A process of reinforcing fragile sheet material, usually using transparent or translucent sheets of plastic or paper Some forms of lamination such as those using cellulose acetate are considered unacceptable as preservation methods because of high heat and pressure during application, instability of lamination materials or difficulty in removing lamination from the item, especially a long time after the lamination was performed
(a) A method of applying magnetic stripe tape to a card; adhesive is applied to the film side of the tape, and the entire tape with magnetic material is bonded to the card; (b) A method of fabricating cards, built up of several layers of material with thin sheets of adhesive in between and bonded under heat and pressure; (c) See Cold Peel
a plastic film bonded by heat and pressure to a printed sheet for protection or appearance
The formation of laminae, the thinnest recognizable layer in a sediment or sediment rock, differing from other layers in color, composition, or particle size Typically displayed in shale
the application of a clear film to label material for the purpose of protection or to enhance visual quality
a sheet of material composed of two or more layers of material adhered together to form the sheet such as a liner and face material together with an adhesive to form a sheet of pressure sensitive label stock
a method of gluing together sheets of wood with the grain in different directions to produce a material that is thinner and lighter than solid wood
Êa plastic film bonded by heat and pressure to a printed sheet for protection or appearance
The process of "sandwiching" a cel between sheets of clear plastic in an effort to preserve it Unfortunately, lamination causes more problems than it solves, because it prevents the paint from absorbing moisture from the atmosphere, making it become brittle and cracked In addition, the chemicals present in the lamination adhesive can attack pigments over time, causing the colors to mottle and fade Heat fused lamination was first used by Courvoisier Galleries on cels from Dumbo and Fantasia, and was soon abandoned The process was revived by the Disney Art Program in the early 1970's, using a laminate similar to a large sheet of scotch tape All cels sold through the Disney Art Program between The Jungle Book and The Great Mouse Detective were subjected to this process Haloing is a term which describes the separation of the plastic laminate around the perimeter of the character, common in cels of this type
A decoration of a manifold in which some subset is partitioned into sheets of some lower dimension, and the sheets are locally parallel It may or may not be possible to fill the gaps in a lamination to make a foliation
Process by which a sandwich of film layers are bound together by adhesives, coatings, or other polymers to form substrates with improved physical and chemical properties
a "peeling" defect in a planchet caused by air or impurities when the planchet strip is rolled out