SUN SHADES

Brand Owner (click to sort) Address Description
ADVIZOR MARTIN J. FERGUSON SUN SHADES;
BÉBÉ SOLEIL SOLAY BRANDS 2268 Orchard Way Beachwood OH 44122 Sun shades;
CALIFORNIA SUN SHADES Gale Pacific USA, Inc. Suite 1704 285 West Central Parkway Altamonte Springs FL 32714 SUN SHADES;retractable window shades;
DS DOWN SOUTH FINE CLOTHING ACTIVEWEAR APPERAL LIFE WEAR Ellzey, Darcynia C. 8181 Lake Forest Blvd. Apt. 3-305 New Orleans LA 70126 sun shades, non prescription glasses;watches;Trademark will be used to identify and to decorate T-shirts, tank tops, jeans, pants, muscle shirts, shorts, socks, dresses, skirts, blouses, sweat shirts, sweat pants, boxer shorts, men and women's swimsuits, jogging suits, jackets, coats, sweaters, baseball hats and head bands, head scarves, skull caps, knit caps, bandanas, boots, casual shoes;key chains, for retail sales;
DS DOWN SOUTH FINE CLOTHING ACTIVEWEAR APPERAL LIFE WEAR Ellzey, Ronald C. 8181 Lake Forest Blvd. Apt. 3-305 New Orleans LA 70126 sun shades, non prescription glasses;watches;Trademark will be used to identify and to decorate T-shirts, tank tops, jeans, pants, muscle shirts, shorts, socks, dresses, skirts, blouses, sweat shirts, sweat pants, boxer shorts, men and women's swimsuits, jogging suits, jackets, coats, sweaters, baseball hats and head bands, head scarves, skull caps, knit caps, bandanas, boots, casual shoes;key chains, for retail sales;
SUMMA VelaOne Enterprises 5 Herman Court Robbinsville NJ 08691 sun shades, namely, canvas canopies; canopies of textile or synthetic materials;
 

Where the owner name is not linked, that owner no longer owns the brand

   
Technical Examples
  1. A barcode symbol having an encoded symbology is provided with color or shades of gray to add additional information at the time of printing. The color or shades of gray provides the current barcode symbology with a third dimension of information. The color or shades of gray can encode information over a specific one-dimensional or two-dimensional symbology. White spaces can be replaced with colors or shades of gray to add coded information to the standard one-dimensional and two-dimensional codes. The number of colors and how they are distributed or arranged can provide the basic backbone of information. A barcode reader that can detect the different color spectrums, can be employed to decode the information. Furthermore, color is not limited to white spaces, but can be implemented into black spaces. Additionally, colored background information can provide additional information to the current symbology.