Adhesives & Sealants

Adhesives made for print firms

Franklin Adhesives & Polymers’ new Flex line of permanent, removable and repositionable water-based adhesives enables printing companies to run adhesives on their flexography equipment – and give customers the precise construction they want on a multitude of print jobs.

The company, a division of Franklin International, has empowered printing companies to easily and cost-effectively print adhesives in-house on their own flexography equipment – and give their customers exactly what they want – with its revolutionary new line of Flex water-based adhesives.

Franklin introduces the extraordinary Flex line with no fewer than 11 adhesives for permanent, removable, repositionable and speciality applications. Breadth of line gives print houses the right type of adhesive for just about any job. Printers can easily provide customers the precise construction they seek, on a variety of print pieces: Direct mailers, packaging, sheet labels, signage, beverage labels, repositionable notes, scrapbooking and much more.

The Flex line includes nine Covinax adhesives for permanent, removable and specialty applications and two Micronax adhesives for jobs that require repositionable adhesives, such as sticky notes and repositionable packaging. Micronax adhesives enable printing companies to create unique pieces that can be lifted and re-applied over and over again.

Printers also will find Flex adhesives easy to apply. First, unlike other flexography adhesives, Flex products are water-based, not solvent-based. This unique formulation renders them safe to use and safe for the environment, too. It also simplifies equipment cleanup after runs.

'We are extremely excited to introduce water-based adhesives for flexography processes to the printing industry,' said Dan Pikula, technical director, pressure sensitive adhesives at Franklin Adhesives & Polymers. 'It enables us to bring our expertise in adhesives to a new market and enables printing companies to greatly expand services to their customers – and to open new opportunities for the printing industry.'