TOWEL RACK
In one aspect there is provided a towel rack having a width and comprising a wall mounting bracket and a towel support frame. The wall mounting bracket is for fastening the towel rack to a wall. The towel support frame is supported by the wall mounting bracket and defines a perimeter thereabout and a plane therebetween. The length of the perimeter is longer than the width of the towel rack. The towel support frame may be secured in a drying configuration so as to orient said plane substantially perpendicular to the wall. When in the drying configuration, a towel may be positioned on the towel support frame substantially around said perimeter.
This application is a regular application of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/247,168 filed Oct. 27, 2015 and entitled, “TOWEL RACK”, the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference.
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThe field of present invention relates generally to bathroom fixtures, and, more particularly, to a towel rack.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONConventional towel bars are generally mounted permanently to a wall. In its simplest form, a towel bar is a bar connected at each end to a mounting member, wherein the mounting members are then connected to the wall so as to locate the bar about two to three inches, or so, from the wall. One problem with conventional towel bars is that they are intended, at best, to only hang a single unfolded bath towel. At best, two bath towels may be hung on a single bar in a folded or bunched-up state.
For example, 80% or more of standard bath towels are 27 inches or 30 inches wide and a standard bath sheet width is 35 inches. However, approximately 80% or more of standard towel bars are only 18 inches to 24 inches long. These dimensions have not been purposefully engineered of designed to correspond to standard towel widths. As such, in order to hang a 27 inch towel without being bunched up, an oversized 30 or 36 inch bar is required. However, most towel bars are not long enough to accommodate a standard towel without the towel having to be folded into itself, bunched-up or overlapped, therefore greatly reducing the ability to dry quickly and encouraging mildew growth. Two 27 inch towels do not fit on a 36 inch towel bar without folding them in half or needing to bunch them. Hanging a multiple towels bunched or folded will not allow them to dry as quick as would being stretched fully and draped once over a bar, as air could not circulate as freely around the towel.
Standard towel bars, as described above, also take up a great amount of wall space. Most household bathrooms have limited wall space and usually have one or two towel bars. Households with more than two family members have to stack towels over one another on bars due to limited wall and towel bar space or use hooks to hang towels which cause the towels to bunch together from the hook and prevent the full surface of the towel to be open for drying. This presents a problem of unpleasant smell as a wet towel is more susceptible for mildew, mold and bacteria than a dry towel.
Finally, some home owners prefer to display towels in different and unique ways, for aesthetic reasons. However, a simple straight towel bar does not provide many different options to visually display a towel in different or unique configurations.
Accordingly, what is needed is a towel rack that takes up less area of a wall than a standard towel rack, still supports a standard bath towel in an unfolded configuration, provides greater air flow through and around a hanging towel and provides a home owner or user with different and additional display configurations.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONIn an embodiment of the invention, there is provided a towel rack having a width and comprising a wall mounting bracket and a towel support frame. The wall mounting bracket is for fastening the towel rack to a wall. The towel support frame is supported by the wall mounting bracket and defines a perimeter thereabout and a plane therebetween. The length of the perimeter is longer than the width of the towel rack. The towel support frame may be secured in a drying configuration so as to orient said plane substantially perpendicular to the wall. When in the drying configuration, a towel may be positioned on the towel support frame substantially around said perimeter.
In another embodiment, the towel rack comprises a wall mounting bracket, a towel support frame, pivoting means and position locking means. The towel support frame is supported by the wall mounting bracket which, in turn, fastenes the towel rack to a wall. The pivoting means to allow the towel support frame to pivot within the wall mounting bracket between a drying configuration and a display configuration. The position locking means to releasably secure the towel support frame in either the display configuration or the drying configuration.
Various embodiments of the pivoting means are provided, including a clamp which may loosely support the towel support frame and a void in the wall mounting bracket, through which the towel support frame may be positioned. Various embodiments of the position locking means are provided, including a clamp which may tightly fasten around the towel support frame in a friction fit and a polygonal fitting on the towel support frame that may be biased into a corresponding polygonal socket on the wall mounting bracket in a mated arrangement.
The following description is of preferred embodiments by way of example only and without limitation to the combination of features necessary for carrying the invention into effect. Reference is to be had to the Figures in which identical reference numbers identify similar components. The drawing figures are not necessarily to scale and certain features are shown in schematic or diagrammatic form in the interest of clarity and conciseness.
Referring to the figures, embodiments of a towel rack 10 for hanging a towel T thereon are shown. The towel rack 10 preferably comprises a wall mount bracket 12 and a towel support frame 14 connected thereon. Wall mount bracket 12 facilitates mounting of the towel rack 10 to a wall A in a conventional manner (e.g. via screws). Wall mount bracket may therefore be provided with screw openings 12o
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Towel support frame 14 may also be constructed of one continuous unit, rather than discrete members, in which case the towel support frame 14 will have a proximal section 16, at least one intermediate section 17,17′ and a distal section 18, rather than discrete members. As such, it will be understood that when referring to proximal, intermediate or distal “members”, the invention will also encompass embodiments where the towel support frame 14 is a single unit having proximal, intermediate and distal sections.
The proximal member 16, intermediate member(s) 17, 17′, and distal member 18 define a plane P therebetween. The length (or radius of curvature) of the at least one intermediate member 17, 17′ substantially determines the amount of space D between the proximal member 16 and distal member 18, such as when the various components 16, 17, 17′, 18 are assembled into the towel support frame 14. When D is equal to zero, the towel support frame 14 substantially simulates a bar style towel rack as is known in the art. Benefits of the present embodiment may be realized when D is at least a size so that, when a towel is hung substantially around the perimeter R of the plane P, the surfaces of the towel are not in contact, thereby allowing air more easily to flow therebetween.
A towel T may be hung about the perimeter R of the plane P (e.g. see
The towel rack 10 is preferably provided with pivoting means 100, to allow the towel support frame 14 to pivot along the longitudinal axis L of the proximal member 16, about a pivot point within wall mount bracket 12. Preferably towel rack 10 can pivot between a drying configuration (
Position locking means 110 are preferably provided to releasably secure towel support frame 14 at the display configuration, the drying configuration, or at additional pivotable positions therebetween. Advantageously, the embodiments provided herein allow a towel support frame 14 to pivot providing for multiple configurations in which to hang and display a towel T. Furthermore, the distance between the wall A and the distal member 18 of the towel support frame 14 decreases as the angle of the towel support frame 14 changes from any position other than being substantially perpendicular to the wall, providing the user to increase space in a bathroom when the towel moved to the display position (e.g. when the towel T is dry).
Various preferred embodiments of the pivoting means 100 and position locking means 110 are shown by having reference to
Preferably, the proximal member 16 further comprises a first end 16a and a second end 16b extending in opposing directions along the longitudinal axis L of the proximal member's center section 24. More preferably, the towel support frame 14 further comprises a first intermediate member 17 having a first end 17a and a second end 17b and a second intermediate member 17′ having a first end 17a′ and a second end 17b′. The first and second intermediate members 17,17′ preferably have a substantially similar cross section as the first and second ends of the proximal member 16 and the distal member 18. The area of the cross section of the first and second intermediate members 17,17′ are preferably sized to accept the first end and the second end 16a,16b of the proximal member 16 therein. In a similar manner, a distal member 18 is preferably provided having a center section 19, first end 18a and a second end 18b extending along distal member's longitudinal axis L′ and sized to engage the second ends 17b, 17b′ of the first and second intermediate members 17,17′ therein. The length of the proximal member 16 and the distal member 18 may be similar.
The distance between the first and second ends 16a,18a,16b,18b of the proximal member 16 and the distal member 18 dictate any expansion and contraction of the towel support frame 14. The towel support frame 14 is in its smallest position (with the smallest perimeter R) when the first intermediate member 17 and the second intermediate member 17′ are adjacent the center sections 19, 24 respectively. The towel support frame 14 is in its largest position (with the greatest perimeter R) when the first intermediate member 17 and the second intermediate member 17′ are only placed over the ends 16a,16b,18a,18b. Towel support frame size locking means 200 is preferably provided to selectively and securably lock the towel support frame 14 in a desired sized configuration. Towel support frame size locking means 200, preferably comprises conventional buttons 202 mounted on flexible tabs 203 and a series of corresponding opening or holes 204 suitable to accept buttons 202 therein and lock the towel support frame 14 in a desired size.
The wall mount bracket 12 may also comprise a light source 42 for creating an esthetically pleasing glow about the towel rack and towel hanging therefrom. The light source 42 may act as a nightlight in a bathroom to replace a traditional night light. The light source 42 may have an on and off switch or it may have a motion sensor to react to movement in a room within the parameters of the motion sensor. A battery compartment 44 may be provided to accept a power source, such as a battery, for powering the light source 42. The wall mount bracket 12 may also comprise an air flowing apparatus such as a fan for assisting ambient air to flow past the surface of the towel hanging therefrom.
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Those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that various modifications to the invention as described herein will be possible without falling outside the scope of the invention. In the claims, the word “comprising” is used in its inclusive sense and does not exclude other elements being present. The indefinite article “a” before a claim feature does not exclude more than one of the features being present.
Claims
1. A towel rack having a width and comprising:
- a wall mounting bracket for fastening the towel rack to a wall;
- a towel support frame supported by the wall mounting bracket and defining a perimeter thereabout and a plane therebetween;
- wherein the length of the perimeter is longer than the width of the towel rack; and
- wherein the towel support frame may be secured in a drying configuration so as to orient said plane substantially perpendicular to the wall;
- and wherein, when in the drying configuration, a towel may be positioned on the towel support frame substantially around said perimeter.
2. A towel rack comprising:
- a wall mounting bracket for fastening the towel rack to a wall;
- a towel support frame supported by the wall mounting bracket;
- pivoting means to allow the towel support frame to pivot within the wall mounting bracket between a drying configuration and a display configuration; and
- position locking means to releasably secure the towel support frame in either the display configuration or the drying configuration.
3. The towel rack of claim 1 further comprising:
- pivoting means to allow the towel support frame to pivot within the wall mounting bracket between the drying configuration and a display configuration; and
- position locking means to releasably secure the towel support frame in either the display configuration or the drying configuration.
4. The towel rack of claim 3 wherein the pivoting means is a clamp.
5. The towel rack of claim 3 wherein the pivoting means is a void within the wall mounting bracket.
6. The towel rack of claim 3 wherein the position locking means is clamp.
7. The towel rack of claim 3 wherein the position locking further comprises a polygonal fitting on the towel support frame and a polygonal socket in the wall mounting bracket.
8. The towel rack of claim 1 further comprising a light source.
9. The towel rack of claim 1 further comprising an air flowing apparatus.
Type: Application
Filed: Oct 26, 2016
Publication Date: Apr 27, 2017
Inventor: Barry Gordon HOLLAND (Red Deer County)
Application Number: 15/335,425