8 Effective Uses For Overlaminate Adhesive Films - Piedmont Plastics

14 Jul.,2025

 

8 Effective Uses For Overlaminate Adhesive Films - Piedmont Plastics

Adhesive and over-laminating films can be used for mounting, laminating, and encapsulating, as well as to adhere a printed image to a surface or substrate. These films are frequently offered in pressure-sensitive, heat-activated, and heat-set varieties.

If you want to learn more, please visit our website GT New Material.

Overlaminates are transparent films with an adhesive backing frequently used in digital printing, floor graphics, and window graphics. They protect surfaces from abrasion, moisture, and other potentially harmful effects in indoor and outdoor environments. These films can be applied to the top or front side of an image or product—or encapsulate it entirely.

What Are Overlaminates Made Of?

Film adhesives are solid sheets of thermoplastic or partially cured thermosetting polymers that can be cut to size and used to attach large-area components, substrates, and lids.

Clear overlaminate films are typically made of various polymers in flexible forms such as polyester (PET), polycarbonate (PC), acrylic, polypropylene (PP), and vinyl (PVC). These films are available in thicknesses ranging from .5 mm to 12 mm, with finishes ranging from plain matte to high gloss. Pressure-sensitive adhesives are used with most overlaminate films so they can bond to the graphic.

What Is Adhesive Film Used For?

Adhesive and overlaminate film appear in many industries for many applications. Its ability to bond with different surfaces offers protection, reinforcement, and many options for applying graphics for branding or general appearance.

Here are some industries that take advantage of what overlaminate film has to offer.

  1. Packaging – Different adhesives can be created with cardboard, plastic, or wood in mind. EVA hot melt adhesives are frequently used in the packaging industry because they can adhere to various coatings. They are ideal for assembling, labeling, processing paper, and other tasks.
  2. Construction Material Assembly – Construction materials often incorporate overlaminates and adhesive film for hybrid constructions, polyurethane construction, insulation panels, and more.
  3. Prefab Housing – The prefab housing industry requires long-lasting and durable adhesives for many purposes, including sub-flooring, bathrooms, moldings, kitchen equipment, and more.
  4. Door and Window Assembly – Different adhesives can be created to bond to surfaces used for making doors and windows, such as wood, PVC, fiberglass, or hybrid aluminum.
  5. Woodworking – Adhesives and overlaminate films are standard in the woodworking industry and are present in many items, from commercial and residential furniture to kitchen and bathroom cabinets.
  6. Transportation – Adhesives are used in producing parts for trains, planes, and automobiles and in vehicle assembly. Because of their ability to absorb impact, adhesives and laminate film are used to improve car safety.
  7. HVAC Manufacturing – In the HVAC industry, adhesives are also used for internal and external components. Structural parts and insulation are often joined using industrial adhesives, increasing the energy efficiency of the produced systems.
  8. Agriculture – Agricultural machinery and equipment, such as silos, spreading apparatus, conveyor systems, storage bins, and more, use adhesives and laminate film in their construction to help hold heavy structural parts together.

Advantages of Adhesive and Overlaminate Film

In addition to long-term exterior durability, adhesive and overlaminate film offers numerous other benefits for manufacturers and DIY builders. These benefits include:

  • They are thicker than simple, clear coatings and provide more protection from the elements and UV radiation.
  • They are compatible and workable with many printers, screeners, and other image-transfer systems.
  • Have a uniform, smooth finish with a consistent surface gloss.
  • Can last for years. Premium clear vinyl overlaminate films can protect and present graphics beautifully for up to five years.
  • Can be easily applied to any relatively flat smooth surface or used as a wrap for more complicated applications.
  • Compared to liquid coatings, overlaminate films can be applied more quickly and with no drying time.
  • There exists a wide choice of film types and thicknesses to meet any application requirement.
  • Are a perfect material for floor graphics.

Overlaminate Film For Floor Graphics

Floors are prime marketing real estate in stores, public spaces, and events. Using floor graphics, indoor and outdoor floors can convey instructions and advertising messages. Floor graphics promote sales, provide directions, and build brand awareness. They can be used to direct customers or enforce guidelines such as social distancing in checkout, pharmacy, and deli lines. Additionally, floor graphics are used in schools, DMVs, and other public spaces to promote social distancing.

Floor graphics are easy to install and remove on many surfaces and are laminated to prevent slipping. In addition, they can be coated with removable adhesives to allow repositioning or removal without damaging the design or leaving residue on surfaces. Piedmont Plastics stocks slip-resistant floor graphics that can be used indoors and outdoors on wood, tile, sealed concrete, laminate, and carpets.

Purchasing Adhesive and Overlaminate Film

Piedmont Plastics maintains an extensive inventory of high-quality overlaminates and adhesives sourced from the industry's most reputable manufacturers. Furthermore, our team is ready to assist you in finding the optimal solution among our more than 50 distribution centers across North America.

The Ultimate Laminating Guide: Films and applications - FESPA

What are the different types of laminating films available and what are the advantages and disadvantages of each? Simon Eccles finds out more.

Lamination film is available to serve a variety of purposes, often a mixture of protection and enhanced appearance. Over laminate film is usually between about 24 and 100 microns in thickness.

There’s a choice of cold, “heat-assist” and thermal adhesives for laminates. Cold adhesive is pressure-sensitive and used over media that is likely to be heat-sensitive, such as vehicle wrap vinyl. Heat assist operates with at least one heated roller in the laminator running at around 60˚C.

It is used for general single-sided lamination onto paper, board, Dibond and the like. Normally pressure-sensitive laminate adhesive can also be used with heat, which softens it and helps it adhere to uneven surfaces with less chance of silvering due to air bubbles. The bubbles will often disappear over 48 hours or so as the air works its way through the laminate.

The “Thermal” term is strictly speaking for double-sided encapsulation running at 130˚C. However, many people call any heated laminate process thermal.

A lot of over-lamination film today is made from a plastic called Bi-axially Oriented Polypropylene (BOPP). BOPP is basically polypropylene that has been stretched in two directions, which improves strength, water-resistance and sometimes clarity.

PVC (vinyl) is also commonly used in clear laminating films as well as for the white media commonly used for decals. It’s often used over printed white vinyl for vehicle wraps – the extra clear layer give extra durability and resists the fading effect of UV light on print or coloured media.

PVC may be listed as monomeric or polymeric vinyl, referring to the type of plasticiser additive. The two have slightly different properties, with monomeric being less flexible and having a shorter outdoor life.

Contact us to discuss your requirements of Laminating Adhesive Film. Our experienced sales team can help you identify the options that best suit your needs.

Another material sometimes used is polyester (or PET), which is often used for encapsulation, where thicker film (typically 75 to 250 microns) is used on both sides of the sheet for high durability.

If the clear film is larger than the item it covers then the edges are sealed and waterproof, so suitable for outdoor use on noticeboards and similar. Edges can be trimmed flush to the enclosed item, but water can get in and delaminate the item.

Some films are intended to be outdoor-durable, in which case UV-resistance is important. Even for indoor use, characteristics such as scratch-resistance may be needed.

Thick plastics for floor graphics can be laminated, although increasingly they are printed directly on the underside by UV inkjet. There are anti-bacterial films intended for book covers and similar frequently handled items hospitals, schools, restaurants etc, though they don’t seem to be widely used so far.

Lamination films are by no means all clear gloss. Clear matt and silk finishes are popular (especially for book covers) if the underlying print needs to show through. Some films are intended for their tactile characteristics as well as appearance. There are embossed, textured clear films with finishes such as linen, sand, canvas and brushed aluminium.

Soft Touch films (pioneered by Derprosa though now with some competitors) have a very matt appearance with a velvet feel if you hold it. They are intended for book covers, brochures, menus, luxury packaging and the like – things that people pick up and hold.

They are available in clear films but also colours including metallics. Derprosa’s metallics have the unusual characteristic that if you print over them with a gloss spot varnish, they take on a near-mirror reflective finish in those areas.

Solid films may apply an overall colour, or a metallic, glitter, diffraction or holographic pattern to the whole target media. There are also clear effects films, that give a diffraction, glitter or holographic effect while allowing the underlying print to show through.

Some laminators can be supplied with adjustable feeders for hot foil, which typically gives a coloured or plain metallic, diffraction dry toner-based digital printing (typically a solid black, as it absorbs the most heat), then you can get “spot foil” over just the print areas.

If you need to mix full-colour print with foiling you can first put a toner receptive laminate over the print, then runs the sheets though a toner press to add a black image, and foil on top of that.

Double-sided adhesive films open up the range of applications and let you use printed or other media that isn’t self-adhesive to begin with. This is usually a two-stage process. If you want to mount print or other media to a sheet of card, for instance, you might be able to use a card that already has an adhesive surface. If not, you need to use double-sided adhesive.

Here you first laminate the self-adhesive onto the plain board, then use the laminator to smooth the top print onto the adhesive-coated board.

You can use the same procedure for thicker solids such as wood or aluminium composite material (ie Dibond and rivals). Mounting images behind clear Perspex sheet or thick acrylic blocks is popular too, which is the same procedure except you’ll need a special optically clear double-sided adhesive and the print goes face-down onto the read of the block.

Recycling

Recycling is a bit of a problem with laminated materials. Unused or waste BOPP can be recycled, but as soon as it is laminated onto printed media it becomes a lot more complicated, as the adhesive, ink and underlying substrate all have to be treated differently. PVC is not easily recycled at all. PET is easily recycled, but again there are the issues of what it has been attached to.

Terminology

Finally, it’s worth noting that the term lamination can be a little inexact. We’ve used it here as a description of what is done for signage, book covers, vehicle wraps and the like. However it was originally used for the practise of building up layers of materials to form a composite such as plywood.

It is also the term used for gluing a thin veneer of expensive wood, or later a printed representation of wood or another material, onto much cheaper bulk material for furniture, flooring, kitchen and bathroom surfaces etc.

There is also “liquid lamination,” which is the practise of applying a liquid protective layer onto printed paper or other media, using a roller. It will then dry to a clear matt, gloss or silk finish. “Coating” is another term for basically the same thing. The liquid is cheaper than laminating film, but generally not as durable.

For more information, please visit Hot Melt BOPP Film Rolls.