This invention relates to disposable beverage cups with lids; more particularly, it relates to disposable dome lids that may be fitted over the mouth of a beverage cup and which include a drink-through aperture on the top surface of the beverage cup lid for easy access to the liquid within the cup. The current invention relates to disposable dome lids that may be put over the mouth of a drinking cup and offer a drink-through aperture on the lid's top surface. Dome-shaped, disposable lids made for use with drinking cups are often wanted due to the many advantages they provide. When a disposable dome cover is used with a beverage cup in which cold drinks are served, it creates a gap above the rim of the beverage cup into which floating ice may intrude when the beverage cup is first filled. This makes it easier to notice and remove the floating ice from the drinking cup. This allows the merchant to use larger ice cubes or chunks of crushed ice than he normally would while still providing a full measure of dispensed beverage; similarly, it gives the consumer the impression that he or she has received a full measure of the beverage while also receiving enough ice to keep the beverage cold for an extended period. In most instances, access to the liquid inside the dome cover is acquired by inserting a straw through, a cross-shaped slot imprinted on the lid for that purpose. Dome lids can retain froth or foam, such as the head that develops on draft beer when it is poured into a drinking cup for sales, such as at a baseball stadium or similar event. This head is created by pouring the beer from the tap into the glass. The use of dome lids with hot beverages such as coffee or tea, and in particular the use of dome lids with a cappuccino, is more advantageous than the use of similar lids with cold beverages. Using a dome cover permits the steam that rises from the hot beverage, especially when the beverage is initially delivered, to ascend and collect inside the volume supplied by the dome lid. Consequently, the pressure that develops within a largely sealed cup with a lid in place may be minimized. There is often a steam release hole punched into the lids of cups meant for use with hot beverages; nevertheless, this hole may get clogged or blocked if many full cups are stacked or transported nearby. In addition, because there is more space above the rim of the cup, the hot beverage has more room to circulate inside it, which is advantageous when transporting a cup with a dispensed hot beverage. This may help avoid the unintentional overflow of the hot beverage past the rim of the cup, which might cause discomfort in the palm of the person holding it or allow moisture to escape from a paper bag or similar container. The use of a dome lid reduces the possibility that the disposable lid may be removed under these circumstances, especially when the full drinking cup is being shaken by external forces. This is particularly true when the cup is held upside down while being shaken. Too far, however, the use of dome lids with hot beverage cups has resulted in several additional disadvantages. In the past, dome lids that offered the potential of a drink-through hole had a small oval-shaped opening of insufficient size, making it impossible to have easy access to the beverage to drink from it. In addition, historically, dome lids were affixed to the rim of a drinking cup by simply being put over it, establishing a type of interference fit between the inner edge of the lid's bottom and the outer edge of the cup's lip. This connection technique has been used for the great majority of dome lids. This arrangement of the lid on the drinking cup is not secure; however, a "plug fit" lid for the cup provides placement for the lid that is far more secure. In a nutshell, the word "plug fit" refers to the creation of depression on the underside of a beverage lid, either near or at the lid's outer edge. This recess is intended to embrace the lip of the drinking cup at both its interior and exterior extremities, allowing the cup lid to expand into the recess and be substantially more securely held in place. In contrast, dome lids with plug-fit recesses, which are particularly beneficial for use with hot beverages, are not generally available on the market, if they are even available. A disposable dome cover may be used in combination with a disposable drinking cup, such as a beverage cup used for the sale of hot and cold beverages. When properly positioned, the upper surface of a dome lid will be elevated above the upper surface of the drinking cup's rim. To be able to place a plug into the lid of the beverage cup, the rim of the beverage cup must extend into a recess on the underside of the dome lid that was designed expressly for this purpose. A side surface that contacts the cup rim, is offset from the cup rim-engaging recess and leans downward on an essentially flat top surface of the lid. Because a portion of the side surface has been repositioned externally toward the outside perimeter of the dome lid, it now has a surface that may contact the user's lower lip when the lid is in place. It is possible to identify a tear-back flap by the fault lines and "U" -a shaped hinge that is imprinted into its upper surface. A locking stub extends downward into a locking recess produced on the top surface of the lid when the tear-back flap is folded back. This produces a drink-through aperture towards the outside edge of the dome cover, providing for easy access to the liquid contained inside the cup. The locking stub does not extend down into the locking recess when the flap is not folded back. All products offered in this online store are sent worldwide. Please contact our sales manager to contact us to better serve you.
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