Roland Hero Elite Signs Lends a Hand to the NHS

Elite Signs   |   United Kingdom

Family business Elite Signs has responded to an urgent call for easily readable name badges for NHS staff treating COVID-19 patients. In addition, the Bridgend graphics specialist is helping children and their parents with a colourful challenge.

Elite Signs was founded by brothers Clive and Barrie James in 1996. Both have recently retired, with younger generations Simon, Shelley and Ethan taking the reins. Elite Signs specialises in vehicle graphics and signage, but when the UK government announced guidance to restrict the coronavirus outbreak the business paused its work.

Simon James, Director of Elite Signs, explains. "We supply vehicle graphics for a range of sectors," he says. "This requires a two-person team which isn't possible while social distancing; our team and our families are our priority so we can't take the risk. We also specialise in signage but with our suppliers closed we're not able to take on this work."


However, Simon has been kept busy since responding to an urgent request from a nurse at the Princess of Wales Hospital in Bridgend. In a post on Facebook, she explained that personal protection equipment (PPE) worn by hospital staff was making it difficult to tell people apart, causing confusion and sometimes distress, and asked for ideas on how to solve this problem. Elite Signs was recommended as a business with the equipment to help. 

Simon calculated that the Princess of Wales Hospital project alone would require thousands of name stickers.

He says:

"For one team of 20 nurses, ten doctors and consultants, and ten support staff, changing scrubs three to four times a day: we worked out 3,500 name stickers would last just 13.5 days. We initially printed 5,000 to be safe."

Other hospitals in South Wales have now been in touch and to date Elite Signs has printed nearly 15,000 PPE ID labels.

Normally used for signs and vehicle wraps, Elite Sign's XR-640 high-speed printer/cutter has been put to work to produce dozens of 250-sticker sheets. Existing stock has also been used, namely Metamark MD5 polymeric calendered vinyl, typically used for durable vehicle graphics. Elite Signs has been offered financial assistance from a customer, reinforced concrete specialist Stephenson, to continue the project.

Elite Signs has also been helping out the nation's parents currently home-schooling their children by turning its most colourful vehicle graphics designs into colouring-in sheets. Inspired by his own daughters' interest in his design work while working from home, Simon has also created an ambulance picture that kids can print out and colour in, in tribute to the NHS.