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The Avery logo designed by Saul Bass in 1975 was used exclusively on office products by CCL Industries, which was allowed to license the logo when it purchased Avery Dennison's office products business in July 2013, until it was replaced sometime around the late-2010s with a new visual identity designed by Chermayeff & Geismar & Haviv.
In 2013, it acquired Avery for $500 million from Avery Dennison, its biggest acquisition to that time. [9] In 2015, it bought Worldmark, a British labelling company specializing in labels for the technology sector, for $255 million. [10] In 2016, it acquired Checkpoint Systems for $422 million. [11]
After acquiring Carter's Ink Company in 1975, Dennison made the business decision to discard all of Carter's records from the 1860s on, including all of Carter's meticulous ink research records. The Carter name is still used by Avery-Dennison on some ink-related products such as rubber stamps. [4]
Avery Dennison Delivers the World's Smartest Item-Level Markdown Technology Pathfinder 6140 Uses Intelligence of Smart Devices to Drive Sales Lift and Save Labor Cost through More Effective ...
W & T Avery, a former British manufacturer of weighing machines; Avery Brewing Company, a regional brewery located in Boulder, Colorado; Avery Dennison, a major manufacturer of pressure-sensitive adhesive materials, apparel branding labels and tags, RFID inlays, and specialty medical products; Avery Publishing, an imprint of the Penguin Group
Nature of America is a series of twelve self-adhesive stamp sheets that the United States Postal Service released annually between 1999 and 2010 starting with the Sonoran Desert sheet [3] [5] and ending with the Hawaiian Rain Forest Sheet.
Avery Dennison expects full-year earnings in the range of $9.35 to $9.50 per share. Avery Dennison shares have climbed 5% since the beginning of the year, while the S&P's 500 index has climbed 23%.
On January 3, 2012, it was announced that the Office and Consumer Products Division of Avery Dennison was being bought by 3M for $550 million. [48] The transaction was canceled by 3M in September 2012 amid antitrust concerns. [49] In May 2013, 3M sold Scientific Anglers and Ross Reels to Orvis. Ross Reels had been acquired by 3M in 2010. [50]