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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention provides a new article of commerce in the form of a label
which a purchaser or other consumer of a phonorecord or other recording
can apply directly to the recording and yet which leaves the entirety of
the manufacturer's label accessible for reading.
One use of the new label is to affix a greeting message to a phonograph
record that is given as a gift. Another use is to enable the record owner
to note on the record information such as purchase price and date, dates
the record is played, and the like. The new label provides one or more
message surfaces carried directly on the record for these and like uses
essentially without any obliteration of the manufacturer's label.
The invention is described principally with reference to phonograph
records, but features of the invention apply to other recordings including
those in magnetic tape cassette format and on magnetic discs.
A phonograph record conventionally has a circular manufacturer's label
affixed at the center of the record and centrally apertured by the
spindle-receiving hole. There is no space on the record for additional
labeling by the user, and it is unsatisfactory to obliterate the
manufacturer's label with such additional labeling.
It is accordingly an object of this invention to provide an additional
recording label which leaves the manufacturer's label intact and
accessible for examination.
A further object of the invention is to provide a recording label for
application by the consumer and which does not interfere with the use of
the recording.
Another object is to provide a recording label of the above character which
can be removed without damage to the manufacturer's label.
Other objects of the invention will in part be obvious and will in part
appear hereinafter.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
A recording label according to the invention has a mounting element
supportingly joined to a message element. The two elements together are
configured to overlie the manufacturer's label on the recording. The
mounting element carries a pressure-sensitive adhesive for securing the
label directly onto the manufacturer's label, but is transparent to allow
full examination of the manufacturer's label which it overlies. The
message element of the label is essentially a flap extending from the
mounting element and which normally lies flat over the manufacturer's
label. The message element can, however, be lifted for examination of the
underside and for examination of the information on the underlying part of
the manufacturer's label. Thus, although the two label elements overlie
the manufacturer's label for ready viewing whenever the recording is used,
each affords complete reading and other examination of that part of the
manufacturer's label which it overlies.
In one use of the new label, a record purchaser writes a gift message on
the message element and affixes the label to a phonorecording that is to
be given as a gift. The user can even affix a photograph to the message
element. Other uses of the new label, when affixed to a recording, include
noting information about the recorded material, and about the purchase and
use of the record.
A supplemental label of this character, when affixed to either a recording
disc or a cassette of magnetic recording tape, remains essentially flat
against the surface which bears the manufacturer's label so as not to
interfere with storage or record use, e.g. playback. The user of the
record, however, can examine and read the entire manufacturer's label,
directly through the transparent mounting element of the new label and by
lifting the message element to examine the manufacturer's label
information underneath. It will also be apparent that both surfaces of the
message element of the new label can bear a message or other visual
information.
In one preferred practice, the new label has the same configuration as a
manufacturer's phonorecording label and is of substantially the same size
to cover essentially the entirety of themanufacturer's label. The new
label hence can have an attractive appearance when affixed to a
phonorecording. The preferred new label for use on a phonograph record
thus is a circular disc of essentially the same size as the disc-shaped
manufacturer's label and is centrally apertured for passage of a
record-player spindle. The message and mounting elements of the new label
are complimentary circular segments, i.e. together they form a complete
circular disc, and the boundary between them is a chord of the circle. The
new label can have a like configuration for use on a magnetic or an
optical recording disc. In an alternative embodiment for use on a cassette
of magnetic recording tape, the label has the same rectangular
configuaration and size as the manufacturer's label. The boundary between
the mounting element and the message element is again a straight line
extending between two edges of the overall configuration.
The invention accordingly comprises an article of manufacture possessing
the features, properties and the relation of elements exemplified in the
article hereinafter described, and the scope of the invention is indicated
in the claims.
For a fuller understanding of the nature and objects of the invention,
reference should be made to the following detailed description and the
accompanying drawings, in which:
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 shows a phonograph record bearing a greeting label embodying
features of the invention;
FIG. 2 is a side elevation view of the phonograph record and greeting label
of FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a plan view of the greeting label shown in FIGS. 1 and 2;
FIG. 4 is a cross-sectional view, with thickness dimensions enlarged for
clarity, of the greeting label shown in FIG. 3;
FIG . 5 is a view similar to FIG. 4 of another greeting label construction
according to the invention; and
FIGS. 6 and 7 are views similar to FIGS. 3 and 4 of another embodiment.
DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATED EMBODIMENTS
FIG. 1 shows a conventional phonograph record 10 with a label 12 according
to the invention affixed directly over the manufacturer's label 14. The
annular portion 10a of the record is pressed to form circumferential
grooves bearing in conventional manner the recorded information. The
invention also can be practiced with a disc-like record that stores
information with other recording techniques, i.e. it can be a magnetic
recording disc or an optical memory disc.
The manufacturer's label 14 is the conventional circular disc affixed to a
face of the record at the center and centrally apertured with a
spindle-receiving hole 16 which passes entirely through the record 10. The
record 10 bears an identical manufacturer's label 18 on the oposite face,
as FIG. 2 shows.
The illustrated new label 12 is a sheet-like circular disc formed with a
transparent mounting element 20 supportingly joined to a message element
22. The two portions are circular segments that together form the complete
circular disc. In the preferred form shown, the label 12 is identical in
shape and in peripheral dimensions to the disc-shaped manufacturer's label
14 to attain an attractive assemblage of the new label 12 in exact
registration over the manufacturer's label 14, except when the message
element 22 is lifted from the plane of the record 10, as appears in the
solid showing in FIGS. 1 and 2. The mounting element 20 is, as stated,
transparent and is adhered to the manufacturer's label 14, typically with
a pressure-sensitive adhesive as discussed further below. The message
element 22 joins to the mounting portion along a chord of the disc-like
configuration. In the embodiment of FIGS. 1 through 4, the chord is a
diameter 24 (FIG. 3). Both elements are of thin sheet or paper-like stock.
The mounting element typically uses material common in pressure-sensitive
transparent adhesive tape and the material of the message element 22 is,
for example, high grade paper stock or thin plastic sheet stock with
frosted surfaces on which one can readily write information and, where
desired, adhesively mount photographs or pictures. Further, the message
element can receive writing or other information on both faces.
FIG. 4 shows one construction for the label 12 with a mounting element 20
of transparent plastic film 20a coated with a layer 20b of
pressure-sensitive adhesive that carries a removable protective peel-off
film 20c. The mounting element forms a major circular segment of the label
but the peel-off film 20c is of smaller size, i.e. is semicircular. This
leaves the adhesive layer 20b uncovered along a joining strip 20d
extending along the chord 24. The message element 22 is a card-like panel
of writing stock, typically paper-based or plastic-based, that is
semicircular and adhered to the mounting element by way of the adhesive
layer 20b along the joining strip 20d.
With this construction, the mounting element 20 can adhere the label 12 to
a one-half or semicircular portion of the manufacturer's label 14 (FIG. 1)
to affix the semicircular message element to the record 10. The latter
element can lie flat over the remaining half of the manufacturer's label
during use and storage of the record. The hinged mounting of the message
element 22 allows a user to lift the message element from the record
surface and thereby allow one to read the underside of the message element
as well as the portion of the manufacturer's label which it otherwise
overlies.
FIG. 5 shows a cross-sectional view like FIG. 4 of another construction of
a label 26 according to the invention and having a mounting element 28 and
a message element 30. Where the label 26 is a circular disc, like the
label 12 of FIGS. 1 through 4, the juncture between the two elements is at
a chord 32. A transparent disc-shaped sheet 34 has the same peripheral
dimensions as the label 26 and carries a pressure-sensitive layer of
adhesive 36 over the entire inner surface, i.e. the right facing surface
in FIG. 5. A removable protective peel-off film 38 covers the adhesive 36
over the mounting element 28. The message element 30, however, has a
writing panel 40 adhered to the adhesive 36.
With this construction, the transparent sheet 34 forms the entire outer,
left-facing in FIG. 5, surface of the label 26. The exposed surface of
this sheet can be treated to receive writing or other user-applied
information, particularly throughout the message element of the label. The
opposing surface of the label 26 throughout the message element is formed
by the writing panel 40.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the new label of the
invention can be fabricated with construction other than those
illustrated. Where the adhesive for affixing the mounting element to a
record is of the commercially available removable type, one can remove the
label 12 or the label 26 from a record, where that becomes desirable,
without damage to the underlying manufacturer's label. It will also be
understood that although the illustrated embodiments of the invention are
of circular disc-like configuration to conform to the manufacturer's label
on a conventional phonograph record, the new label can employ other
geometries including an essentially rectangular format to conform to the
manufacturer's label on a conventional cassette of magnetic recording
tape.
Another embodiment of the invention is a label ecured by a mounting portion
that folds underneath the message portion. For a phonograph record, this
label 42 can have, as FIGS. 6 and 7 show, a semicircular message portion
44 from which a mounting portion 46 extends. The illustrated label 42 has
a transparent layer 42a coated with adhesive 42b and carrying a decorative
panel 42c on the front face of the message portion. A peel-off film 42d is
over the adhesive. The label 42 is mounted by folding the message portion
46 180.degree. from the extended position shown to underlie the message
portion 44, as shown with broken lines in FIG. 7. After removal of the
film 42d, the adhesive is exposed for mounting on a record surface.
It will thus be seen that the objects set forth above, among those made
apparent from the preceding description, are efficiently attained. Since
certain changes mwy be made in the above recording label without departing
from the scope of the invention, it is intended that all matter contained
in the above description or shown in the accompanying drawing be
interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
It is also to be understood that the following claims are intended to cover
all of the generic and specific features of the invention described
herein, and all statements of the scope of the invention which as a matter
of language might be said to fall therebetween.
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Description  |
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