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Agfa vs Gucci: How One Single Word Can Costs Millions | Intellectual News #26
Written by: Olena Yakobchuk

Agfa versus Gucci: how one single word can cost millions. Patent games for smart entrepreneurs. I’m Olena Yakobchuk — welcome to The Patent Strategist’s Approach. 

📍What entrepreneurs can learn from the patent battle between a tech company and a luxury brand

This edition is for entrepreneurs who have reached the level of investors — those who can afford to play patent games. Businesses often underestimate patents, believing that “we produce something old and well-known, we dont need patents…” until they receive a notice of infringement from patent-holding competitors. Or, on the contrary — inspired by their capital, they get carried away with the idea of monopoly, yet lack a strategy, data, or a team to realize it.
Because such a task requires the effort and skill of a true professional team — patent strategists, marketers, and scientists/ technologists with an experimental base to support these ambitions. Today’s case shows that a patent is not just a legal document. It is an economic strategy tool for market control.

Case facts: Technology vs Fashion

Recently, the court in Hamburg (UPC, Local Division Hamburg, Case ID: ACT_561734/2023) delivered its decision in the case of Agfa vs Gucci.
Agfa, a Belgian technology company, filed a lawsuit against the Italian luxury brand Gucci (specifically, nine companies
belonging to the Gucci family of luxury brands and to the Saint Laurent and Balenciaga groups) over patent EP 3 388 490, which covers a method of decorating leather by applying a colored image.

Here is the essence of the claim wording:
“…covering the leather with a base coating containing a pigment of an achromatic color other than black, applying a colored image by inkjet printing, curing by UV radiation, optionally applying a top coat and hot pressing…”

I’m quoting the claim text here so you can read it carefully yourself.

Fig. 1


🎯 The essence of the dispute

Agfa accused Gucci of patent infringement in relation to collections featuring animal prints — mainly bags and shoes. Fig. 2

During the proceedings, Agfa sought to include all light shades — such as ivory, pale yellow, and similar tones — arguing that Gucci’s designs hardly used truly achromatic colors.

In doing so, Agfa relied on a broad term without providing a precise interpretation — effectively attempting to monopolize a wider portion of the market by covering colors like ivory or pale yellow.

However, this intention was not reflected in the key document — the patent claim itself.
Let’s return to the claim wording:
Claim 1: “…covering the split leather (45) with a base coating (44) containing a pigment that forms an achromatic color other than black…” Claim 3: “…the achromatic color is white…” In court, Agfa referred to the patent description — where mixed pigments were mentioned — and tried to broaden the meaning of “achromatic color” by citing examples from the specification.

But in the claims, which legally define the patent’s scope, Agfa itself had limited the term in dependent Claim 3 to:
“…achromatic colour is a white pigment.” In other words, there was no mention of ivory or any other shades.
Thus, the invention’s claim, through its own dependent formulation, explicitly defined “achromatic” as white pigment only. Gucci, meanwhile, demonstrated that “achromatic” refers solely to white, grey, and black — colors without a dominant hue. Agfa’s own patent description supported this interpretation: “Blue and green are chromatic colours, while white, grey and black are achromatic colours, as they have no dominant hue.” (para. [0021]) Ironically, the wording Agfa used in its own patent ended up working in Gucci’s favor.

The same conclusion aligns with the dictionary definition (Collins Dictionary):
Achromatic — white, black, or grey without hue.
Fig. 3

In its defense, Gucci relied on this narrow definition, emphasizing that an “achromatic color” means a color in which all wavelengths are approximately equally represented. Patents love dictionaries — and consistency of terminology. That’s one of the clearest marks of a professional patent drafter: the unity of terms and disciplined use of dictionary- based language. The court ultimately sided with Gucci, noting that a patent itself functions as “a kind of dictionary,” where precise — even if narrow — definitions prevail. In its ruling (Fig. 4), the court held that any definitions in the description that contradict the issued claims cannot justify broader interpretation. The claims alone determine the scope of protection.

Fig. 4

A Bit of Intellectual Theory

There is a concept known as a “point patent”, and this case illustrates it vividly. We have long discussed point or selective patents. What does that mean? Imagine you state that the content range of substance A is from 1 to 70, but I file a patent for the range 55–60 — because that’s where the optimal result occurs — and you forgot to specify that narrower range in your own patent. This gives me a monopoly on the product that falls within 55– 60. This strategy is often applied to material or substance properties — for example, in generic drug patents — where the patent covers a range or even a single point. In our case, it could be the color white — or a specific pigment or combination of pigments. When drafting a patent, strategy comes first — craftsmanship follows. Agfa tried to capture “everything light,” but without evidence. Gucci focused on a single, well-defined point — and won. Gucci even presented technical data: the spectral analysis of Gucci’s coating showed a deviation of over 20%, which meant the wavelengths were not evenly distributed — therefore, the color was not achromatic. Naturally, Gucci likely filed (or soon will file) its own point patent precisely covering this interpretation of color. That’s what point or selective patents are — and this case is a textbook example of their power. Because if Gucci doesn’t do it, Agfa will — by correcting its earlier mistake and submitting a new, narrower, and better- supported claim. We’ll soon see who adapts faster — or perhaps, who already has.

The Result

 

Gucci’s products with ivory coatings do not fall under Agfa’s patent. And most likely, Gucci is already preparing its own.
Lessons for Entrepreneurs For entrepreneurs who invest in patents:

  1. Set a clear objective.,

Define exactly what you want to monopolize: a range or a point, a color or a property.
Outline the boundaries of your ambition — but stay aware of the competitors’ realities — so your strategist can build a monopoly that aligns with your goals.
It’s not enough to say “achromatic” and expect to cover all shades; you need to specify “white (ΔE < 2)” or “5–10% pigment content.”

  1. Provide data.,

Patent strategists are not magicians. Without tables, examples, and laboratory data, a patent remains a hypothesis. Yes, professionals can model it — but that takes time. It’s always better to base your patent on real evidence.
To create a narrow, point, or selective patent, you need a solid evidential base — examples and pigment data included in the claims. Sometimes, one evidential photo can save a monopoly.

  1. Engage a marketer and a scientist at the filing stage.,

Together, determine what constitutes commercial value: the effect, the shade, the method, or the parameter. A patent strategist must have open access to both marketing and R&D insights — developing a strategy that matches the entrepreneur’s long-term vision. That’s how you avoid repeating the Thermos or Aspirin stories. Because a patent is both a scientific fact and a business instrument.

  1. Consider jurisdiction.,

• Europe (UPC): narrow interpretation • USA: functional interpretation • China: evidence-based interpretation One application — three different risks. That’s where strategy makes all the difference.

  1. Remember:,

Even a valid patent doesn’t guarantee monopoly — not without the right patent strategy. And most importantly: Work with professionals. There are few of us — but we do exist.

 Patent Pre-Filing Checklist
(optional visual insert or downloadable checklist could go here)

 Conclusion

Agfa was left with a valid, yet effectively toothless patent.
Gucci — with a strong product and a potential new application.
The moral is simple: Broad wording without evidence and professional precision does not create a monopoly. Only a clear goal, a strategic team, and a point-based professional approach can build a true patent advantage.

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