Varnish.
Touch Tack: See: Quick Adhesion, Tack.
TPI/Ties Per
Inch: In perforations, the number of
material ties that exist between each hole. See also:
Perforation.
Transfer
Tape: A coating of pressure sensitive
adhesive applied to a liner that is release-coated on
both sides. This allows a user to apply the tape to a
surface and remove the liner, leaving only the adhesive
on the surface.
Tractor
Feed: See: Feed Slots, Pin-Fed Holes,
Starburst Holes.
Transparency: That
property of a material which transmits light rays so
that objects can be clearly seen through the
material.
Transparent
Label: A pressure sensitive label of
which the face material, adhesive, and protective
coatings transmit light so that objects can be seen
through it.
Tyvek®: The
brand name of DuPont's imprintable material originally
developed for automobile seat belt labels. It is
virtually indestructible and highly
moisture-resistant.
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U
V
Varnish: A heat-cured coating of one or more
materials applied to a face material for protection
and/or decoration. See also: Clear Coat, Lacquer,
Overcoat, Protective Coating, Top Coat/Top
Coating.
Vegetable
Parchment: A
grease-resistant, water-resistant paper resembling
animal parchment. It is made by passing unsized paper
through sulphuric acid in order to gelantinize its
surface; then, it is washed and dried.
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W
Waste: See: Ladder, Matrix, Skeleton.
Water Soluble
Adhesive: See:
Adhesive: Water Soluble.
Wax resin
ribbons:The binder
used with these ribbons includes both wax (30-70%) and
thermoplastic resin. Through the formation of multiple
layers in the ink layer, these ribbons provide both the
excellent printing transferability of the wax and the
superior durability of the resin. In comparison with wax
type ribbons, wax resin type ribbons offer superior
abrasion resistance. AS a result, reliability is
improved, and these ribbons are widely used with both
paper label are synthetic paper labels. Wax resin
ribbons are ideal for such applications such as
distribution control labels.
Wax
ribbons: The
binder is about 50-90% wax. The melting characteristics
of the wax are used to provide excellent ink
transferability, and these ribbons are primarily used
for printing on paper labels. However, wax type labels
offer poor heat and abrasion resistance, so they are
unsuitable for printing images that will be stored for
long period of time.
Weatherability: The capability of a material to withstand
the effects of weather.
Web: A continuous sheet of pliable
manufactured material.
Web
Width: The
measurement of the web that is perpendicular to the
machine direction. Typically refers to the width of the
liner or carrier.
Wrinkling: The puckering or creasing of a pliable
material that can result from environmental conditions
and/or manufacturing situations.
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X
Y
Yellowing: A defect characterized by a gradual color
change in the original appearance of white paper; the
development of yellowish or brownish hues.
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Z
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