Ladder Rack for Garments, Footwear, and Household Articles
An organization and storage rack having a ladder-like frame with rungs and hooks designed to receive items such as garments, footwear, and other household articles. By extending the rungs through a ladder-like frame, along with knobs at the rung tips, this rack allows items to be densely places without the need for traditional clothing hangers or other accessories. It can safely store a large amount and variety of garments and footwear without risk of damage from sharp hooks or hangers. It can either be leaned like a ladder against an upright surface or hung on the back of a door or other upright surface.
Not Applicable
STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENTNot Applicable
REFERENCE TO SEQUENCE LISTING, A TABLE, OR A COMPUTER PROGRAM LISTING COMPACT DISK APPENDIXNot Applicable
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention is in the technical field of garment organization. More particularly, the present invention is in the technical field of racks designed to organize and dry garments, footwear, and other household articles.
Clothing racks are generally used for storing or drying clothing in personal settings as well as in commercial setting for transporting or displaying clothes for sale and marketing. Traditional garment rack designs often use clothing hangers to hold individual garments or are limited to holding only a few articles using hooks. Furthermore, few clothing rack designs are suitable for placement in bedrooms and other living spaces.
Currently, the most typical places for people to store their clothing and apparel items are in closets, drawers, and bins. This is generally convenient for clean clothing that hasn't been worn since being washed. A problem common for many people is where to place clothing that has been worn once or twice since washing and can be worn again before re-washing. It's usually not desirable to refold worn clothes and place it in contact with clean clothes, so people generally leave these articles piled up or draped over random objects.
Accordingly, there is a need for an improved clothing rack to quickly store and organize clothes between washes while minimizing the amount of room space required.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention is a rack used to organize and dry garments, shoes, and other household articles made of cloth. There are two variations of this invention that allow it to either be leaned like a ladder against an upright surface (version 1) or hung on the back of a door or other upright surface (version 2).
Both versions of this invention feature a plurality of rungs on a ladder-like frame for holding items. The rungs extend through the ladder frame to receive items on both the inside and outside of the frame, as well as being hung on the rung tips. By extending the rungs through the ladder frame this design allows items to be densely places on the rack without the need for traditional clothing hangers or other accessories. Knobs are placed along the upper backing frame of both versions to hang additional garments or accessories such as hats and belts.
Version 1 of this invention leans against an upright surface and has an upper and lower section for clothing and shoes respectively. Clothing rungs are for cloth-like garments or accessories such as belts or handbags and shoe rungs are for footwear and other rigid items. Shoe rungs are placed in pairs on a wider ladder frame to create level planes at each step of ladder. This configuration creates an effectively flat surface while using the same ladder design and building material as the clothing section. Optional shelves and bins can be laid on top of the shoe rungs to create a solid surface for items that can't be held directly on the shoes rungs. To enable smaller packaging and storage area the rack can be disassembled into two halves at the junction of the upper and lower sections.
Version 2 of this invention hangs on the back of a door or other upright surface and has a rung configuration similar to the clothing section of version 1. Its ladder frame is connected at the top to a hinged backing frame attached to door hangers. The rack can be braced at an angle, using optional legs, for easy loading and unloading of items or hung flat in parallel with the door to save space. To brace the rack at an angles the bottom of the rack is pulled away from the door allowing a pair of hinged legs to fall into place. To restore it to a flat position the legs are manually flipped up allowing the bottom of the rack to swing flat against the door. When the bottom legs are not included the rack can be manually swung away from the door while items are loaded.
The ladder-like design of this rack offers easy access and visibility of the contained items using a simple light-weight construction that requires minimal room space. It can safely store a large amount and variety of garments, footwear, and accessories without risk of damage from sharp hooks or hangers.
Referring now to the invention in more detail,
To use the rack, garments are simply draped or hung on the dowels 1,29 and knobs 3,6,30,31. In version 1 of the rack footwear can also be placed flat across the pair of dowels 2 at each step of the lower ladder section. In version 2 the rack is typically pulled into the open position, shown in
In further detail, referring to version 1 of the rack in
The building materials and precise shapes of components may vary. The construction details of the invention as shown in
While the foregoing written description of the invention enables one of ordinary skill to make and use what is considered presently to be the best mode thereof, those of ordinary skill will understand and appreciate the existence of variations, combinations, and equivalents of the specific embodiment, method, and examples herein. The invention should therefore not be limited by the above described embodiment, method, and examples, but by all embodiments and methods within the scope and spirit of the invention.
Claims
1. A ladder rack having a plurality of rungs on a ladder-like frame in which the rungs are solid pieces that extend through the ladder frame such that the ladder rungs are accessible on both the inside and outside of the ladder frame.
2. The ladder rack according to claim 1, wherein the rungs are arranged in sets of 2 or more on a wider frame to create a level plane at each step of the ladder rack.
3. The ladder rack according to claim 1, wherein the ladder frame is attached with a hinge at the top to a horizontal cross-frame, which enables the ladder frame to swing outward at the base while remaining fixed at the top to the horizontal cross-frame attached to an upright surface, such as a door.
4. The ladder rack according to claim 3, wherein hinged legs are attached to the bottom of the ladder frame such that:
- the frame can be manually pulled outward at the base to allow the hinged legs to extend into place;
- the legs are cut or attached in a way that limits the travel of the hinge such that the legs lock at the desired angle to brace the ladder frame at an angle against an upright surface, such as a door.
5. The ladder rack according to claim 1, wherein an upper segment containing single rungs and a lower segment containing sets of rungs can be joined or disassembled, such as with cam-lock connectors.
6. The ladder rack according to claim 1, wherein knobs are placed on the tips of the ladder rungs to facilitate hanging items on the rung tips.
7. The ladder rack according to claim 1, wherein the members of the ladder frame are attached at the top to a solid horizontal cross-frame to strengthen the ladder frame, create a more stable surface when leaning the rack against an upright surface, and providing an area for additional hooks, knobs, or trays.
8. The ladder rack according to claim 1, wherein the members of the ladder frame are attached at the bottom to a solid horizontal cross-frame to strengthen the ladder frame and create a more stable base when leaning the rack against an upright surface.
9. The ladder rack according to claim 2, wherein solid or semi-solid shelves or bins, made of material such as wood, plastic, or wire mesh, can be placed on top of the rung sets to create additional types of storage.
Type: Application
Filed: Oct 16, 2012
Publication Date: Apr 17, 2014
Inventor: Oren Avissar (Los Angeles, CA)
Application Number: 13/652,490