TOWEL HAVING SECURING APERTURE AND METHOD OF SECURING TOWEL TO A RACK
The invention is a towel having a fabric base having a quadrilateral shape and a coupled first horizontal strip having a quadrilateral shape, the first horizontal strip being coupled proximate the top edge of the fabric base in a manner so as to create a loop formed by the fabric base and first horizontal strip. The invention is also a method of securing the towel to a rod, rack, bar or handle.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/671,639 filed on Jul. 13, 2012, entitled “TOWEL HAVING SECURING APERTURE AND METHOD OF SECURING TOWEL TO A RACK”.
TECHNICAL FIELDThe present invention relates to towels, such as dish and hand towels as would be used in a kitchen, bathroom, washroom, laundry room or as, e.g., a sports or golf towel.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONIt is a well known practice to hang towels, such as, but not limited to, dish towels and hand towels on towel rings or towel racks, including ad-hoc racks formed by handles of drawer pulls and handles on kitchen appliances such as ovens or refrigerators. It takes some amount of skill to position the towel on such actual and ad-hoc racks so that the weight of each side of the towel bisected by the rack is substantially equal to the other, such equilibrium being required to keep the towel from sliding off the rack. Disadvantageously, if the towel is out of equilibrium, meaning one end of the towel is even slightly heavier that the other, then it does not take much applied force to cause the towel to slide off the rack and onto, e.g., the floor. Even if the towel is in equilibrium, if a household has small children, it is often the case that such towels end up on the floor if the towel is within reach of the child. What is desired is a towel having a structure that allows it to be secured to a rack without the use of clips, cups, snaps, hook and loop fasteners such as VELCRO® brand fasteners, ties and the like.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONAs used herein, the relationship of the parts of the invention are with reference to generally quadrilateral fabric shapes, such as a rectangle. Each such rectangle has a front and back, a perimeter comprising a top edge, right edge, bottom edge, and left edge. In a first orientation, the top edge and bottom edge have substantially equal lengths but are shorter than the right edge and left edge, which right edge and left edge also have substantially equal lengths. In a second orientation, the top edge and bottom edge have lengths that are longer than the right edge and left edge. As the parts of the invention are made of fabric, the thickness of the invention is de minimis when compared to the length and width of the fabric, although one skilled in the art would recognize that some material, such as terry cloth, is thicker than cloth linen, both of which fabrics can be used in making the invention. The use of the foregoing designations are merely to show the relative positions of the different portions of the invention with respect to the others and are not to be construed as limiting the invention.
The invention comprises a substantially planar fabric base in a quadrilateral shape, preferably a rectangle in a first orientation, further having coupled thereto a substantially planar first horizontal strip in a second orientation having a rectangular shape. The first horizontal strip is coupled toward the top edge of the fabric base using, e.g., stitching, using two rectangular patterns dictated by, respectively, the left one-third of the fabric base and the right one-third of the fabric base, thus leaving an opening between the planar back surface of the horizontal strip and the front planar surface of the fabric base, such opening forming an aperture or loop between the fabric base and horizontal strip in the respective middle one-third thereof. The creation of this loop facilitates a method of the invention. When the left one-third of the invention is folded back and then the right one-third of the invention is folded back (or vice versa), the loop formed between the respective middle one-third of the fabric base and first horizontal strip remains toward the user. The invention is then placed in front of a rack and the bottom edge of the invention is pulled up under the rack, then looped over the rack from behind and then fed through the loop, the loop being, as mentioned, the opening between the fabric base and the horizontal strip. In this manner, the invention is secured to the rack and cannot be pulled off of it from below. In a second embodiment of the invention, instead of a horizontal strip, the fabric base has a horizontal slit proximate the top of the fabric base in the middle one-third of the fabric base.
The fabric base can be comprised of any suitable fabric, such as cotton, linen, blended fabrics, calico, terry cloth, and the like. The invention can be made decorative by using a print such as a floral pattern or the like, on the horizontal strip, on the fabric base, or on a second, lower horizontal strip coupled to the fabric base. Such lower horizontal strip can have a decorative pattern and/or color matched to the upper horizontal strip.
For a better understanding of the present invention including the features, advantages and specific embodiments, reference is made to the following detailed description along with accompanying drawings in which:
While the making and using of the preferred embodiments of the present invention is discussed in detail below, it should be appreciated that the present invention provides many applicable inventive concepts which can be embodied in a wide variety of specific contexts. Some features of the preferred embodiment shown and discussed may be simplified or exaggerated for illustrating the principles of the invention.
As noted, the relationship of the parts of the invention are with reference to generally quadrilateral fabric shapes, such as a rectangle. As seen in
As the parts of the invention are made of fabric, the thickness of the invention is de minimis when compared to the length and width of the fabric, although one skilled in the art would recognize that some material, such as terry cloth, is thicker than cloth linen, both of which fabrics can be used in making the invention. The use of the foregoing designations are merely to show the relative positions of the different portions of the invention with respect to the other and are not to be construed as limiting the invention.
Referring again to
Referring to
Referring to
The fabric base 101 and horizontal strip 102 can be comprised of any suitable fabric, such as cotton, linen, blended fabrics, calico, terry cloth, and the like. The invention can be made decorative by using a print such as a floral pattern or the like, on the horizontal strip 102, on the fabric base, or on a second, lower horizontal strip 104 coupled to the fabric base as seen in
An additional method of securing the invention 100 to a rack 501 comprises the following steps as shown in
The embodiments shown and described herein are only exemplary. Even though characteristics and advantages of the present invention have been set forth in the foregoing description together with details of the invention, the disclosure is illustrative only and changes may be made within the principles of the invention to the full extent indicated by the broad general meaning of the terms used in the attached claims. For example, either or both of the shapes of the fabric base and horizontal strip can be squares so long as the coupling of the horizontal strip to the fabric base creates a loop through which the towel can be fed through to secure it to a rack.
Claims
1. A towel, comprising:
- a fabric base having a quadrilateral shape;
- a first horizontal strip having a quadrilateral shape, the first horizontal strip being coupled proximate the top edge of the fabric base in a manner so as to create a loop formed by the fabric base and first horizontal strip.
2. The towel of claim 1, wherein the quadrilateral shapes of the fabric base and first horizontal strip are rectangular.
3. The towel of claim 1, wherein the fabric base has a rectangle shape that is substantially planar, a front and back and a fabric base perimeter;
- the fabric base perimeter being a top edge, right edge, bottom edge, and left edge;
- the first horizontal strip having a rectangle shape that is substantially planar and a front and back and a first horizontal strip perimeter;
- the first horizontal strip perimeter having a top edge, right edge, bottom edge, and left edge.
4. The towel of claim 3, wherein the fabric base top edge and fabric base bottom edge are substantially equal in length and have a length that is shorter than the fabric base right edge and fabric base left edge, the fabric base right edge and fabric edge left edge being substantially equal in length; and further wherein the first horizontal strip top edge and first horizontal strip bottom edge are substantially equal in length and have a length that is longer than the first horizontal strip right edge and first horizontal strip left edge, the first horizontal strip right edge and first horizontal strip left edge being substantially equal in length.
5. The towel of claim 4, wherein the fabric base is oriented with respect to the first horizontal strip such that the fabric base top edge and fabric base bottom edge are in a horizontal position and the fabric base right edge and fabric base left edge are in a vertical position when the first horizontal strip top edge and first horizontal strip bottom edge are in horizontal position and the first horizontal strip right edge and first horizontal strip left edge are in a vertical position.
6. The towel of claim 5, wherein the first horizontal strip is positioned toward the top edge of the fabric base.
7. The towel of claim 5, wherein the first horizontal strip is positioned at the top edge of the fabric base.
8. The towel of claim 5, wherein the first horizontal strip is coupled to the fabric base using a stitching pattern so as to form the loop.
9. The towel of claim 8, wherein the stitching pattern comprises a stitching pattern proximate a left one-third of the fabric base, and a further stitching pattern is proximate a right one-third of the fabric base.
10. The towel of claim 9, wherein each stitching pattern is configured result in an opening, aperture or loop between a planar back of first horizontal strip and a planar front of the fabric base.
11. The towel of claim 7, wherein the first horizontal strip is glued to the fabric base.
12. The towel of claim 5, wherein the fabric base is comprised of one of cotton, linen, blended fabrics, calico and terry cloth.
13. The towel of claim 5, wherein the first horizontal strip is comprised of one of cotton, linen, blended fabrics, calico and terry cloth.
14. The towel of claim 5, further comprising a second horizontal strip positioned proximate a bottom edge of the fabric base.
15. The towel of claim 14, wherein the first horizontal strip and second horizontal strip include thereon a decorative printed pattern.
16. A towel, comprising a fabric base further having a quadrilateral shape with a horizontal slit proximate the top side of the fabric base so as to create an aperture for receiving a portion of the fabric base there-through.
17. A method of securing a towel to a rack, comprising:
- providing a fabric base having a quadrilateral shape and a first horizontal strip having quadrilateral shape, the first horizontal strip being coupled proximate the top edge of the fabric base so as to create a loop formed by a portion of the fabric base and a portion of first horizontal strip;
- folding the left one-third of the fabric base and coupled first horizontal strip back lengthwise;
- folding the right one-third of the fabric base and coupled first horizontal strip back lengthwise;
- positioning the fabric base and coupled first horizontal strip proximate a rod, rack, bar or handle;
- looping the bottom of the fabric base over the rod, rack, bar or handle and through the loop formed by the fabric base and coupled first horizontal strip; and
- straightening the fabric base into in a neat and orderly position on the rod, rack, bar or handle.
Type: Application
Filed: Jan 3, 2013
Publication Date: Jan 16, 2014
Inventor: Melissa Livingston (McKinney, TX)
Application Number: 13/733,447
International Classification: B32B 7/04 (20060101); B32B 7/08 (20060101); A47L 19/00 (20060101); B32B 3/10 (20060101); B32B 7/14 (20060101); A47K 10/02 (20060101);