safety sign

Safety Labels vs Signs: What’s the Difference?

May 22, 2018
What signage should you use to help keep your workers safe?

The accurate interpretation of safety signs is crucial to prevent injuries and save lives. OSHA has set industry standards that clearly define what a safety sign is, how it should be used, and where it should be placed. However, when it comes to deciding whether to use a sign or a label to convey a message, OSHA leaves that part up to you.

Every facility will have different priorities and constraints when it comes to choosing safety labels and signs. It may often require experimentation with different kinds of materials and designs to determine what is most effective, but these basic definitions apply:

Safety labels are most commonly made of an adhesive-backed vinyl material to apply directly to a surface
Safety signs are constructed from a hard backed material designed to attach to walls, doors, fencing, and more

These definitions are not set in stone. To help choose between a safety label or safety sign, get a breakdown of the most important factors to consider.

How to Choose Between a Label and Sign

OSHA does not specify whether a sign or label should be used to communicate vital safety information, just as long as the message is communicated in an obvious, long-lasting, and legible way.

Labels are most commonly made to convey identification or instruction. They are typically made of an adhesive vinyl material to instantly peel and apply directly to a surface. This makes labels convenient to apply to a variety of items and areas for inventory labeling, product packaging, identifying tools and materials in a warehouse or office, and equipment instructions and warnings for machine guarding, lockout/tagout (LO/TO), and much more.

The main drawback of generic labels is that they are temporary and need to be replaced often. The adhesive will likely corrode and text will fade when exposed to light and moisture, which makes them ideal for work environments that have little to no exposure to harsh elements.

However, labels made with premium vinyl label stock material provide lasting durability to keep labels intact in a variety of environments without fading or peeling away from UV light, moisture, or chemicals. There is a variety of other labeling supplies that are engineered for use in specific environments including low/high temperatures, laboratories, electronics, and more. Labels can also be applied to difficult areas like piping systems and valves using tag stock that provides a rigid backing.

Signs consist of a hard-backed material for durable, long-lasting messages that can be hung or mounted onto many surfaces. They can be used to create large wayfinding messages, safety instructions and procedural signs for a variety of workspaces, and other general facility signs that need to remain intact in work environments with different degrees of exposures.

The drawback to signs is that they are a bigger investment due to their often bigger size, higher-quality material, and more complex design elements like graphics and specialized text.

Factors to Consider

The following factors will assist you to determine whether a sign or label will be the best choice for your needs:

What kind of environment will the message be in? Will there be minimal industrial and environmental exposures, or will the message likely come into contact with light, moisture, solvents, chemicals, or other materials?
How durable must your message be? Can the material be flexible or must it remain rigid?

Will the message be indoors or outdoors?

Who needs to see this message and where? Consider the amount of information you need to convey. It is important to ensure your messages remain clear and legible to viewers at all times.

Transform Labels into Durable Signs

You can save significant time and money spent on extra supplies and materials by turning adhesive labels into sturdy signs using sign blanks. Sign blanks are an easy way to communicate safety messages in hard to label areas and locations that need temporary signage, such as construction sites, warehouses, and retail businesses.

The rigid surface ensures your messages remain reliable and long-lasting. You can also get the most out of your labeling supply by applying multiple labels onto sign blanks to create custom signs that may require more information or to make a bigger impact, like communicating site-specific PPE requirements and miscellaneous safety procedures. For example, you can make larger signs by doubling up on labels. Make an 8-in. tall sign using 4-in. label supply by applying two labels to a sign blank to instantly double its size.

Just choose the sign blank size and material that is best for the environment, ranging from strong fiberglass and aluminum, to corrugated plastic for temporary sign applications. Sign blanks also have the ability to provide visibility from all angles with 1, 2, and 3-way design options for both indoor and outdoor use:

1-way: a flat, one-sided semi-rigid white plastic material allows viewing from one direction. Attaches to fences, walls, and doors.
2-way: a flat, two-sided durable translucent white plastic material allows viewing from two directions. An ideal solution for posting in hallways and areas where visibility is limited.
3-way: a flat, three-dimensional v-shaped durable translucent white plastic material allows signs to be seen from 180°. This is ideal for critical safety signs that need to be seen from multiple angles, such as emergency exits and wayfinding.

Types of Sign Blank Materials

Sign blanks are available in a variety of materials that range in durability and purpose so you can have confidence you are choosing the best option for your specific needs. They also come with convenient pre-drilled holes at the corners to make them easy to hang on walls or mount to a variety of surfaces and building fixtures using cable ties, nails, or screws.

Sign blank materials include: steel, corrugated plastic, aluminum, reflective aluminum, and fiberglass. It is critical to consider the environment and installation method when choosing the material for your sign.

Environment

Will the message be indoors or outdoors?
Does the sign need to endure certain temperatures?
Will it be in direct sunlight or low light?
Is there a chance it will come into contact with moisture, oil, solvents, or chemicals?

Installation Method

Will the message be permanent or temporary?
Where will you apply this message? E.g.: on a post, wall, door, barrel, storage container, fence

Get a breakdown of the features of each sign blank material:

Steel

A steel sign blank is made of a ferrous metal (iron) material with a solid 24-gauge steel backing for heavy-duty signs that also allow magnets to stick to it. It’s highly resistant to most chemicals, stands strong to impact, and withstands low temperatures.

This material is mainly for interior signage as it will rust fairly easily. Apply to piping, shipping containers, on refrigerators, and more

Corrugated Plastic

Use this low cost corrugated plastic sign blank for temporary mounting locations. The tough corrugation provides a thick material that is lightweight and retains its flat surface shape, even after being bent. This material is made for mild environments that will come into little or no contact with prolonged UV exposure, low temperatures, and strong solvents.

Corrugated plastic is perfect for temporary sign applications on poles, fences, and more to communicate wayfinding, site-specific hazards and warnings, and other general safety information in warehouses and other indoor facilities.

Aluminum

Aluminum sign blanks are lightweight and reliable in locations that contain harsh environmental exposures including chemicals, abrasion, moisture, and sunlight. This is an ideal material for DIY sign creation using multiple adhesive labels, which apply seamlessly to this surface.

This corrosion-resistant material can withstand low temperatures. It won’t rust, making it highly durable for outdoor applications. Apply aluminum signs on fencing, poles, or other difficult to label locations that conventional labels cannot adhere to.

Reflective Aluminum

This material offers the same lightweight construction and durability as the aluminum sign blank but can also instantly add extra visibility to your message. Enhance visibility indoors and out with reflective aluminum signs to keep messages highly visible both day and night. This material is perfect for low-light conditions and for signs that need to be seen from long distances. These are an ideal solution for construction sites, mining operations, confined spaces, and more.

Fiberglass

Fiberglass is the sturdiest of the sign blank materials. It provides the highest resistance to impact and is stronger than most metals. The thick material lasts 25+ years outdoors and will retain its shape and durability in high and low temperatures as well as exposures from various external stresses. However, contact with strong solvents such as acetone, methyl ethyl ketone (MEK), and trans-dichloroethylene will jeopardize this material.

This provides a smooth, clean surface for labels that is ideal for placement in areas where label application is difficult, such as mounting on walls with challenging textures that most signs cannot adhere to. Fiberglass is a worthwhile investment if you need a permanent sign solution.

Invest in Label & Sign-Making Solutions

You can streamline the safety labeling process by designing and printing materials on-demand whenever you need them using a DuraLabel industrial label printer. DuraLabel printers allow you to design custom signs and labels using label design software and choose from built-in templates to simplify the label creation process to produce compliant labels for common industrial applications like 5S, GHS, pipe marking, and more. Print safety messages small to large on ½’’ to 10’’ wide tapes depending on the printer model.

To improve safety instantly, choose from a variety of premade labels that are installation-ready. 

In addition to sign blanks, you can improve visibility to dangerous work areas all the way down to the floor using tough adhesive floor signs. Simply peel and apply to your facility floor to instantly improve safety awareness and wayfinding. You also have ability to customize floor signs with your own message to tailor them to the work environment.

Prevent OSHA fines for a lack of hazard communication and make your own rigid signs directly from your facility.

Kelsey Rzepecki writes for Graphic Products, makers of the DuraLabel line of industrial label and sign printers. 

About the Author

Kelsey Rzepecki

Kelsey Rzepecki writes for Graphic Products, a provider of industrial safety education and compliance solutions. For more information about customized visual communication, visit www.GraphicProducts.com or call 800.788.5572.

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