Title of Invention

METHOD OF COLORING A CONTACT LENS

Abstract Methods of coloring contact lenses and disclosed. The methods comprising a step of forming a cliché. The cliché comprises a piece of material having at least one depression formed therein. The methods also comprise a step of introducing a fluent colorant into the depression of the cliché. Still further, methods comprise a step of transferring at least some of the colorant from the depression to a contact lens.
Full Text WO 2006/078520 PCT7US2006/000974
METHOD OF COLORING A CONTACT LENS
Background of the Invention
(1) Field of the Invention
This invention relates to colored contact lenses and
methods of making colored contact lenses.
(2) General Background
Pad printed processes are often utilized to mass produce
colored cosmetic corrective and non-corrective contact lenses.
Pad-printing generally comprises the use of printing plates or
clichés that have one or more depressions that collectively form
a pattern that is transferable to a contact lens. During a pad-
printing process, the fluent colorant is introduced into the
depressions of the cliche. After the fluent colorant is
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introduced into the depressions of the cliché, a doctor blade or
an ink cup is then wiped across the surface of the cliché
surrounding the depression(s) to remove excess ink from the
cliché. A printing pad is then pressed against the cliché to
transfer at least some of the colorant from the depressions to
the printing pad. Finally, the printing pad is pressed against
the contact lens to transfer the colorant from the printing pad
to the contact lens.
A disadvantage of using pad-printing techniques is that the
clichés wear as a result of the wiping process and generally
must be replaced after approximately one-hundred thousand
cycles, thereafter being no longer suitable for use. In
addition to costs associated with forming new clichés, the
replacement process requires halting production, dismounting the
worn cliché or cliché set, and then mounting and aligning new
cliché (s). Aligning new clichés is often time consuming and
tedious. When printing detailed image patterns comprising
multiple layers of individual colorants, each new cliché for a
particular colorant layer must not only be properly aligned to
the contact lenses, but also to each of the other clichés. As a
result, numerous iterations of resuming then halting the lens
production line to verify the cliché alignment accuracy are
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often required. As images for coloring contact lenses become
more intricate with higher resolutions and increasing numbers of
color layers, the difficulty of aligning clichés and the time
spent to do so increases.
Summary of the Invention
The pad-printing methods of the present invention are an
improvement over prior art pad-printing methods of coloring
contact lenses. In general, the present invention increases the
useful life of clichés and improves the image resolution
achievable using printing pad techniques.
In a first aspect of the invention, a method comprises a
step of forming a cliché. The cliché comprises a piece of
material having at least one depression formed therein using an
electrical discharge machining process. This method also
comprises a step of introducing a fluent colorant into the
depression of the cliché. Still further, this method comprises
a step of transferring at least some of the colorant from the
depression to a contact lens.
In a second aspect of the invention, a method comprises a
step of forming a cliché. The cliché comprises a piece of
material having a hardness rating in excess of Rockwell 64
(measured on the "C" Scale). The cliche also comprises a
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depression formed into the piece of material. The method also
comprises a step of introducing a fluent colorant into the
depression of the cliché. Furthermore, the method comprises a
step of transferring at least some of the colorant from the
depression to a contact lens.
In another aspect of the invention, a method comprises a
step of providing a cliché. The cliche comprises a piece of
material having a flat surface portion and a depression. The
flat surface portion defines a plane and the depression extends
through the plane and into the piece of material a maximum depth
perpendicular to and beyond the plane. The method further
comprises a step of introducing a fluent colorant into the
depression of the cliché. Additionally, the method comprises a
step of wiping excess fluent colorant from the flat surface
portion surrounding the depression, the wiping causing the piece
of material to wear in a manner such that the maximum depth of
the depression is reduced. Still further, the method comprises
a step of transferring at least some of the colorant from the
depression to a contact lens. The steps of introducing a fluent
colorant into the depression of the cliché, wiping excess fluent
colorant from the flat surface portion surrounding the
depression, and transferring at least some of the colorant from
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the depression to a contact lens occur in a manner such that
these steps could be repeated in excess of one million times
without the maximum depth of the depression being reduced by
more than five micrometers.
In yet another aspect of the invention, a method comprises
a step of forming a cliché. The cliche comprises a piece of
cemented carbide material having at least one depression formed
thereinto. The method further comprises steps of introducing a
fluent colorant into the depression of the cliché, and
transferring at least some of the colorant from the depression
to a contact lens.
While the principal advantages and features of the
invention have been described above, a more complete and
thorough understanding of the invention may be obtained by
referring to the drawings and the detailed description of the
preferred embodiment, which follow.
Brief Description of the Drawings
Figure 1 is an example of an iris simulating image
comprising a plurality of distinct colorant layers overlaying
each other.
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Figures 2a through 2d are the individual colorant layers
that, in combination, form the iris simulating image shown in
Figure 1.
Figures 3a through 3e depict steps of a standard pad-
printing process for transferring colorant from a cliché to a
contact lens.
Figure 4 is a detail perspective view of a cliché depicting
an example of two individual depressions of a larger depression
pattern formed into the cliché.
Reference characters in the written specification indicate
corresponding items shown throughout the drawing figures.
Detailed Description of the Preferred Embodiments of the
Invention
An example of an iris simulating image for use in coloring
contact lenses via a pad-printing process is shown in Figure 1.
The iris simulating image 20 comprises the plurality of
individual colorant layers shown in Figures 2a through 2d.
Using a pad-printing process, the individual colorant layers are
each separately applied to a contact lens.
The process of printing a colorant layer on a contact lens
using a pad-printing process is schematically shown in Figures
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3a through 3e. As depicted in Figure 3a, a cliché 3 0 having a
flat surface 32 is flooded with a fluent colorant 34. The
cliche 30 has at least one depression 36 that extends into the
material forming the cliché through the flat surface 32. The
depression 30 or set of depressions is configured such that when
viewed from directly above the flat surface 32, the depression
or set of depressions create a pattern identical to the
particular colorant layer sought to be applied to a contact lens
(i.e., a pattern such as shown in Figures 2a through 2d). A
doctor blade 38, or in some cases a portion of an ink cup, is
engaged with and swept across the flat surface 32 of the cliché
30 to wipe excess fluent colorant 34 from the portion of the
flat surface surrounding the depression(s) 36, leaving fluent
colorant in the depression(s). Following these steps and as
shown in Figure 3b, a conventional pad-printing pad 40 is then
vertically aligned with the depression 36 and pressed downward
against the cliché 30 to transfer at least some of the fluent
colorant 34 in the depression(s) to the pad. The pad 40 is
thereafter brought into registration (Figure 3c) with a contact
lens substrate 42 held on a lens holder 44 and then pressed
(Figure 3d) against the lens substrate to deposit the colorant
on the substrate. When the pad 40 is raised from the contact
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lens substrate 42, at least some of the colorant layer 46
remains on the substrate in the desired pattern for the
particular colorant layer, and is allowed to dry. Although not
shown, additional colorant layers are thereafter serially
printed on the lens substrate 42 by transferring fluent colorant
from other clichés (or other portions of the same cliche) that
have distinct patterns or arrangement of depressions.
Preferably, different fluent colorants are used for each
distinct pattern. Once transferred to the contact lens
substrate 42, the individual colorant layers combine to form the
complete iris-simulating image (such as shown in Figure 1).
The number of colorant layers making up the overall image
sought to be printed on contact lenses can vary, and in some
cases may be only one. However, the present invention is
particularly advantageous when the image sought to be printed is
an iris simulating image comprising multiple colorant layers.
Typically the images sought to be printed on contact lenses
are created or edited using computers. For example, a computer
having a processor such as an Intel Pentium-4 processor and that
is equipped with a vector graphics design program such as Adobe
Illustrator* is well suited for editing such images. In
situations where the image to be printed is an iris simulating
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image, an initial digitized image pattern may be obtained by-
scanning a photograph or rendering of a iris simulating pattern
the computer, via a digital camera, or any other means of
obtaining an digitized image of an iris pattern. Alternatively,
the iris simulating patterns can be created from scratch using
computer software. When using a pad-printing process, several
sub-images, each representing a separate colorant layer, may be
generated. Depressions are then formed into clichés to match
the images or sub-images as described below.
Unlike prior art techniques used to create clichés for
pad-printing contact lenses, the present invention utilizes
different materials and different methods of creating
depressions in the clichés. Preferably each cliché is formed
from a piece of cemented cabide material. As used herein,
cemented carbide is meant to include Tungsten Carbide,
Molybdenum Carbide, Tantalum Carbide, Rhenium Carbide,
Columbium Carbide, Alumon Carbide, Barium.Carbide, Boron
Carbide, Calcium Carbide, Cerium Carbide, Hafnium Carbide, Iron
Carbide, Itrion Carbide, Lantion Carbide, Lition Carbide,
Mangese Carbide, Molibion Carbide, Niobium Carbide, Neodymium
Carbide, Nigel Carbide, Nitron Carbide, Praseon Carbide,
Samarium Carbide, Sodium Carbide, Selenium Carbide, Silicon
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Carbide, Tantalum Carbide, Torion Carbide, Titanium Carbide,
Uranium Carbide, Vanadium Carbide, Zircon Carbide, and any other
cemented carbide belonging to the class of hard, wear-resistant,
refractory materials in which the hard carbide particles are
bound together, or cemented, by a binder and binderless
carbides such as CerbideTM, HardideTM, and any heterogeneous
combination of metal(s) or alloy(s) with one or more ceramic
phases in which the latter constitutes approximately fifteen to
eighty-five percent by volume and in which there is relatively
little solubility between metallic and ceramic phases at the
preparation temperature.
A perspective view of a portion of an exemplary cliché 30
is shown in Figure 4. The piece of cemented carbide material
used to form the cliché 30 preferably comprises a flat surface
32 having surface finish of six micro-inches centre line average
(CLA). Pieces of cemented carbide material meeting these
specifications can be purchased through various cemented carbide
material suppliers such as Philadelphia Carbide Company located
in Oreland, Pennsylvania. The piece of material used to create
the cliche 30 is preferably plate material having overall
dimensions similar to prior art pad-printing plates or clichés.
Preferably a plurality of depressions 36 corresponding to
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the image or image colorant layer sought to be reproduced using
the cliché 30 are formed into the piece of material though the
flat surface 32. Unlike prior art techniques of forming
depressions in clichés, the present invention preferably
utilizes an electrical discharge machining (EDM) process to
create the depressions 36. This is preferably done by saving
the desired image is a digitized format such as IGES (Initial
Graphics Exchange Specification) format and exporting it to
computer aided machining software (CAM software) (available
through SmalTec International of Naperville, Illinois).
Preferably, the CAM software, in turn, drives a CNC Controller
and an electrical pulse controller used to run a wire electrical
discharge grinding (WEDG) EDM device, such a Panasonic model MG-
ED72W (also available through SmalTec International), to thereby
form the depressions into the piece of material. Alteratively,
a Die-Sinking EDM (also known as Sinker, Ram-Type, Conventional,
Plunge or Vertical EDM) can be used to from the depressions into
the piece of material. When using a Die-Sinking EDM, a raised
reciprocal pattern of the image is preferably formed on the
electrode of the EDM machine using, known lasing processes. For
example, positive image or reciprocal relief of the depressions
from a colorant layer can be etched into an electrode comprised
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of a tungsten-copper alloy (such as is available through Saturn
Industries of Hudson, New York) via a yttrium aluminum garnet
(YAG) laser (such as an Electrox* Scriba II, commercially
available from Electrox USA, Indianapolis, Indiana). It should
be appreciated that a cliché can comprises a single set of
depressions forming a single color layer or that a cliché may
comprise a plurality of sets of depressions, with each set
forming a separate image pattern.
Using the forgoing methods to create the depressions of a
color contact pad-printing cliché, provides several advantages
over prior art methods of forming depressions. In particular,
using a WEDG EDM process allows for the formation of very small
and precise depressions that are not achievable using prior art
techniques of forming color contact pad-printing clichés. To
illustrate this point, a detail perspective view depicting a
pair of depression formed into the flat surface 32 of a cliché
30 is shown in Figure 4. A first depression 50 is shown
extending into the piece of material through the plane of the
flat surface 32 of the cliché 30. The first depression 50
extends into the material of the cliché 30 a constant depth 52
perpendicular to and beyond the plane of the flat surface 32.
The second depression 54 comprises a first portion 56 that
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extends into the material of the cliché 30 a first depth 58
perpendicular to and beyond the plane of the flat surface 32,
and a second portion 60 that extends into the material of the
cliché a second depth 62 perpendicular to and beyond the plane
of the flat surface.
For purposes of explaining resolution details of the
depressions, it should be appreciated that a projected surface
area can be determined for each of the first and second
depressions 50, 54 by projecting the depressions perpendicularly
onto the plane of the flat surface 32. Using a EDM process to
form the depressions allows very precise placement of the
depressions. For example, at least a portion of the projected
surface area of the first depression 50 can be within 50
micrometers, 25 micrometers, 10 micrometer, 5 micrometers, and
even 2.5 micrometers of a portion of the second depression 54.
This spacing is represented by the numeral 62 in Figure 4.
Additionally, the projected surface areas of the depressions can
be rather small. For example, the projected surface area of an
individual depression can be less than 6000 square micrometers,
or if desired, less than 4000 square micrometers, 2000 square
micrometers, 1000 square micrometers, or even 800 square
micrometers. Still further, using EDM processes to create the
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depressions, the depth of any depression can vary by more than
six micrometers from one portion to another portion of the
depression. Although the variance in the depth of a depression
is preferably gradual, the depth variance can also be abrupt.
For example the first depth 58 of the first portion 56 of the
second depression 54 shown in Figure 4 could be seven
micrometers while the second depth 62 of its second portion 60
may be in excess of twenty micrometers.
By allowing high resolution depressions to be formed the
cliches, very intricate patterns of depressions can be formed to
collectively create a colorant layer of an image to be
transferred to a contact lens. Additionally, by allowing the
depth of depression to be varied and allowing the depths of
separate depressions to be distinct, different thicknesses of a
colorant can be simultaneously transferred to a contact lens
using a pad-printing process. In situation where the colorant
is not fully opaque, this allows control over the shade of the
color resulting from the colorant throughout different portions
of the image. Thus, using the methods described herein, a pad-
printing process can achieve image resolutions and quality near
those achievable via inject processes.
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By forming the clichés out of cemented carbide material,
the hardness of the clichés is in excess of the industry
standard Rockwell 62-64 ("C" Scale) steel currently employed in
the art. Additionally, the wear resistance of clichés is nearly
100 times greater than that of the material currently employed
in the art. As discussed above, the wiping step of a pad-
printing process invariably wears a cliché in a manner such that
the depth of the depressions is gradually reduced. By
increasing the wear resistance of the clichés, such wear can be
reduced to less than six micrometers per million pad-printing
cycles. Moreover, in some cases, the wear may be reduced to
less than six micrometers per ten million cycles. This allows
clichés formed using methods of this invention to have a useful
life many time greater than the useful life of clichés presently
used in the art of coloring contact lenses. By increasing the
useful life of the clichés, the frequency of replacing the
cliches can be reduced by a factor of more than one hundred.
This greatly increases productivity and efficiency by reducing
the undesirable downtime resulting from the alignment process
each time the clichés are replaced.
While the present invention has been described in reference
to a specific embodiment, in light of the foregoing, it should
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be understood that all matter contained in the above description
or shown in the accompanying drawings is intended to be
interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense and that
various modifications and variations of the invention may be
constructed without departing from the scope of the invention
defined by the following claims. Thus, other possible
variations and modifications should be appreciated.
Furthermore, it should be understood that when introducing
elements of the present invention in the claims or in the above
description of the preferred embodiment of the invention, the
terms "comprising," "including," and "having" are intended to be
open-ended and mean that there may be additional elements other
than the listed elements. Similarly, the term "portion" should
be construed as meaning some or all of the item or element that
it qualifies.
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What Is Claimed Is;
1. A method comprising:
forming a cliché, the cliché comprising a piece of material
having at least one depression formed thereinto, the forming of
the cliche comprising using an electrical discharge machining
process to create the at least one depression;
introducing a fluent colorant into the depression of the
cliché; and
transferring at least some of the colorant from the
depression to a contact lens.
2. A method in accordance with claim 1 wherein the electrical
discharge machining process utilized in the step of forming the
cliché is a wire electrical discharge grinding process.
3. A method in accordance with claim 1 wherein the step of
forming the cliché occurs in a manner such that the piece of
material has a flat surface portion that defines a plane and
such that the depression extends through the plane and into the
piece of material a maximum depth perpendicular to and beyond
the plane, and further comprising the steps of:
wiping excess fluent colorant from the flat surface
surrounding the depression, the wiping causing the piece of
material to wear in a manner such that the maximum depth of the
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depression is reduced; and
repeating each of the steps of introducing a fluent
colorant into the depression of the cliché, wiping excess fluent
colorant from the flat surface surrounding the depression, and
transferring at least some of the colorant from the depression
to a contact lens in excess of one million times without
reducing the maximum depth of the depression by more than five
micrometers.
4. A method in accordance with claim 1 wherein the step of
forming the cliché occurs in a manner such that the piece of
material is formed from a cemented carbide material.
5. A method in accordance claim 1 wherein the step of forming
the cliché occurs in a manner such that the piece of material
has a flat surface portion that defines a plane and such that
the piece of material comprises a plurality of spaced-apart
depressions that extend through the plane and into the piece of
material and that are formed into the piece of material using
the electrical discharge machining process, each of the
depressions having a projected surface area defined by
projecting such depression perpendicularly onto the plane, each
of the projected surface areas of at least twenty-five percent
of the depressions being less than one-thousand square
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micrometers, and wherein the step introducing the fluent
colorant comprises introducing the fluent colorant into each of
the plurality of depressions and the step of transferring at
least some of the colorant comprises simultaneously transferring
at least some of the colorant from each of the depressions to
the contact lens.
6. A method in accordance claim 1 wherein the step of forming
the cliché occurs in a manner such that the piece of material
has a flat surface portion that defines a plane and such that
the piece of material comprises a plurality of spaced-apart
depressions that extend through the plane and into the piece of
material and that are formed into the piece of material using
the electrical discharge machining process, each of the
depressions having a projected surface area defined by
projecting such depression perpendicularly onto the plane, at
least a portion of the projected surface area of each of at
least twenty percent of the depressions each being within
twenty-five micrometers of another portion of another one of the
depressions, and wherein the step introducing the fluent
colorant comprises introducing the fluent colorant into each of
the plurality of depressions and the step of transferring at
least some of the colorant comprises simultaneously transferring
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at least some of the colorant from each of the depressions to
the contact lens.
.7. A method in accordance with claim 6 wherein the step of
forming the cliché occurs in a manner such that each of the
projected surface areas of at least twenty-five percent of the
depressions is less than one-thousand square micrometers.
8. A method in accordance with claim 1 wherein the step of
forming the cliché occurs in a manner such that the piece of
material has a flat surface portion that defines a plane and
such that the depression comprises a first portion that extends
through the plane and into the piece of material a first maximum
depth perpendicular to and beyond the plane and such that the
depression comprises a second portion that extends through the
plane and into the piece of material a second maximum depth
perpendicular to and beyond the plane, the first maximum depth
being in excess of six micrometers greater than the second
maximum depth.
9. A method comprising:
forming a cliché, the cliché comprising a piece of material
having a hardness rating in excess of (WC" Scale) Rockwell 64,
the cliché also comprising a depression formed into the piece of
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material;
introducing a fluent colorant into the depression of the
cliché and
transferring at least some of the colorant from the
depression to a contact lens.
10. A method in accordance with claim 9 wherein the step of
forming the cliché occurs in a manner such that the piece of
material in a cemented carbide material.
11. A method in accordance with claim 9 wherein the step of
forming of the cliché comprises using an electrical discharge
machining process to create the depression.
12. A method in accordance with claim 11 wherein the electrical
discharge machining process utilized in the step of forming the
cliché is a wire electrical discharge grinding process.
13. A method comprising:
providing a cliché, the cliché comprising a piece of
material having a flat surface portion and a depression, the
flat surface portion defining a plane, the depression extending
through the plane and into the piece of material a maximum depth
perpendicular to and beyond the plane;
introducing a fluent colorant into the depression of the
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cliché;
wiping excess fluent colorant from the flat surface portion
surrounding the depression, the wiping causing the piece of
material to wear in a manner such that the maximum depth of the
depression is reduced;
transferring at least some of the colorant from the
depression to a contact lens;
the steps of introducing a fluent colorant into the
depression of the cliché, wiping excess fluent colorant from the
flat surface portion surrounding the depression, and
transferring at least some of the colorant from the depression
to a contact lens occurring in a manner such that the steps of
introducing a fluent colorant into the depression of the cliché,
wiping excess fluent colorant from the flat surface portion
surrounding the depression, and transferring at least some of
the colorant from the depression to a contact lens could be
repeated in excess of one million times without the maximum
depth of the depression being reduced by more than five
micrometers.
14. A method in accordance with claim 13 wherein the steps of
introducing a fluent colorant into the depression of the cliché,
wiping excess fluent colorant from the flat surface portion
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surrounding the depression, and transferring at least some of
the colorant from the depression to a contact lens are repeated
in excess of one million times without the maximum depth of the
depression being reduced by more than five micrometers.
15. A method in accordance with claim 13 wherein the steps of
introducing a fluent colorant into the depression of the cliché,
wiping excess fluent colorant from the flat surface portion
surrounding the depression, and transferring at least some of
the colorant from the depression to a contact lens occur in a
manner such that the steps of introducing a fluent colorant into
the depression of the cliché, wiping excess fluent colorant from
the flat surface portion surrounding the depression, and
transferring at least some of the colorant from the depression
to a contact lens could be repeated in excess of five million
times without the maximum depth of the depression being reduced
by more than five micrometers.
16. A method in accordance with claim 13 wherein the step of
forming of the cliché comprises using a wire electrical
discharge grinding machining process to create the depression.
17. A method in accordance with claim 13 wherein the step of
forming the cliché occurs in a manner such that the depression
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comprises a first portion that extends through the plane and
into the piece of material a first maximum depth perpendicular
to and beyond the plane and such that the depression comprises a
second portion that extends through the plane and into the piece
of material a second maximum depth perpendicular to and beyond
the plane, the first maximum depth being in excess of six
micrometers greater than the second maximum depth.
18. A method in accordance with claim 13 wherein the step of
forming the cliché occurs in a manner such that the piece of
material comprises a plurality of spaced-apart depressions that
extend through the plane and into the piece of material, each of
the depressions having a projected surface area defined by
projecting such depression perpendicularly onto the plane, at
least a portion of the projected surface area of at least twenty
percent of the depressions each being within twenty-five
micrometers of another portion of another one of the
depressions, and wherein the step introducing the fluent
colorant comprises introducing the fluent colorant into each of
the plurality of depressions and the step of transferring at
least some of the colorant comprises simultaneously transferring
at least some of the colorant from each of the depressions to
the contact lens.
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19. A method in accordance with claim 18 wherein the step of
forming the cliché occurs in a manner such that each of the
projected surface areas of at least twenty-five percent of the
depressions is less than one-thousand square micrometers.
20. A method in accordance with claim 18 wherein the step of
forming the cliché occurs in a manner such that at least one of
the depressions comprises a first portion that extends through
the plane and into the piece of material a first maximum depth
perpendicular to and beyond the plane and a second portion that
extends through the plane and into the piece of material a
second maximum depth perpendicular to and beyond the plane, the
first maximum depth being in excess of six micrometers greater
than the second maximum depth.
21. A method in accordance with claim 13 wherein the step of
forming the cliché occurs in a manner such that the piece of
material in a cemented carbide material.
22. A method comprising:
forming a cliché comprising a piece of cemented carbide
material having at least one depression formed thereinto;
introducing a fluent colorant into the depression of the
cliché; and
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transferring at least some of the colorant from the.
depression to a contact lens.

Methods of coloring contact lenses and disclosed. The methods comprising a step of
forming a cliché. The cliché comprises a piece of material having at least one
depression formed therein. The methods also comprise a step of introducing a fluent
colorant into the depression of the cliché. Still further, methods comprise a step of
transferring at least some of the colorant from the depression to a contact lens.

Documents:

02611-kolnp-2007-abstract.pdf

02611-kolnp-2007-claims.pdf

02611-kolnp-2007-correspondence others.pdf

02611-kolnp-2007-description complete.pdf

02611-kolnp-2007-drawings.pdf

02611-kolnp-2007-form 1.pdf

02611-kolnp-2007-form 2.pdf

02611-kolnp-2007-form 3.pdf

02611-kolnp-2007-form 5.pdf

02611-kolnp-2007-gfa.pdf

02611-kolnp-2007-international publication.pdf

02611-kolnp-2007-international search report.pdf

02611-kolnp-2007-pct request form.pdf

2311-KOLNP-2007-GRANTED-FORM 1.pdf

2311-KOLNP-2007-GRANTED-SPECIFICATION-COMPLETE.pdf

2611-KOLNP-2007-(22-04-2013)-CORRESPONDENCE.pdf

2611-kolnp-2007-form 18.pdf

abstract-02611-kolnp-2007.jpg


Patent Number 263720
Indian Patent Application Number 2611/KOLNP/2007
PG Journal Number 47/2014
Publication Date 21-Nov-2014
Grant Date 17-Nov-2014
Date of Filing 12-Jul-2007
Name of Patentee JOHNSON & JOHNSON VISION CARE, INC.
Applicant Address 7500 CENTURION PARKWAY, SUITE 100 JACKSONVILLE, FL 32256
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 DANIEL G. STREIBIG 528, BALLWOOD, BALLWIN, MISSOURI 63021
PCT International Classification Number B41M 1/30,B29D 11/00
PCT International Application Number PCT/US2006/000974
PCT International Filing date 2006-01-12
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 60/645,550 2005-01-20 U.S.A.