Glossary
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We have created a glossary that helps to explain what terms mean from the perspective of the sticker, label & printing industry.
If a term is missing that you would like added, please comment below.
A
Acrylic adhesive
Acrylic labels offer a much better temperature range and good resistance to UV light. Acrylic has great long-term adhesion and is suited for most sticker & label applications. Most general label films will use an acrylic, pressure-sensitive adhesive.
B
Backing paper
Backing paper is a popular name for the release-liner that's on the back of a self-adhesive sticker. It is removed before application. It is usually a silicone-coated paper but can also be a clear PET film. The other name that can be used for backing papers is a release liner.
Banding
Banding is consistent, parallel stripes in a printed image. It is caused by the print head moving across the media and the feed being incorrectly calibrated, so it moved too much or too little. The results are lines throughout your print where it should be a solid colour. This blog on common print problems shows how banding can look.
Bitmap (artwork)
A bitmap image is made from thousands, sometimes millions, of tiny dots known as pixels. Popular bitmap file formats are JPEG and PNG, typically used for photographs. Unlike vector artwork, bitmap images will get blurry if you scale them too much. You can learn how to scale low-resolution bitmap artwork here.
BOPP
Polypropylene (BOPP) is a film with high tear resistance & rigidity. This makes it ideal for beverages & many other label applications. It's the industry standard for labels.
C
Calendared (vinyl)
Calendared vinyl is a plastic film made from PVC. Calendaring is a manufacturing process that tells us how a PVC film is made.
Ingredients get mixed and kneaded in an extruder. The mix then passes over huge heated rollers to form a long, thin vinyl sheet.
Calendered vinyl ranges from economy to high-grade but is best used on flat surfaces.
Cast (vinyl)
Cast vinyl refers to a plastic film made from PVC. Producing cast vinyl involves an expensive manufacturing process and a premium product. Car wrapping is a popular use of cast vinyl because cast materials are very stable and can be very thin, which makes them extremely conformable.
Another amazing feature of cast vinyl is once it's applied onto a complex surface, you can reheat the vinyl to between 80 °C and 90 °C (176 °F and 194 °F) to thermoform the material. This means it's set into a new shape, so it won't lift over time.
CMYK(OVG)
CMYK stands for Cyan, Yellow, Magenta, and Black (key). These 4 are process colours used to make thousands of other colours. Newer print technologies have added Orange, Violet & Green to widen the colour gamut (the number of colours that can be printed).
D
Delamination
Delamination happens when the transparent, protective film applied over the printed layer starts to lift.
Delamination can happen because of excessive abrasion or because the adhesive isn’t strong enough to hold the clear laminate in place, especially if the label is stuck onto curved surfaces.
Die-cut
The term ‘die-cut’ originates from an old method using pre-made metal ‘dies’. Strips of sharp metal are formed into the wanted shape to make a cutting ‘die’.
Die-cutting today means the sticker or label is cut around the shape of your artwork in a custom shape, through both the vinyl and backing paper layers. They can be any shape and are popular stickers.
F
Fluorescent
The word fluorescent, neon and Day-Glo can all be used interchangeably to describe a colour that looks very bright. Fluorescent colours are usually limited to only a few shades because the original pigments are only available in yellow, red, orange, green & pink. Fluorescent colours absorb and convert non-visible light into visible light, which is why they look so bright.
G
GSM
Stands for grams per square meter (g/m2) - unit of measuring mass per area.
Often understanding the thickness is hard because you need to know the density. Popular backing papers for stickers range from 80-150 GSM whereas labels on rolls typically have a much thinner backing paper, less than 60 GSM.
Gamut (colour)
A colour gamut defines a range of colours within the spectrum of that colour model that can be reproduced on a printer or other device, such as a computer screen.
Two popular colour models that have a defined gamut are CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, and black (key)) and RGB (red, green, blue).
H
Hot melt (adhesive)
Hot melt is an adhesive containing 100% solids, unlike water or solvent-based adhesives. It is a Thermoplastic adhesive, so becomes mouldable when heated up. Hot melt adhesive is most commonly used in glue guns. It’s sometimes applied to the back of printable media for hard-to-stick surfaces, such as tyre stickers or oil drums & cardboard box sealing, as it has high tack, low-shear properties.
I
Inkjet printing
Inkjet printing recreates a digital image by spraying tiny ink droplets onto a substrate. Inkjet printers combine cyan, yellow, magenta & black inks to create high-resolution images. Some inkjet printers print white, orange, green, and violet to increase the number of colours they can print, known as the colour gamut.
K
Kiss-cutting
Kiss cutting refers to how a sticker or label is cut. Kiss cut stickers only get cut through the vinyl layer around the edge of your sticker/label without cutting through the release liner.
Only cutting through the vinyl layer leaves an extra backing around your sticker, which makes them easier to peel & apply.
L
Label
A label is the same as a sticker on sheets or rolls. The terms can be used interchangeably for a self-adhesive piece of printed plastic or paper. Labels are typically used on mass-produced products such as beverage bottles.
Laminate
A laminate is a layer covering the printed image of a sticker or label. Laminates are used for protection or aesthetics. Laminates generally come in 5 finishes: gloss, satin, matte, soft-touch (similar to matte), and anti-slip. A laminate can be a layer of clear plastic, but it can also be a liquid coating that's applied. Liquid laminates are not as durable as applying a plastic layer but are typically cheaper.
Laser cutting
There are many ways to cut stickers & laser cutting is one. CO2 lasers, about 190 microns thick, can either die-cut or kiss-cut vinyl and other media to any shape required.
Laser cutters can run at over 50 linear meters per minute and have a cutting accuracy of +/- 0.1mm.
Latex printing
Latex ink printers use water-based inks where the latex acts as a carrier for the colour pigments. Heaters within the printer dry the latex as it comes off the printer, so the ink cures instantly, leaving no time before the media can be finished (laminated & cut). The final printed product is durable and considered eco-friendly because of the water-based inks used.
M
Metallised film
A metallised film is a polymer film, usually PET, that's coated with a thin layer of metal, normally aluminium. They give the film an extremely shiny, near-chrome, metallic appearance. They are usually quite stiff because they need a hard polymer film to get a very shiny finish. Metallised films are used to make mirror silver, mirror gold, holographic, and other shiny stickers.
Micron
A metric unit of measuring length also called a Micrometre. It equals one-millionth of a meter, 0.001mm, or about 0.000039 inches. Its symbol is μm.
Print media is typically between 50-80 microns thick (0.05mm to 0.08mm). This doesn’t sound very thick but is perfect for most applications.
Mil
An Imperial unit of measuring length normally referred to as thou, a thousandth.
It’s 25.4 μm (micron) or 0.001 in. Its symbol is thou or mil. It is often used in the USA to measure the thickness of media, whereas in Europe, the unit of micron is normally used.
Misregistration (cutting)
Misregistration describes a cut machine cutting a sticker or label incorrectly by being offset in the X or Y-axis. It gives an uneven boarder to your sticker and can look particularly bad. It is unusual to happen with digital cutters unless they are poorly calibrated.
Monomeric
Monomeric vinyl is a grade of calendared PVC film. Monomeric grade films use a single polymer and are therefore cheaper to manufacture. They’re typically lower-grade PVC films used for short-term, promotional uses.
P
Peel adhesion (adhesive)
Peel adhesion is defined as the force needed to “peel” an adhesive tape from any given surface. This is typically tested at 90 and 180 degrees. Results expressed as N/25mm then the surface it was tested on, usually stainless steel or glass, after a specified time, usually 24 hours.
Peel adhesion values increase over time for pressure-sensitive adhesives, the most common glue used for stickers & labels.
PE
Polyethylene film falls into two main categories: low-density (LDPE) & high-density (HDPE).
- LDPE is soft and flexible, has good tear and moisture resistance, and is great for grocery bags and food packaging.
- HDPE has good impact strength, puncture resistance, and chemical resistance but low gas barrier properties, making it suitable for premium labels.
PET
Polyester (PET) is a printable film with great durability. This makes polyester great for labels & stickers with outdoor applications. PET films have good temperature, UV, and chemical resistance.
Plasticiser (migration)
A plasticiser is a substance that’s added to a material to make it softer and more flexible.
Plasticisers are used in PVC films to make them more flexible. This can make PVC stickers some of the easiest to apply. However, plasticisers can also cause vinyl films to shrink, so it’s important to get the right balance.
Polymeric (vinyl)
Polymeric vinyl is a grade of calendared PVC vinyl. Polymeric-grade PVC films use more than one polymer, which means they’re more expensive to manufacture than monomeric films. Polymeric calendered vinyl gets used on longer-term applications, such as window graphics or stickers.
PVC
Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) is one of the world’s most-produced polymers. There are two types of PVC: rigid & flexible.
The flexible version is used to make PVC films, often called vinyl or vinyl films.
PVC is being used less & less in some industries because it’s harder to recycle than PP or PE alternatives.
R
Release liner
A release liner is the backing to a self-adhesive sticker or label that gets peeled away before application. It is usually a silicone-coated paper but can also be a clear PET film. The other name for is backing paper. Silicone-release liners are notoriously hard to recycle because of their silicone coating.
Reverse printing
Reverse printing is a process where a design is printed as though mirrored, so the image looks correct when it's looked at through the clear media. It is used if you want the sticker's adhesive over the printed image, and it is great for stickers to apply inside windows. We call these front-adhesive stickers.
Rotary screen printing
Rotary Screen Printing is the same concept as screen printing but in a cylinder. It’s prevalent for high-quality textile printing.
When rotary screen printing, a machine presses a paste or ink through the mesh on a cylindrical screen onto the subscribe. Each colour is applied separately to achieve full-colour prints.
Rotary screen printing looks like this.
Rubber-based adhesive
A rubber-based adhesive is an alternative to an acrylic adhesive. A rubber-based adhesive has superior long-term adhesion, especially on plastic surfaces. However, it can feature a yellowish tint that isn’t good for transparent films. It’s also better in relatively benign environments where it won’t experience extreme hot or cold temperatures or exposure to sunlight. It’s generally used on labels for high-tack applications, such as oil drum labels and tyre stickers.
S
Screen printing
When screen printing, a screen is made by stretching a mesh onto a frame. The chosen tension & mesh size determine how much ink gets transferred to a substrate.
A design is then transferred to the screen by developing an image onto it using a UV cured block. The shape of the stencil determines the pattern that’s printed on the substrate.
A rubber squeegee, either hand or machine-operated, then pushes ink through the mesh onto the paper or plastic substrate. Screenprinting inks can be solvent or water-based and can be cured by UV or leaving the water/solvent to evaporate.
Shear testing (adhesive)
When adhesives are tested in shear, two pieces are bonded together and pulled apart in opposite directions.
This image helps to explain.
Adhesives for stickers & labels are tested in shear to see how they will perform in real-world applications.
Shrinkage
All plastics will shrink over time; this includes all types of plastic stickers and labels. Shrinkage rates vary but are typically between 0.5% to 3%. This is completely normal. Really soft PVC films with lots of plasticisers are some vinyl types that will shrink the most. See shrinkage rates of various materials.
Solvent adhesives
Solvent-based adhesives may lose up to 50-70% of layer thickness during drying as the solvent evaporates. Solvent-based, pressure-sensitive adhesives are one of the most popular adhesives used today.
Sticker
A sticker is a self-adhesive piece of paper or plastic, typically printed. A sticker can be on a roll or sheet, but it tends to be called a label when part of a sheet or roll.
The terms sticker & label can be used quite interchangeably, so it's best to read into more detail if you're looking at buying stickers or labels.
Surface energy
Surface energy is a relative measurement of the energy at the surface of a material. It's often quoted in units of mN/m. It's important because it defines how easy material is to stick to.
T
Tack
Tack is the property of a pressure-sensitive adhesive that allows it to stick to a surface with only slight pressure.
The higher the tack, the more a sticker will adhere to a surface on the first application, making it harder to lift & re-apply.
Thermal transfer printing
A very thin layer of ink, less than 10 microns thick, is applied to a PET carrier and made into rolls, known as a thermal transfer ribbon (TTR). The ink is typically made from a wax & resin mix.
A thermal print head applies heat and pressure to the ribbon to melt the ink so an image gets printed to the media. Each spot or process colour is applied separately to make full-colour prints.
Thru cut
Thru-cut in the label market refers to how a sticker is cut. It tells us a sticker or label is cut through both the sticker & its backing paper, meaning they’ll arrive as individual pieces, not on sheets or rolls.
U
UV inkjet
A UV inkjet refers to traditional inkjet printing, but where the ink cures by exposure to UV light as an alternative to solvent or water-based inks that take time to dry. UV curing can make printing much faster and more eco-friendly because potentially harmful solvents aren’t released into the environment.
V
Variable data printing
Variable data printing is when each sticker or label in the same batch has a unique piece of data printed. Popular reasons for variable data printing are QR codes, barcodes, dates, numbers, or SKUs - typically something that helps to identify a product. If you'd like custom stickers or labels with variable data, you need to provide a CSV with the data & let us know which piece of data needs to change for each label.
Vector (artwork)
Vector artwork is made from geometrical formulas (aka maths) to represent images. You can create vector artwork in design programmes such as CorelDRAW, Adobe Illustrator, and Inkscape. The benefit of vector artwork is that it will not go blurry when scaled like bitmap artwork will. You can learn more here.
W
Water-based adhesives
Water-based adhesives are usually non-hazardous and eco-friendly, containing no VOCs. They are a popular alternative to solvent-based adhesives and are widely used for pressure-sensitive, self-adhesive films.
Wetting out (adhesive)
Wetting out of adhesive involves the material's surface energy and the adhesive's formulation.
When an adhesive ‘wets out,’ it describes how the adhesive flows to cover a surface to maximize the contact area. Higher surface energy materials give a better wet-out and, therefore, a stronger bond.