US1714503A - Decalcomania - Google Patents

Decalcomania Download PDF

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US1714503A
US1714503A US163332A US16333227A US1714503A US 1714503 A US1714503 A US 1714503A US 163332 A US163332 A US 163332A US 16333227 A US16333227 A US 16333227A US 1714503 A US1714503 A US 1714503A
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design
sheet
tissue
transfer
open
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US163332A
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Standish B Gorham
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B44DECORATIVE ARTS
    • B44CPRODUCING DECORATIVE EFFECTS; MOSAICS; TARSIA WORK; PAPERHANGING
    • B44C1/00Processes, not specifically provided for elsewhere, for producing decorative surface effects
    • B44C1/16Processes, not specifically provided for elsewhere, for producing decorative surface effects for applying transfer pictures or the like
    • B44C1/165Processes, not specifically provided for elsewhere, for producing decorative surface effects for applying transfer pictures or the like for decalcomanias; sheet material therefor
    • B44C1/175Transfer using solvent
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/24Structurally defined web or sheet [e.g., overall dimension, etc.]
    • Y10T428/24479Structurally defined web or sheet [e.g., overall dimension, etc.] including variation in thickness
    • Y10T428/24612Composite web or sheet
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/24Structurally defined web or sheet [e.g., overall dimension, etc.]
    • Y10T428/24802Discontinuous or differential coating, impregnation or bond [e.g., artwork, printing, retouched photograph, etc.]
    • Y10T428/24851Intermediate layer is discontinuous or differential
    • Y10T428/2486Intermediate layer is discontinuous or differential with outer strippable or release layer

Definitions

  • This invention relates to decalcomanias or transfer paper and has for its object the ac-vcurate transfer of so-called open decalcomania designs, no matter how delicate, in-
  • decalcomanias were of two general types, first the type which Was intended to be transferred ⁇ to a transparent material, such as glass, and second the type which was intended for transfer to the smooth sur'faces of non-transparent material such as porcelain, furniture, and the like.
  • the decalcomania material comprised a sheet of relatively stiff paper coated with gum or other suitable adhesive upon the surface of. which the design to be transferred was first applied as a series of superposed layers of White lead upon which White lead foundation design there was next printed in successive layers the colors intended to be visible upon the transfer of the design to the transparent medium.
  • the surface of the decalcomania thus prepared was covered with varnish or other adhesive medium.
  • duplex paper In decalcomanias intended for application to furniture or porcelain or the like, it has been customary to use a paper known as duplex paper.
  • Duplex paper consists of a backing' sheet of relatively still' material, one surface of this sheet bei-ng lined with a sheet of tissue, the heavy backin being readily strippable from the tissue. he design to be transferred in this case was neces- ⁇ sarily printed reversely. upon the gummed
  • the application of a decalcomania of this sort, that is a duplex paper with reversed design did not prove practical for the purose of making transfers to transparent sure acesd for a number ofreasons, so that the remained unaffected by the development represented in the art by the introduction of the duplex paper.
  • the underlying principle is to apply to the tissue side of duplex paper a so-called open design printed and built up in white lead or equivalent material, the edges of the white lead design coinciding with the edges of the final open design when completed by the application of open color printing, leaving spaces or hollows between the built up portions of the white lead open design; then, after thus first building up the open design in white lead, surfacing said builtup portions of the design with layers of color or colors definitive of the finished open design and finally covering the entire area of the design with an adhesive.
  • Figure 2 is a section of a portion thereof to indicate, exaggeratedly, the manner in which the structure is built up.
  • A indicates the relatively stiff backing sheet of the duplex paper
  • B is the tissue portion of the duplex paper
  • C is indicative of an adhesive or gum applied to rthe surface of the tissue B
  • D, D2, D3, D is indicative of an adhesive or gum applied to rthe surface of the tissue B
  • D5 indicate successive printings of white lead, these printings having thecontour ofv the open design to be transferred.
  • E and E2 represent successive applications of printings of one color conforming to the design to be transferred, and F andF2 represent successive printings of a second color which likewise conforms to the design lto be trans ferred. Obviously there may be as many or as few different colors as the ydesign may call for.
  • G represents a layer of varnish or other .adhesive medium, which may be of uniform thickness or which may, as hereinabove described, be applied more heavily in the region of the ope-n work design or referably along the edges of said design.
  • he printing of the designboth white lead and color ⁇ portions is preferably, as will be observed froml Figure 1, a ositive printing, to wit, the eye as it sees t e decalcomania,
  • the transfer sheet thus prepared is then not wetted as a whole as in the prior practice, but is applied by the application of moisture only between the transparent surface and the surface G of the transfer sheet. This may be conveniently done by wetting the window and then applying the surface Gr to the moistened part of the window. This will cause the mois ture used to establish adhesion to the transparent sheet to be absorbed in major part by the gummed tissue without noticeably softening or pulping the backing sheet A.
  • the A presence of the relatively heavy paper backing A consequently permits the decalcomania to be applied exactly as printed and withoutdistortion or displacement such as would ensue if the tissue B were used alone andv were attempted to be applied wet, or if the backing sheet A were watersoaked prior to or during the application of the design.
  • the heavy backing A is stripped from the tissue B, said tissue remaining in adhesion with the tranfer design.
  • the stripping of this backing sheet A from the transfer sheet after its application to the transparent surface does not involve any strain upon the design carried by the transfer sheet, so
  • the white lead mounds or built-up portions which define and de-limit the open designs rearwardly of the front or colored face thereof are not visible to the observer who looks at the desi through a pane of glass to which it has translucent so as to permit the color of the face portion of the open design to appear through the white lead, are relatively invisible tothe observer who looks at that side of the glass to which the design has been ap- If the tissue sheet B is removed rom theliacking A the white lead'built-up portions appear to be without any decorative value, ut this effect disappears when the design is transferred andthe tissue sheet is removed. Accordingto the new procedure, it is possible to reproduce the finest,
  • the new process is to be regarded as a dry process, said backing sheet never being exposed lto moisture. it is of importance that the backing sheet be not wetted for otherwise a .factor of dison the insides of' windows, so as to present to the view of the beholder'outside a design as, perfectly shaped, arranged, and contoured, and as delicately drawn as if the design had been applied by the hand of the artist himself.
  • a transfer sheet for' applying decalcomaina to a transparentbody comprising a relatively heavy backing sheet and a gummed layer constituted oftissue, a design of open character printed in positive on the tissue layer and.
  • said design being a compound structure consisting of a built-upportion of protecltive material having edges which coincide approximately witli the edges of the o en design, a color face associated with the ace ofthe said built-up portions, and an ad hesive layer, the color face lying between the adhesive layer and the built-up portion of the protective material while the latter occupies the space between the color face and tissue layer, and a separable connection between the backing sheet and the tissue layer, the composite structure being such that the design of the transfer sheet may be accurately applied toa wetted transparent surface as the result of the-sup ort furnished by stiffness of the backing s eet, and that the moisture yusedto establish adhesion to the transparent sheet is absorbable in major4 part in association with the tissue layer, permitting the heavier backing sheet to be readily stripped from the rear face of

Description

May 2s, 1929. s. B. Gom-AM 1,714,503
DECALCOMANIA,`
Filed Jam 25, 1927 A TTUH/VEYS Patented May 28, 1929.
UNiTED STATES STANDISH B. GORHAM, OF NEW YORK, N.` Y.
DECALCOMANIA'.
Application led Sranuary 25, 1927, Serial No. 163,332.
This invention relates to decalcomanias or transfer paper and has for its object the ac-vcurate transfer of so-called open decalcomania designs, no matter how delicate, in-
volving incidentally certain manufacturing radvantages hereinafter more particularly referred to.
Heretofore, speaking generally, decalcomanias were of two general types, first the type which Was intended to be transferred `to a transparent material, such as glass, and second the type which was intended for transfer to the smooth sur'faces of non-transparent material such as porcelain, furniture, and the like. In the first case the decalcomania material comprised a sheet of relatively stiff paper coated with gum or other suitable adhesive upon the surface of. which the design to be transferred was first applied as a series of superposed layers of White lead upon which White lead foundation design there was next printed in successive layers the colors intended to be visible upon the transfer of the design to the transparent medium. The surface of the decalcomania thus prepared was covered with varnish or other adhesive medium. In the application of -suchl designs the paper Was soaked in water and the moistened transfer' sheet was placed in proper position against the glass and left in place until satisfactory adhesion of that part of the face of the decalcomania which represented the design had taken place. Then the paper backing was thoroughly remoistened and drawn off, leaving the design in place. It will be apparent that in any such procedure delicacy of design Was impossible. Onl relatively wide letters could be used an irrespective of the amount of strength given to those letters by repeated printings of White lead as described, of which eight layers represented common practice, the drawing off ofthe Wet paper at the end vof p the procedure nevertheless tended to distort the transfer design so that a perfectly effective transfer could not be made. At the same time it was quite impossible by proceeding in this Way to make a transfer of any design having borders ordelicate lines or designs because the distortive force v necessarily resulting from the l decalcomania art for transparent materlaldrawing off of theVy Wet paper was .greater than any -capacity or strength of the design to `hold its proper position on the transparent surface 1n res1stance to said force.
vFurthermore the expansion of the heavy paper after being soaked would be more than the expansion of vthe ink film and the transfer Would, as a result, crack.' The-let- `ters could be strengthened by printing them 1n many lal ers of White lead foundation, but
beyond this manipulation, which was not 4 sufliciently effective, very little else could be done. Possibly the most satisfactory commercial decalcomania of this type Was the one of which the edges of the layers or ehar- -acters to be transferred were heavily varnlshed and the transfer Kwas left in place on ,the glass for about twenty-four hours. In
that case the stiff paper backing required substantial rewetting tmpermit of its removal and the eEect was never very `good and certainly incapable of transferring 'fine or delicate designs. It served Well enough for Wide letters or characters, but even those, after their transfer was completed, exhibited evidence of some distortion and did not give the perfect effect of a design directly applied to the glass as in the case of a hand-painted letter.
In decalcomanias intended for application to furniture or porcelain or the like, it has been customary to use a paper known as duplex paper. Duplex paper consists of a backing' sheet of relatively still' material, one surface of this sheet bei-ng lined with a sheet of tissue, the heavy backin being readily strippable from the tissue. he design to be transferred in this case was neces- `sarily printed reversely. upon the gummed The application of a decalcomania of this sort, that is a duplex paper with reversed design, did not prove practical for the purose of making transfers to transparent sure acesd for a number ofreasons, so that the remained unaffected by the development represented in the art by the introduction of the duplex paper. According to the present invention, the underlying principle is to apply to the tissue side of duplex paper a so-called open design printed and built up in white lead or equivalent material, the edges of the white lead design coinciding with the edges of the final open design when completed by the application of open color printing, leaving spaces or hollows between the built up portions of the white lead open design; then, after thus first building up the open design in white lead, surfacing said builtup portions of the design with layers of color or colors definitive of the finished open design and finally covering the entire area of the design with an adhesive. A transfer sheet prepared in this fashion where the white lead foundation is built/up in relief, the relief corresponding to the contour of an open design, will cause the design to appear as an open design on the surface to which it is transferred just as if it had been painted on that surface by an artist with all the delicacy of shape and relative position of the various parts fully preserved notwithstanding the fact that between the various parts of the open design there are tracts and areas entirely free from lateral connections in the completely finished transferred design. This method of procedure produces a transfer structure which is believed to be' entirely new. An illustrative embodiment of the invention is shown in the accompanying drawings, in which -Figure 1 is the front view of the sheet of duplex decalcomania ofthe new type, and
Figure 2 is a section of a portion thereof to indicate, exaggeratedly, the manner in which the structure is built up.
In the drawings A indicates the relatively stiff backing sheet of the duplex paper; B is the tissue portion of the duplex paper; C is indicative of an adhesive or gum applied to rthe surface of the tissue B; D, D2, D3, D,
D5, DG indicate successive printings of white lead, these printings having thecontour ofv the open design to be transferred. E and E2 represent successive applications of printings of one color conforming to the design to be transferred, and F andF2 represent successive printings of a second color which likewise conforms to the design lto be trans ferred. Obviously there may be as many or as few different colors as the ydesign may call for. G represents a layer of varnish or other .adhesive medium, which may be of uniform thickness or which may, as hereinabove described, be applied more heavily in the region of the ope-n work design or referably along the edges of said design. he printing of the designboth white lead and color` portions, is preferably, as will be observed fromlFigure 1, a ositive printing, to wit, the eye as it sees t e decalcomania,
sees the design in the form in which it is to appear after it istransferred. The transfer sheet thus prepared is then not wetted as a whole as in the prior practice, but is applied by the application of moisture only between the transparent surface and the surface G of the transfer sheet. This may be conveniently done by wetting the window and then applying the surface Gr to the moistened part of the window. This will cause the mois ture used to establish adhesion to the transparent sheet to be absorbed in major part by the gummed tissue without noticeably softening or pulping the backing sheet A. The A presence of the relatively heavy paper backing A consequently permits the decalcomania to be applied exactly as printed and withoutdistortion or displacement such as would ensue if the tissue B were used alone andv were attempted to be applied wet, or if the backing sheet A were watersoaked prior to or during the application of the design. After close surface adhesion between the surface G of the transfer sheet andthe surface of a glass window, for example, is established, the heavy backing A is stripped from the tissue B, said tissue remaining in adhesion with the tranfer design. The stripping of this backing sheet A from the transfer sheet after its application to the transparent surface, does not involve any strain upon the design carried by the transfer sheet, so
` that no matter how delicate the design may be, itvwill not be disrupted, shifted or distorted by the said operation as it would be if the design were carried on the backing sheet A instead of on the tissue sheet B. About half an, hour after the transfer isv first applied to the transparent surface, the adhesion is comple-te, and all that is now necessary is to moisten the tissue, whereupon it can be easily wiped off and removed, leaving the design perfectly transferred with all its delicacy of detail unimpaired and undisrupted as an open design having edges which are free from and unsupported by adjacent edges of the open design; AWhen the design is positively printed, as in my preferred embodiment, the face of the transfer sheet is applied to the transparent surface, so that said -face may be viewed through the glass. In other words', there is always a thickness of the transparent material between the observer and the design which he observes in its transferred condition.
The operations of applying decalcomania in the described manner and of removing from the transferred design all parts of the transfer sheet whichl are not to be a permanent portion of the transferred design, (leavlie do not require to be as greatly strengthened tempted to be used. Thus, where it has been customary to use eight successive printings `of white lead for a solid design (no yamount of White lead sucing, accordin to this prior practice,y to permit open designs to be properly or satisfactorily transferred) 1t 1s now possible to produce far better results, almost perfect results with open de signs and to use but six or even less successive printings of white lead. The white lead mounds or built-up portions which define and de-limit the open designs rearwardly of the front or colored face thereof are not visible to the observer who looks at the desi through a pane of glass to which it has translucent so as to permit the color of the face portion of the open design to appear through the white lead, are relatively invisible tothe observer who looks at that side of the glass to which the design has been ap- If the tissue sheet B is removed rom theliacking A the white lead'built-up portions appear to be without any decorative value, ut this effect disappears when the design is transferred andthe tissue sheet is removed. Accordingto the new procedure, it is possible to reproduce the finest,
most delicate lettering, borders, and edges,.
all of which would' be pulled 0H by suction or distortion if such designs were attempted to be transferred according to'the standard method.-`v Then again, the standard method wherein simplex paper is used, necessitates that the whole transfer sheet be soaked in water in order to be applied and that the transfer sheet must also be either still wet, or rewetted in orderl to permit of the removal of thewpaper backing. `These various elements introduce factors which have thus Vfar made is impossible totransfer delicate designs in a satisfactory manner.
So far as 4the backing sheet of the new duplex transfer sheet is concerned, it will be observed Ithat'the new process is to be regarded as a dry process, said backing sheet never being exposed lto moisture. it is of importance that the backing sheet be not wetted for otherwise a .factor of dison the insides of' windows, so as to present to the view of the beholder'outside a design as, perfectly shaped, arranged, and contoured, and as delicately drawn as if the design had been applied by the hand of the artist himself.
I claim: j I
1. A transfer sheet forapplying decal@- een applied and, being relatively' In fact gummed layer constituted of tissue, a design .of open character on the tissue layer and adapted, upon application to a transparent body to be visible fromv each side of the said body as the same open design, said design being a compound structure consisting of a built-up portion of protective material having edges which coincide approximately with the edges of the open design, a color face associated with the face of the said built-up portions, and an adhesive layer, the color face lying between the adhesive layer and the built-up portion of the protective material while the latter occupies the space between the color face and tissue layer, and alseparable connection between the backing sheet and the tissue layer, the composite structure being such that they design of the transfer sheet may be accurately applied to a wetted transparent surface as the result of the support furnished by stiffness of the backing sheet, and that the moisture used to establish adhesion to the transparent sheet is absorbable in major part in association with the tissue layer, permitting the heavier backing sheet to be readily stripped from the rear face of the tissue without imposing strain on. the open design after the design .on the tissue has developed its initial ad- 2. A transfer sheet for' applying decalcomaina to a transparentbody, comprising a relatively heavy backing sheet and a gummed layer constituted oftissue, a design of open character printed in positive on the tissue layer and. adapted, upon application to a transparent b`od to be visible from each side of the said bo y as the same open design with the positive side of the printed design visible only through the transparent body, said design being a compound structure consisting of a built-upportion of protecltive material having edges which coincide approximately witli the edges of the o en design, a color face associated with the ace ofthe said built-up portions, and an ad hesive layer, the color face lying between the adhesive layer and the built-up portion of the protective material while the latter occupies the space between the color face and tissue layer, and a separable connection between the backing sheet and the tissue layer, the composite structure being such that the design of the transfer sheet may be accurately applied toa wetted transparent surface as the result of the-sup ort furnished by stiffness of the backing s eet, and that the moisture yusedto establish adhesion to the transparent sheet is absorbable in major4 part in association with the tissue layer, permitting the heavier backing sheet to be readily stripped from the rear face of the tissue Without imposing strain on the open 5 design after the design on the tissue has developed its initial adhesive grip While leaving the tissue layer to be easily wiped 0H Without disturbing the design, as soon as the adhesive uniting said design to the transparent sheet has assumed a definite set. I0
In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand.
sfrANDisH-B. GoRHAM.
US163332A 1927-01-25 1927-01-25 Decalcomania Expired - Lifetime US1714503A (en)

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Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2811475A (en) * 1952-11-20 1957-10-29 Brittains Ltd Transfer paper and dry-strip transfers made with such paper
US3043732A (en) * 1957-01-02 1962-07-10 Dennison Mfg Co Top label surprinting
US3130113A (en) * 1954-08-09 1964-04-21 United Merchants & Mfg Self-adhesive decorative surface covering material

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2811475A (en) * 1952-11-20 1957-10-29 Brittains Ltd Transfer paper and dry-strip transfers made with such paper
US3130113A (en) * 1954-08-09 1964-04-21 United Merchants & Mfg Self-adhesive decorative surface covering material
US3043732A (en) * 1957-01-02 1962-07-10 Dennison Mfg Co Top label surprinting

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