Lamination For Plastic Materials or Pouches
CPP
Description: Cast polypropylene (CPP) is extruded in-house, and can be used for a variety of applications, including, twist film, flow wraps, bag film, and a myriad of special applications. CPP extrusion is very common in Europe and Asia, but is more of a specialty film in North America.
Typical Features: Excellent clarity, gloss, scratch resistance, heat seals, and hot tack. Good stiffness.
Barrier Properties: Excellent water barrier, poor gas barrier.
Typical Grades: Ranges from 60 ga up to 4 mil.
Applications: CPP is an excellent alternative to PE for bags with less than 1 lbs of content. CPP has significantly better heat seals than OPP and easily seals through contamination for dusty products. CPP is an excellent sealant web, laminated to OPP, PET, Paper. It is also often used for Twist Wrap applications.OPP
Description: Oriented polypropylene (OPP or BOPP) is a commodity film that is typically produced in dedicated factories in North America, Asia, or the Middle East.
Typical Features: Excellent clarity, gloss, and stiffness. Good heat seals.
Barrier Properties: Excellent water barrier, poor gas barrier.
Typical Grades: We generally stock 70ga, 80 ga, 1 mil, 1.2 mil, and 1.4 mil.
Applications: Sealant web or outer web in laminations, or a stand-alone film for certain applications. Most grades of OPP is sealable on 2 sides, and can in most cases be fin sealed or lap sealed.PE
Description: Polyethylene is extruded throughout North America, and is a readily available and commonly used material. We extrude PE in-house and also buy certain grades from local suppliers, depending on the requirements. PE is typically blown, but can also be cast. Cast PE is typically softer and clearer than blown PE.
Typical Features: Excellent heat seals, puncture resistance, and impact resistance.
Barrier Properties: Good water barrier, poor gas barrier.
Typical Grades: 1.5 mil, 2-4 mil.
Applications: PE is most commonly used as the sealant web in laminates of all kindsPET
Description: Polyester (PET) is a commodity film that is typically produced in dedicated factories in North America, Asia, or the Middle East.
Typical Features: Excellent stiffness, clarity, gloss and heat resistance.
Barrier Properties: Excellent gas barrier, poor water barrier.
Typical Grades: We stock 48 ga PET, which is the most common grade in North America for flexible packaging.
Applications: Polyester is almost always used as an outer web in laminations. The heat-resistance of PET makes it ideal for this application, creating a very "forgiving" material that is easy to run. Heatsealable grades of PET do exist, but they are not that common. As a result, PET laminations require a fin seal.Metallized PET
Description:
CPP
Description: Cast polypropylene (CPP) is extruded in-house, and can be used for a variety of applications, including, twist film, flow wraps, bag film, and a myriad of special applications. CPP extrusion is very common in Europe and Asia, but is more of a specialty film in North America.
Typical Features: Excellent clarity, gloss, scratch resistance, heat seals, and hot tack. Good stiffness.
Barrier Properties: Excellent water barrier, poor gas barrier.
Typical Grades: Ranges from 60 ga up to 4 mil.
Applications: CPP is an excellent alternative to PE for bags with less than 1 lbs of content. CPP has significantly better heat seals than OPP and easily seals through contamination for dusty products. CPP is an excellent sealant web, laminated to OPP, PET, Paper. It is also often used for Twist Wrap applications.OPP
Description: Oriented polypropylene (OPP or BOPP) is a commodity film that is typically produced in dedicated factories in North America, Asia, or the Middle East.
Typical Features: Excellent clarity, gloss, and stiffness. Good heat seals.
Barrier Properties: Excellent water barrier, poor gas barrier.
Typical Grades: We generally stock 70ga, 80 ga, 1 mil, 1.2 mil, and 1.4 mil.
Applications: Sealant web or outer web in laminations, or a stand-alone film for certain applications. Most grades of OPP is sealable on 2 sides, and can in most cases be fin sealed or lap sealed.PE
Description: Polyethylene is extruded throughout North America, and is a readily available and commonly used material. We extrude PE in-house and also buy certain grades from local suppliers, depending on the requirements. PE is typically blown, but can also be cast. Cast PE is typically softer and clearer than blown PE.
Typical Features: Excellent heat seals, puncture resistance, and impact resistance.
Barrier Properties: Good water barrier, poor gas barrier.
Typical Grades: 1.5 mil, 2-4 mil.
Applications: PE is most commonly used as the sealant web in laminates of all kindsPET
Description: Polyester (PET) is a commodity film that is typically produced in dedicated factories in North America, Asia, or the Middle East.
Typical Features: Excellent stiffness, clarity, gloss and heat resistance.
Barrier Properties: Excellent gas barrier, poor water barrier.
Typical Grades: We stock 48 ga PET, which is the most common grade in North America for flexible packaging.
Applications: Polyester is almost always used as an outer web in laminations. The heat-resistance of PET makes it ideal for this application, creating a very "forgiving" material that is easy to run. Heatsealable grades of PET do exist, but they are not that common. As a result, PET laminations require a fin seal.Metallized PET
Description:
Metallized OPP
Description: Metallized OPP is another common barrier material. We metallize our OPP in-house by evaporating a thin coat of aluminum onto the film under vacuum.
Typical Features: Similar to OPP
Barrier Properties: Outstanding gas barrier and water barrier.
Typical Grades: 70 ga PET is stocked and metallized for the application. Other grades are also readily available, but since the metal provides the barrier, 70 ga typically works for a multitude of applications.
Applications: Metallized OPP is often used as the sealant web in an OPP/MET OPP lamination for a variety of applications from flow wraps for chocolate to VFFS for candy, etc. Metallized OPP can also be surface printed and used as a single web
The two most common reasons for adding a coating over your printed piece are for protection: to avoid scuffing the ink, if you have included areas of heavy ink coverage; and for aesthetic reasons: to draw the reader's eye to particular items, to add depth and interest to your printed piece. First consider why you are coating your job.
When making a decision, keep in mind the following:
- Dried inks show fingerprints and scuffing, especially in dark solids.
- Press coatings (like varnish) cost less than bindery (off-press) coatings (like UV coating and laminates) since bindery coatings are applied over dry ink at slow speeds. Because the chemicals used in aqueous coating damage press rollers, this coating is more expensive for the printer/binder to apply than varnish; therefore, the extra cost is passed on to the client.
- Varnish is the least effective way to prevent scuffing, particularly when publications are multiply shrink-wrapped (as opposed to singly shrink-wrapped) prior to shipping. Bindery coatings like UV coating and laminates are far better for protecting loose books in transit. Even aqueous coating is much stronger than varnish and can therefore withstand books shifting around in transit without scuffing.
- All printers can apply varnish, but not all printers can apply laminates, UV coating, or aqueous coating.
- You cannot print (ink-jet or by hand), glue, or foil stamp over coatings, so you need to leave an uncoated window if you want to do any of these (coatings should be the final finishing step on a printed piece).
- You should only varnish coated stock, or the coating will seep into the paper and be lost.
- Some coatings deepen the ink color they cover, yellow with age, and/or discolor white paper.
VARNISH
Varnish is essentially ink without pigment. It requires its own printing unit on press. It can be wet-trapped (printed in-line at the same time other inks are laid down), or dry-trapped (run as an additional pass through the press after the initial ink coating has dried). The latter often provides a glossier finish. Varnish comes in gloss, dull, and satin (in-between dull and gloss), and can be tinted by adding pigment to the varnish.
From an artistic standpoint, you can play a dull-varnished portion of the sheet against a portion without varnish or with a gloss varnish. This contrast can give emphasis to certain areas and/or give the impression of depth.
UV COATING
UV Coating is a clear liquid spread over the paper like ink and then cured instantly with ultraviolet light. It can be a gloss or dull coating, and can be used as a spot covering to accent a particular image on the sheet or as an overall (flood) coating. UV coating gives more protection and sheen than either varnish or aqueous coating. Since it is cured with light and not heat, no solvents enter the atmosphere. However, it is more difficult to recycle than the other coatings.
UV coating is applied as a separate finishing operation as a flood coating or (applied by screen printing) as a spot coating. Keep in mind that this thick coating may crack when scored or folded.
AQUEOUS COATING
Aqueous coating is more environmentally friendly than UV coating because it is water based. It has better hold-out than varnish (it does not seep into the press sheet) and does not crack or scuff easily. Aqueous does, however, cost twice as much as varnish.
Since it is applied by an aqueous coating tower at the delivery end of the press, one can only lay down a flood aqueous coating, not a localized "spot" aqueous coating. Aqueous comes in gloss, dull, and satin.
LAMINATE
Laminates come in two types: film and liquid, and can have a gloss or matte finish. As their name suggests, in one case a clear plastic film is laid down over the sheet of paper, and in the other case a clear liquid is spread over the sheet and dries (or cures) like a varnish. Laminates protect the sheet from water (including perspiration from the hands) and are therefore good for coating items like menus and book covers. For more money, one can even specify a porous, lay-flat laminate (the interior of which is covered with numerous "V"-shaped cuts in the plastic that minimize the "curl" one often sees on paperback book covers due to moisture seeping into the uncoated side and causing it to expand). Laminates are slow to apply and costly but provide a strong, washable surface. They are the superior choice for protecting loose books in transit.
What kind of coating you should get depends of course on what you're printing and what that printing is intended for.
dbanig@prflexbag.com