US3730751A - Method for erasure drawing - Google Patents
Method for erasure drawing Download PDFInfo
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- US3730751A US3730751A US00149899A US3730751DA US3730751A US 3730751 A US3730751 A US 3730751A US 00149899 A US00149899 A US 00149899A US 3730751D A US3730751D A US 3730751DA US 3730751 A US3730751 A US 3730751A
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- coating
- erasable
- original image
- shade
- sheet
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B44—DECORATIVE ARTS
- B44C—PRODUCING DECORATIVE EFFECTS; MOSAICS; TARSIA WORK; PAPERHANGING
- B44C3/00—Processes, not specifically provided for elsewhere, for producing ornamental structures
- B44C3/005—Removing selectively parts of at least the upper layer of a multi-layer article
Definitions
- the coating has a starting shade which contrasts with the shade of the underlying layer, which may be the sheet itself, and is partially erasable to produce intermediate shades of the starting shade. More than one contrasting erasable coating layer may be provided in which instance selective erasing of one or more of the coating layers, either wholly or partially, is utilized to draw the original image.
- the present invention relates to a method of drawing an original image by use of an eraser.
- drawing has been basically a process of putting dark lines on a light or white background.
- the surface to be drawn upon is usually white, or lighter than the drawing medium, and one, in effect, darkens this light surface with various media such as charcoal, graphite, ink, etc.
- Other prior art techniques have involved the use of a negative made by applying printers ink to a backing member and then the selective removal of portions of the ink to form letters or the like by mechanically cutting openings through a waxy coating which has been treated so as to be opaque and which is carried by a transparent backing.
- Still other prior art techniques have utilized a multilayer sheet containing a concealed picture which is exposed by rubbing away the concealing layer, or the use of a coating layer which is dissolvable to reveal the underlying concealed picture.
- a coating layer which is dissolvable to reveal the underlying concealed picture.
- an original image is not drawn but rather only a concealed previously created picture is ultimately revealed.
- Still another prior art technique utilizes a stiff white cardboard which is coated with India ink and a metal stylus which is employed to make a drawing by removing portions of the ink with the stylus so as to reveal corresponding portions of white therebeneath.
- this technique is essentially an engraving technique and, once again, is not capable of producing intermediate shades of the starting shade of the ink.
- An original image is drawn on a multilayer sheet of drawing material having an erasable coating, such as ink, substantially over the entire drawing area, by the selective erasing of the coating.
- the coating has a starting shade which contrasts with the shade of the underlying layer and which is partially erasable to produce intermediate shades of the starting shade by applying a partial pressure to the coating with an eraser.
- Such partial pressure is less than the total pressure required to erase substanice tially the entire coating at the place of pressure application.
- More than one contrasting erasable coating layer may be provided in which instance selective erasing of one or more of the coating layers, either wholly or partially, may be accomplished so as to draw the original image.
- shading may be introduced into the original image.
- a compre hensive range of varying effects may thereby be produced by varying the pressure applied by the eraser to the coated drawing sheet as well as by utilizing drawing sheets having a plurality of contrasting erasable coating layers.
- FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic illustration of an exemplary drawing sheet utilized in performing the preferred method of the present invention
- FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic illustration of another exemplary drawing sheet which can be utilized in perform ing the preferred method of the present invention.
- FIG. 3 is an illustrative example of a drawing made in accordance with the preferred method of the present invention.
- FIG. 1 In drawing an original image in accordance with the preferred method of the present invention, preferably a sheet of drawing material having one or more layers of erasable coating is utilized. Such a sheet of drawing material is shown illustratively in FIG. 1 where the sheet, generally referred to by the reference numeral 10, has an underlying surface area 12 and an erasable coating 14 which preferably overlies the entire surface area 12 upon which the original image is to be drawn.
- the surface area 12 portion of the sheet 10 may preferably be a smooth surfaced paper and the erasable coating 14 may consist of a predetermined concentration of a darkening agent such as India ink.
- a darkening agent such as India ink.
- various other grades and types of paper and various other erasable coatings may be utilized in practicing the method of the present invention without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
- the erasable coating 14, in this instance the ink should be of a consistency that will allow an eraser to rub into it without resisting the eraser.
- the surface area 12, which is preferably paper should generally not be soft enough to permit the eraser to rub deeply into the paper as this will reduce control over the various intermediate shades of the erasable coating that are producible in accordance with the preferred method of the present invention, as will be described in greater detail hereinafter.
- the erasable coating which in this instance is a predetermined concentration of India ink, is uniformly distributed over the smooth paper surface 12.
- the smooth paper may be such as smooth surface Aquabee Bristol paper.
- India ink is utilized as the erasable coating, it may be utilized full strength, diluted fifty percent with distilled water and aqua ammonia, that is, distilled water being one-half the volume of the ink being added to the volume of the ink; diluted at the rate of one-hundred percent; diluted at the rate of one-hundred and fifty percent, or any other desired concentration which still provides an erasable coating of a consistency which allows the eraser to rub into it.
- an eraser is utilized with the sheet of drawing material having an erasable coating, such as the material illustrated in FIG. 1.
- an eraser it is meant to include any abrasion means such as, by way of example, rubber, steel wool, or sandpaper, and is not meant to refer to only rubber.
- rubber erasers are utilized in practicing the preferred method of the present invention, such as commercially available ink eraser sticks.
- the artist places a sheet of drawing material having an erasable coating thereon, such as the drawing material illustrated in FIG. 1, on the writing surface.
- the sheet preferably contains no predesigned hidden image thereon and is to be utilized for purposes of drawing an original image.
- the artist then takes an eraser and selectively erases the erasable coating so as to produce an original image in accordance with whatever pattern or design he wishes to draw.
- the original image is preferably drawn solely by use of this selective erasing.
- Various degrees of shading can be introduced into the original image by the artist by varying the amount of pressure applied by the eraser to the erasable coating 14.
- a partial pressure that is a pressure which is less than the total amount of pressure required to erase substantially the entire coating
- an intermediate shade of the starting shade of the erasable coating 14 is produced.
- the surface area 12 is preferably a contrasting shade with that of the erasable coating 14.
- FIG. 1 the results of the application of varying degrees of partial pressure are shown. Assuming the starting shade of the erasable coating 14 to be darker than that of the surface area 12, the lower the degree of partial pressure applied in rubbing the eraser on the erasable coating 14, the darker that portion of the original image so that illustrated area 16 would be darker in appearance than illustrated area 18 in FIG. 1. Similarly, if the erasable coating 14 were lighter in starting shade than the surface area 12, then the lesser the degree of partial pressure applied by the eraser to the erasable coating 14, the lighter that portion of the original image. Therefore, by varying the amount of pressure applied by the eraser, various degrees of intermediate shading may be introduced into the original image. By way of illustration, FIG.
- FIG. 3 shows an original image drawn in accordance with the preferred method of the present invention. Assuming the erasable coating to be black and the surface area 12 to be white, the shaded area of FIG. 3 represents the black background area, the unshaded area represents substantially white portions or light grey portions of the image, and the cross-batched areas represent an intermediate shade of grey between the white and black areas.
- a drawing sheet having any number of erasable coatings thereon may be utilized.
- Such a drawing sheet is shown by Way of example in FIG. 2.
- each of the erasable coatings is of a contrasting starting shade and is a substantially uniform coating over the surface area 112.
- the multilayer drawing sheet a shown in FIG. 2 has two erasable coatings 14a and 20 thereon.
- FIG. 1 In the example shown in FIG.
- the drawing may be colored with a transparent media such as transparent drawing ink.
- the method of the present invention is equally applicable to drawing sheets which have erasable coatings thereon which are other shades or colors than black or White, such as a given starting shade of red or blue or some other color in the spectrum, as long as the erasable coating or coatings are contrasting shades with respect to each other and the surface area of the drawing sheet. In such an instance, more varied eflects than are obtainable with mere black and white erasable coatings can be obtained.
- the artist when practicing the method of the present invention, if the original image to be drawn will contain mostly white areas, then the artist should use a sheet of material having an uppermost erasable coating layer which is light in color, such as white. On the other hand, if the original image to be drawn will contain mostly dark areas, such as shadows, then the artist should use a sheet of drawing material having an uppermost erasable coating layer which is dark.
- an original image is drawn on a sheet of drawing material having at least one erasable coating covering the surface area of the sheet by the selective erasing of the coating from the sheet.
- the coating may be partially erased to produce intermediate shades of the starting shade of the coating by varying the amount of pressure applied by the eraser on the erasable coating.
- a method of drawing an original image comprising the steps of z providing a sheet having a surface area upon which said original image is to be drawn, said surface area having an erasable coating covering substantially all of said surface area, said surface area having a given shade, said coating having a starting shade which contrasts with the shade of said surface area;
- said erasing step includes the further step of applying a partial pressure to said coating with said eraser to partially erase said coating, said partial pressure being less than the total pressure required to erase substantially said entire coating at the place of said pressure application.
- a method in accordance with claim 1 wherein said providing step comprises providing a sheet with said surface area having at least a first uppermost coating layer and a second coating layer underlying said first layer, at
- said uppermost coating layer being an erasable coating, said first and second layers having contrasting starting shades, said sheet being a backing layer for said coating layers.
- said providing step comprises providing said surface area wherein said first and second coating layers are erasable
- said selective erasing step comprises producing at least a portion of said original image by substantially erasing at least a portion of said uppermost coating layer and partially erasing at least a portion of said underlying coating layer to produce intermediate shades of said underlying coating layer starting shade.
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Abstract
A METHOD OF DRAWING AN ORIGINAL IMAGE BY THE SELECTIVE ERASING OF AN ERASABLE COATING, SUCH AS INK, FROM A MULTILAYER SHEET OF DRAWING MATERIAL. THE COATING HAS A STARTING SHADE WHICH CONTRASTS WITH THE SHADE OF THE UNDERLYING LAYER, WHICH MAY BE THE SHEET ITSELF, AND IS PARTIALLY ERASABLE TO PRODUCE INTERMEDIATE SHADES OF THE STARTING SHADE. MORE THAN ONE CONTRASTING ERASABLE COATING LAYER MAY BE PROVIDED IN WHICH INSTANCE SELECTIVE ERASING OF ONE OR MORE OF THE COATINGS LAYERS, EITHER WHOLLY ORPARTIALLY, IS UTILIZED TO DRAW THE ORIGINAL IMAGE.
Description
May 1, 1973 J. NEWBERGER 3,730,7b1
METHOD FOR ERASURE DRAWING Filed June 4, 1971 FIG]; I KU lLi -/I4//0 FIG. 2.
w w/m FIG. 3
\NVENTOR B JUDAH NEWBERGER ATTORNEYS United States Patent O 3,730,751 METHOD FOR ERASURE DRAWING Judah Newberger, 149 S. Broadway, White Plains, N.Y. 10605 Filed June 4, 1971, Ser. No. 149,899 Int. Cl. B44c 1/22; B44d 1/54 US. Cl. 11711 4 Claims ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE A method of drawing an original image by the selective erasing of an erasable coating, such as ink, from a multilayer sheet of drawing material. The coating has a starting shade which contrasts with the shade of the underlying layer, which may be the sheet itself, and is partially erasable to produce intermediate shades of the starting shade. More than one contrasting erasable coating layer may be provided in which instance selective erasing of one or more of the coating layers, either wholly or partially, is utilized to draw the original image.
BACKGROUND OF INVENTION Field of the invention The present invention relates to a method of drawing an original image by use of an eraser.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PRIOR ART Traditionally, drawing has been basically a process of putting dark lines on a light or white background. The surface to be drawn upon is usually white, or lighter than the drawing medium, and one, in effect, darkens this light surface with various media such as charcoal, graphite, ink, etc. Other prior art techniques have involved the use of a negative made by applying printers ink to a backing member and then the selective removal of portions of the ink to form letters or the like by mechanically cutting openings through a waxy coating which has been treated so as to be opaque and which is carried by a transparent backing. However, in such a selective removal technique, there is no provision for partial removal of the printers ink so as to obtain intermediate shades, or half tones, of the starting shade of the printers ink. This does not permit varying effects but rather only permits a black or white composition of the image to be created.
Still other prior art techniques have utilized a multilayer sheet containing a concealed picture which is exposed by rubbing away the concealing layer, or the use of a coating layer which is dissolvable to reveal the underlying concealed picture. However. in these prior art techniques, an original image is not drawn but rather only a concealed previously created picture is ultimately revealed.
Still another prior art technique utilizes a stiff white cardboard which is coated with India ink and a metal stylus which is employed to make a drawing by removing portions of the ink with the stylus so as to reveal corresponding portions of white therebeneath. However, this technique is essentially an engraving technique and, once again, is not capable of producing intermediate shades of the starting shade of the ink.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION An original image is drawn on a multilayer sheet of drawing material having an erasable coating, such as ink, substantially over the entire drawing area, by the selective erasing of the coating. The coating has a starting shade which contrasts with the shade of the underlying layer and which is partially erasable to produce intermediate shades of the starting shade by applying a partial pressure to the coating with an eraser. Such partial pressure is less than the total pressure required to erase substanice tially the entire coating at the place of pressure application. More than one contrasting erasable coating layer may be provided in which instance selective erasing of one or more of the coating layers, either wholly or partially, may be accomplished so as to draw the original image. By partially erasing the various coatings, shading may be introduced into the original image. A compre hensive range of varying effects may thereby be produced by varying the pressure applied by the eraser to the coated drawing sheet as well as by utilizing drawing sheets having a plurality of contrasting erasable coating layers. When utilizing multilayer drawing sheets, if the image to be drawn is essentially light in color, then the outermost coating is chosen to be light, and if the image to be drawing is essentially dark in color, then the outermost contrasting layer is chosen to be dark.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWING FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic illustration of an exemplary drawing sheet utilized in performing the preferred method of the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic illustration of another exemplary drawing sheet which can be utilized in perform ing the preferred method of the present invention; and
FIG. 3 is an illustrative example of a drawing made in accordance with the preferred method of the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS Referring now to the drawings in detail and especially to FIG. 1 thereof. In drawing an original image in accordance with the preferred method of the present invention, preferably a sheet of drawing material having one or more layers of erasable coating is utilized. Such a sheet of drawing material is shown illustratively in FIG. 1 where the sheet, generally referred to by the reference numeral 10, has an underlying surface area 12 and an erasable coating 14 which preferably overlies the entire surface area 12 upon which the original image is to be drawn. By way of example and not limitation, the surface area 12 portion of the sheet 10 may preferably be a smooth surfaced paper and the erasable coating 14 may consist of a predetermined concentration of a darkening agent such as India ink. If desired, various other grades and types of paper and various other erasable coatings may be utilized in practicing the method of the present invention without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. However, for purposes of explanation, we shall describe the method of the present invention with reference to a smooth paper surface area 12 and the use of India ink as the erasable coating 14.
Preferably, the erasable coating 14, in this instance the ink, should be of a consistency that will allow an eraser to rub into it without resisting the eraser. In addition, the surface area 12, which is preferably paper, should generally not be soft enough to permit the eraser to rub deeply into the paper as this will reduce control over the various intermediate shades of the erasable coating that are producible in accordance with the preferred method of the present invention, as will be described in greater detail hereinafter. Preferably, the erasable coating, which in this instance is a predetermined concentration of India ink, is uniformly distributed over the smooth paper surface 12. The smooth paper may be such as smooth surface Aquabee Bristol paper. By way of illustration, if India ink is utilized as the erasable coating, it may be utilized full strength, diluted fifty percent with distilled water and aqua ammonia, that is, distilled water being one-half the volume of the ink being added to the volume of the ink; diluted at the rate of one-hundred percent; diluted at the rate of one-hundred and fifty percent, or any other desired concentration which still provides an erasable coating of a consistency which allows the eraser to rub into it.
In practicing the preferred method of the present invention, an eraser is utilized with the sheet of drawing material having an erasable coating, such as the material illustrated in FIG. 1. By the use of the term eraser it is meant to include any abrasion means such as, by way of example, rubber, steel wool, or sandpaper, and is not meant to refer to only rubber. However, preferably rubber erasers are utilized in practicing the preferred method of the present invention, such as commercially available ink eraser sticks.
In practicing the preferred method of the present invention, the artist places a sheet of drawing material having an erasable coating thereon, such as the drawing material illustrated in FIG. 1, on the writing surface. The sheet preferably contains no predesigned hidden image thereon and is to be utilized for purposes of drawing an original image. The artist then takes an eraser and selectively erases the erasable coating so as to produce an original image in accordance with whatever pattern or design he wishes to draw. The original image is preferably drawn solely by use of this selective erasing. Various degrees of shading can be introduced into the original image by the artist by varying the amount of pressure applied by the eraser to the erasable coating 14. By applying a partial pressure, that is a pressure which is less than the total amount of pressure required to erase substantially the entire coating, at a given point on the erasable coating as he is drawing the original image, an intermediate shade of the starting shade of the erasable coating 14 is produced. As previously mentioned, the surface area 12 is preferably a contrasting shade with that of the erasable coating 14. By rubbing the eraser on the erasable coating 14 with varying degrees of pressure, various intermediate shades are produced. By starting shade, it is meant the unerased shade of the erasable coating.
By way of illustration in FIG. 1, the results of the application of varying degrees of partial pressure are shown. Assuming the starting shade of the erasable coating 14 to be darker than that of the surface area 12, the lower the degree of partial pressure applied in rubbing the eraser on the erasable coating 14, the darker that portion of the original image so that illustrated area 16 would be darker in appearance than illustrated area 18 in FIG. 1. Similarly, if the erasable coating 14 were lighter in starting shade than the surface area 12, then the lesser the degree of partial pressure applied by the eraser to the erasable coating 14, the lighter that portion of the original image. Therefore, by varying the amount of pressure applied by the eraser, various degrees of intermediate shading may be introduced into the original image. By way of illustration, FIG. 3 shows an original image drawn in accordance with the preferred method of the present invention. Assuming the erasable coating to be black and the surface area 12 to be white, the shaded area of FIG. 3 represents the black background area, the unshaded area represents substantially white portions or light grey portions of the image, and the cross-batched areas represent an intermediate shade of grey between the white and black areas.
In practicing the preferred method of the present invention, as was previously mentioned, a drawing sheet having any number of erasable coatings thereon may be utilized. Such a drawing sheet is shown by Way of example in FIG. 2. Preferably, each of the erasable coatings is of a contrasting starting shade and is a substantially uniform coating over the surface area 112. By way of example, the multilayer drawing sheet a shown in FIG. 2 has two erasable coatings 14a and 20 thereon. In the example shown in FIG. 2, two portions of the original image have been reproduced by applying varying degrees of partial pressure; a small amount of partial pressure having been applied to point 22 so as to only partially erase a portion of the uppermost erasable coating 20', and a greater degree of partial pressure having been applied to point 24 so as to totally erase the uppermost erasable coating 20- and partially erase the underlying erasable coating 14a of portion 24 of the original image. By utilizing such a multilayer drawing sheet a greater variety of shading for various portions of the original image may be introduced.
In addition, if desired, after the original image has been drawn by the selective erasing of the erasable coating or coatings, the drawing may be colored with a transparent media such as transparent drawing ink. Furthermore, the method of the present invention is equally applicable to drawing sheets which have erasable coatings thereon which are other shades or colors than black or White, such as a given starting shade of red or blue or some other color in the spectrum, as long as the erasable coating or coatings are contrasting shades with respect to each other and the surface area of the drawing sheet. In such an instance, more varied eflects than are obtainable with mere black and white erasable coatings can be obtained.
Preferably, when practicing the method of the present invention, if the original image to be drawn will contain mostly white areas, then the artist should use a sheet of material having an uppermost erasable coating layer which is light in color, such as white. On the other hand, if the original image to be drawn will contain mostly dark areas, such as shadows, then the artist should use a sheet of drawing material having an uppermost erasable coating layer which is dark.
In summarizing the method of the present invention, an original image is drawn on a sheet of drawing material having at least one erasable coating covering the surface area of the sheet by the selective erasing of the coating from the sheet. The coating may be partially erased to produce intermediate shades of the starting shade of the coating by varying the amount of pressure applied by the eraser on the erasable coating.
It is to be understood that the above described embodiments of the invention are merely illustrative of the principles thereof and that numerous modifications and embodiments of the invention may be derived within the spirit and scope thereof, such as combining the method of selective erasing of the coating with engraving techniques for a portion of the image in which a stylus is employed to remove portions of the coating by scratching, so as to provide additional effects in the drawing, such drawing being substantially made by the method of selective erasing of the erasable coating.
What is claimed is: 1. A method of drawing an original image comprising the steps of z providing a sheet having a surface area upon which said original image is to be drawn, said surface area having an erasable coating covering substantially all of said surface area, said surface area having a given shade, said coating having a starting shade which contrasts with the shade of said surface area; and
selectively erasing said coating with an eraser to produce said original image, said original image being drawn substantially by said selective erasing, at least a portion of said original image being produced by partially erasing at least at portion of said coating to produce intermediate shades of said starting shade, whereby an original image having various degrees of shading is produced.
2. A method in accordance with claim 1 wherein said erasing step includes the further step of applying a partial pressure to said coating with said eraser to partially erase said coating, said partial pressure being less than the total pressure required to erase substantially said entire coating at the place of said pressure application.
3. A method in accordance with claim 1 wherein said providing step comprises providing a sheet with said surface area having at least a first uppermost coating layer and a second coating layer underlying said first layer, at
least said uppermost coating layer being an erasable coating, said first and second layers having contrasting starting shades, said sheet being a backing layer for said coating layers.
4. A method in accordance with claim 3 wherein said providing step comprises providing said surface area wherein said first and second coating layers are erasable, and said selective erasing step comprises producing at least a portion of said original image by substantially erasing at least a portion of said uppermost coating layer and partially erasing at least a portion of said underlying coating layer to produce intermediate shades of said underlying coating layer starting shade.
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS Bicknell 117-11 X Marran 117-355 Kortick 117-11 X Adler 117-11 X Rudnick 1117-11 X Marx et al 117-11 X 10 RALPH HUSACK, Primary Examiner US. Cl. X.R.
35-66; 117-37 R, 45, 76 P, F
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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US14989971A | 1971-06-04 | 1971-06-04 |
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US3730751A true US3730751A (en) | 1973-05-01 |
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US00149899A Expired - Lifetime US3730751A (en) | 1971-06-04 | 1971-06-04 | Method for erasure drawing |
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Cited By (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US4041652A (en) * | 1976-06-04 | 1977-08-16 | The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company | Apparatus for engraving the sidewall of a tire |
US4115602A (en) * | 1977-02-28 | 1978-09-19 | Bullard Wade A | Method of reprinting on a print removable paper product |
US4172907A (en) * | 1977-12-29 | 1979-10-30 | Honeywell Information Systems Inc. | Method of protecting bumped semiconductor chips |
FR2557031A1 (en) * | 1983-12-22 | 1985-06-28 | Drouin Isabelle | Method of painting and making mural decorations |
US20060078855A1 (en) * | 2004-09-21 | 2006-04-13 | Thomas Maria A | Teaching method and kit for abstract pattern drawing |
-
1971
- 1971-06-04 US US00149899A patent/US3730751A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Cited By (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US4041652A (en) * | 1976-06-04 | 1977-08-16 | The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company | Apparatus for engraving the sidewall of a tire |
US4115602A (en) * | 1977-02-28 | 1978-09-19 | Bullard Wade A | Method of reprinting on a print removable paper product |
US4172907A (en) * | 1977-12-29 | 1979-10-30 | Honeywell Information Systems Inc. | Method of protecting bumped semiconductor chips |
FR2557031A1 (en) * | 1983-12-22 | 1985-06-28 | Drouin Isabelle | Method of painting and making mural decorations |
US20060078855A1 (en) * | 2004-09-21 | 2006-04-13 | Thomas Maria A | Teaching method and kit for abstract pattern drawing |
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