Easy pack track and clip garment bag
Disclosed is a novel garment bag having a cantilevered support arm under which is an open ended slot that can be placed onto a closet bar to the lateral centerline of the garment bag to contain garments supported on conventional hangers. The hangers can be slid on the closet bar without being removed therefrom into the garment bag adjacent to the cantilevered support arm. Each hanger supporting a garment is also slid over a retaining strap attached to the garment bag so that when packing is complete, the retainer strap can be placed around the hanger hooks and attached through a hook and loop fastener to the garment bag. There is included at least one spine as a part of the garment bag. The spine is comprised of a series of ribs, each rib of which contains tracks and clips. Tracks allow for horizontal movement of the clips along the rib so the clips can be positioned for attachment to lateral edges of garments. This is to minimize wrinkling when the garment bag is closed and moved about in travel.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to the field of travel luggage, and more specifically concerns a garment bag that when hung in a closet on a closet bar in which the clothes to be packed are also hung, the clothes can be slid along the bar without being removed therefrom into their packed position in the garment bag. It also includes a track and clip feature to hold clothing in position within the garment bag to minimize wrinkling when the garment bag is closed, removed from the closet bar and carried by the user.
2. Description of the Prior Art
A common piece of luggage that is used by present day travelers is frequently referred as a garment bag. Garment bags are frequently employed by airline passengers who do not wish to check their luggage, instead preferring to carry their bags on board airplanes. A typical garment bag is sized a little larger than a blazer or sports coat when it is open to be packed and after packing it can be folded in half so as to allow the user to carry the bag at their side, as well as allow the bag to readily fit within the overhead bins in jet airliners.
A typical prior art garment bag is usually packed by opening it up and lying it on a bed so that clothes on hangers can be removed from a closet, laid in the garment bag and the hooks on the hangers placed around a device at the top of the garment bag that substitutes for the bar in the closet from which the clothes were removed. After the clothes are loaded into the garment bag, garment bag is closed, usually with a zippered closure, and frequently then folded in half with the bottom half and top half attached to each other to produce a resulting piece of luggage that can be carried at one's side, as well as fit into the overhead bins in an airplane. There are several consequences that usually result from the foregoing procedure.
First of all it is necessary to remove each garment from the closet, carry it to the garment bag on the bed, lay it flat attaching the hook of the hanger to a device within the garment bag that emulates the closet bar, and smooth the wrinkles from the garment before laying the next garment on top of the first one. The second consequence is that when the garment bag is closed and folded for travel, the clothing in the bag tends to shift because of gravity and movement and tends to wrinkle. Because there is no means in prior art garment bags that effectively prevents this phenomenon, it is normal to expect the clothing placed in such a garment bag to wrinkle to some degree depending upon the length of time the garments are in the garment bag, the amount of room in the garment bag that allows shifting of the garments and the amount of movement to which the garment bag is exposed.
The present invention facilitates packing the garment bag while it remains hanging from a closet bar, and doing so without removing the clothing from the closet bar except for the purpose of selecting the garments to be packed and the order in which they are packed. The present invention also includes a track and clip mechanism which is intended to maintain the positioning of the garments within the bag by positive control without regard to the amount of space left in the garment bag when packing is complete, the folding of the bag, and the movement to which it is subjected after the garment bag is closed and carried on the journey. Thus the present invention addresses two deficiencies of the prior art, the efforts involved in packing to minimize wrinkling of the garments, and the retention of the garments in a positive manner to minimize wrinkling after the garment bag is closed.
A pre-examination search commissioned by the applicant has revealed no reference that shows a means to pack a garment bag that is suspended from a closet bar wherein the garments to be packed can be slid along the same closet bar as the garment bag is suspended from in the closet without removing the garments from the closet bar during the packing process. This has the obvious advantage that the garments when placed in the garment bag remain suspended in a relatively wrinkle free posture while hanging from from the same hanger as they were in the closet before being packed. Examples of the prior art include Riccoboni, U.S. Pat. No. 5,622,255, which provides separate folding hangers that are a part of the invention as illustrated in
Regarding the track and clip feature of the present invention no reference teaches this being done in a lateral manner with tracks that are horizontal. The invention stabilizes garments laterally and maintain them in a minimal wrinkle mode perpendicular to the force of gravity when the garment bag is hung up. The closest reference is Ingram, U.S. Pat. No. 5,419,432 which teaches a hem clasp mechanism as shown in
Bearing in mind the foregoing, it is a principal object of the present invention to provide an easy pack track and clip garment bag in which garments on hangers supported by a closet bar can be slid without removal from the closet bar to be packed into a garment bag which is also supported by the same closet bar.
A related principal object of the present invention is to provide a garment bag which can be packed in a vertical hanging configuration with clothing supported on hangers from a closet bar while gravity maintains the garments in a minimum wrinkle mode as each is packed into the garment bag.
An additional object of the invention to facilitate editing of the choices of clothes to be removed if too many are initially elected to be packed, because they are hanging from the closet bar and can be easily removed without disturbing adjoining garments as would be the case if they were lying down in a prior art garment bag packed on a bed.
Another object of the invention is to provide a garment bag that permits packing it without the necessity to lay down garments and smooth out wrinkles in the garment bag.
A further object of the invention is to avoid the necessity to transport garments from a closet to a horizontal garment bag commonly laid in the prior art on the surface of a bed for packing purposes.
An additional object of the invention is to spare the time and reduce the effort to pack a garment bag by allowing the same to be done in a vertical mode hanging in the closet from which the garments to be packed are selected.
A further object of the invention is to provide a horizontally oriented track and clip mechanism within a garment bag to maintain garments with minimum wrinkling in a lateral direction.
Another object of the invention is to provide a garment bag having a series of horizontal tracks in which are disposed a plurality of clips movable in said tracks horizontally to maintain at a multiplicity of positions along the side of each garment sufficient lateral stabilization to minimize wrinkling of the garments.
One more object of the invention is to provide a garment bag with a spine comprised of a series of ribs that have a limited pivoting connection between them that prevents folding the garment bag in a crease that would wrinkle garments packed therein.
Other objects and advantages will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon referenced to the following descriptions and the appended drawings.
In accordance with a principal aspect of the invention there is provided an easy pack track and clip garment bag which includes a cantilevered support arm having an opening that can be slid onto a closet bar to the lateral centerline of the garment bag. The invention also includes an external covering supported by cantilevered support arm to contain garments supported on conventional hangers which can be slid on the closet bar without being removed therefrom into the garment bag adjacent to the cantilevered support arm. Each hanger supporting a garment is slid over a retaining strap attached to the garment bag so that when all the garments desired to be packed are in the garment bag, the retainer strap can be pulled tightly around the hanger hooks and attached through the velcro fastener to the garment bag. All of the hanger hooks are raised slightly together to permit removal of the garment bag cantilevered support arm from the closet bar after the garment bag is closed.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention there is included at least one spine as a part of the garment bag. The spine is comprised of a series of ribs, alternate ribs of which contains tracks and clips along the longitudinal centerline of every other rib. Tracks allow for lateral (horizontal) movement of the clips along the ribs. This permits the clips to be positioned for attachment to the lateral edges of garments to maintain their lateral positioning, thereby minimizing wrinkling when the garment bag is closed and moved about in travel. The clips slide within the tracks, can be rotated to accommodate differing shapes of garments, have jaws with internal surfaces that protect garments from damage, and are resiliently biased into a normally closed position that can be opened by thumb pressure on the upper surface.
By selecting garments according to size with the smallest size being first, a plurality of garments can be clipped at their lateral edges using a single spine. The invention further contemplates the use of more than one such spine when needed for the number of garments to be packed. The first spine forms the back of the garment bag, while one or more additional spines, referred to as inset spines, are disposed inside the garment bag when it is closed and folded.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGSVarious other features and details of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following discussion taken in conjunction with the following drawings, in which:
As required, detailed embodiments of the present invention are disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that disclosed embodiments are merely exemplary of the invention which may be embodied in various forms. Therefore, specifics structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a basis for the claims and as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention in virtually any appropriately detailed structure.
Reference is now made to the drawings, wherein like characteristics and features of the present invention shown in the various figures are designated by the same referenced numerals.
Retaining strap 20 preferably includes a magnetic strip sewn into it so that if the closet bar is a ferrous material, the retaining strap will be attracted to it and will lie flat when packing is proceeding.
In the closeup of
Inset
While the invention has been described, disclosed, illustrated and shown in various terms or certain embodiments of modifications which has assumed in practice, the scope of the invention is not intended to be, nor should it be deemed to be, limited thereby and such other modifications or embodiments as may be suggested by the teachings herein are particularly reserved especially as they fall within the breadth and scope of the claims here appended.
Claims
1. In an improved garment bag having back, front, top, bottom and sides, a handle, and a suspension member to support hooks of clothes hangers near a top of a clothes storage cavity in the garment bag, the improvement comprising:
- a top plate of garment bag substantially vertically disposed above the clothes storage cavity;
- a cantilevered support arm formed from an upper portion of the top plate;
- a substantially horizontal open ended slot in the top plate having a width slightly greater than a diameter of a closet bar and a length beginning at a side of the top plate and extending substantially to a vertical centerline of the garment bag; and
- a retainer to hold together the clothes hanger hooks at the suspension member.
2. The improved garment bag of claim 1 in which the retainer is a retaining strap that holds the hooks of the clothes hangers together in substantially an identical position as when the clothes hangers are slid on the closet bar into the garment bag in packing it.
3. The improved garment bag of claim 2 in which the retaining strap is fixedly attached at a first end to the top plate and a second end is laid on top of the closet bar over which hooks of clothes hangers are slid when packing the garment bag and then the second end is attached to the first end using a hook and loop fastener.
4. The improved garment bag of claim 1 in which the back of the garment bag is a spine depending downwardly from the top plate and comprised of a series of substantially horizontal ribs having a pivoting connection between the ribs.
5. The improved garment bag of claim 4 which further comprises at least one substantially horizontal track in selected ribs, and at least one clip resiliently biased in a normally closed configuration and slidable in a track.
6. The improved garment bag of claim 5 in which multiple tracks and multiple clips serve to hold clothes supported on clothes hangers laterally stable to minimize wrinkling of clothes when the garment bag is closed, folded and transported.
7. The improved garment bag of claim 6 in which clothes are packed in order of increasing size starting with a smallest item such that each successive garment overlies its predecessor so clips will reach the edges of each garment to hold each laterally stable.
8. The improved garment bag of claim 5 in which clips are comprised of a base that is slidably engaged in a track, a top jaw plate pivotally connected to the base, an upper jaw connected to the upper jaw plate, a lower jaw connected to the base, resilient biasing means to maintain normally closed pressure between the jaws, fabric protecting material on fabric contacting surfaces of the jaws, and which clips are rotatable in a plane parallel to a plane of the rib.
9. The improved garment bag of claim 5 which further comprises at least one additional spine to provide more tracks and clips to accommodate additional clothes inside the garment bag.
10. In an improved garment bag having back, front, top, bottom and sides, a handle, and a suspension member to support hooks of clothes hangers near a top of a clothes storage cavity in the garment bag, the improvement comprising:
- a spine forming the back of the garment bag and having a plurality of ribs with a pivoting connection between the ribs;
- at least one substantially horizontal track in selected ribs; and
- at least one clip resiliently biased in a normally closed configuration and slidable within the track.
11. The improved garment bag of claim 10 in which multiple tracks and multiple clips serve to hold laterally stable to minimize wrinkling of clothes disposed on clothes hangers when the garment bag is closed, folded and transported.
12. The improved garment bag of claim 11 in which clothes are packed in order of increasing size starting with a smallest item such that each successive garment overlies its predecessor so clips will reach the edges of each garment to hold each laterally stable.
13. The improved garment bag of claim 10 in which clips are comprised of a base that is slidably engaged in a track, a top jaw plate pivotally connected to the base, an upper jaw connected to the upper jaw plate, a lower jaw connected to the base, resilient biasing means to maintain normally closed pressure between the jaws, fabric protecting material on fabric contacting surfaces of the jaws, and which clips are rotatable in a plane parallel to a plane of the rib.
14. The improved garment bag of claim 10 which further comprises at least one additional spine to provide more tracks and clips to accommodate additional clothes inside the garment bag.
15. The improved garment bag of claim 10 which further comprises,
- a top plate of the garment bag substantially vertically disposed above the clothes storage cavity;
- a cantilevered support arm formed from an upper portion of the top plate;
- a substantially horizontal open ended slot in the top plate having a width substantially equal to a diameter of a closet bar, and a length beginning at a side of the top plate and extending substantially to a vertical centerline of the garment bag; and
- a retainer to hold together the clothes hanger hooks at the suspension member.
16. The improved garment bag of claim 15 in which the retainer is a retaining strap that holds the hooks of the clothes hangers together in substantially an identical position as when the clothes hangers are slid on the closet bar into the garment bag in packing it.
17. The improved garment bag of claim 16 in which the retaining strap is fixedly attached at a first end to the top plate and a second end is laid on top of the closet bar over which hooks of clothes hangers are slid when packing the garment bag and then the second end is attached to the first end using a hook and loop fastener.
Type: Application
Filed: Nov 18, 2003
Publication Date: May 19, 2005
Inventor: Louis Cohen (Aventura, FL)
Application Number: 10/714,685