CLOTHING HANGERS AND GRIPPERS
Clothes hangers and clothes grippers are disclosed herein. One clothes hanger includes a first planar hanger profile piece including first and second hanger arms extending oppositely from a central portion and including respective pedestal portions folded upon the first and second hanger arms and the central portion, a second planar hanger profile piece including first and second hanger arms extending oppositely from a central portion, wherein the first and second planar hanger profile pieces are attached to one another with the planar pedestal portions disposed therebetween, the planar pedestal portions serving to space the first and second planar hanger profile pieces from one another.
In one aspect, the present invention relates to apparatus for gripping, securing or hanging items or material, including items of clothing, which may be for the purpose of storage, transport and display.
In another aspect, the present invention relates to a method whereby a substantially planar clothes hanger may be provided with configurations which aid and facilitate the loading of certain types of garment to the hanger.
In other aspects, the present invention relates to a method whereby a clothes hanger may be provided with a way of displaying information, e.g., size, price, branding, promotions or any other information in the form of text, graphics symbols or the like.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONClothing companies, as an example, are constantly seeking new and innovative ways to convey, store and display their products. With clothing, for example, which is being offered for sale in a modern retail environment, a clothes-hanger is an important ‘point-of-sale’ tool, which may be provided with features, which can show a garment in its best possible aspect, requiring it to be both attractive and functional. Other aspects have come into focus in recent years, the first being the rising importance of environmental requirements, which has created the need to replace plastic as a choice in the creation of clothes-hangers with a more environmentally friendly material such as paper, which is more easily and ecologically less damaging to re-cycle. In parallel with this, the focus has currently shifted towards the auxiliary equipment and devices, also manufactured in many cases from plastic, as well as metal, such as the grippers commonly used to hold garments such as trousers, pants, skirts etc.
With regard to the environment, an industry where the vast majority of hangers are made from plastic has seen an increasing demand for more environmentally friendly materials, and an end to polluting industrial processes.
In one object of the present invention, the presently disclosed designs have been conceived, therefore, with the aim of creating a durable and strong gripper using materials which although they may not have the inherent strength of, e.g., plastic, or metal, may be more environmentally friendly, and in the long-run, possibly cheaper with the added advantage of being able to be re-cycled within already existing and non-polluting re-cycling schemes.
Although the present designs might also be created in standard materials, e.g., plastic or metal, the advantage would be that such a design offers an opportunity to create a strong gripper from less tensile material. However, the main purpose of the invention has been to allow the use of more sustainable materials such as, for example, paper, with a design which allows a less tensile material to assume a strength beyond it's normal capacities.
In another object of the present invention, recognition is made that a significant quantity of the material used in the manufacture of a more environmentally-friendly product is likely to come in sheet form, providing for a substantially planar hanger. The presently disclosed designs have been conceived, therefore, with the aim of providing a method whereby a substantially planar clothes hanger may be provided with a curve, and an increase in the front-to-back depth of the surface area running across the width of the hanger from shoulder to shoulder, while using the minimum of material.
In yet other objects of the present invention, the present designs have been conceived with the aim of providing a means of presenting easily interchangeable information on a hanger of an essentially planar kind, although it may also be applied to non-planar hangers where features have been incorporated to facilitate such an application.
In yet further objects of the present invention, the present designs have been conceived with the aim of providing a method and means whereby a planar clothes hanger may be provided with features which allow a more environmentally-friendly, but weaker material to be configured to both hold the garment in a simple and enhancing way, while simultaneously, looking attractive and being easy to load with a garment.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONIn one aspect of the present invention, various embodiments of a clothing gripper have been designed to provide a similar function to existing products made from metal or plastic, but made in a less tensile material such as paper or fibre. Some embodiments include a mechanism whereby an arm is made to close between two rows of rigid material, to compress fabric, and be locked in situ, by a retaining ‘hoop’ or lever, in such a manner as to retain whatever artefact is so held. In another embodiment, a non-mechanical version is provided consisting simply of a tube with two parallel crevices cut vertically along part of the length of the tube, on opposite sides, which may have features of various kinds cut into the opposing edges of the crevice, contours such as teeth, curves or texture etc. In embodiments, the teeth have been created with an upward-slant, to offer easy-entry, with a more resistant release.
In one embodiment, a partially rotatable arm has been cut from a substantially planar panel attached by means of an arbor formed from the top of the arm, and retained within its circumference by the material of the panel from which it has been cut, said panel and arm being set between two outer panels, such that the rotatable arm forms a jaw with the two facing outer edges of the outer panels between which is forced by means of a hoop or restraining collar which is held against the back of the gripper and when pushed downwards over a spur at the back of the gripper, locks the jaws in a closed position trapping any material placed within them.
In other embodiments, a tube has replaced the outer panels described above, where a section has been removed from along a lower part of the length of the tube to create two parallel ridges formed by the cutaway, between which a planar arm, extending downwards as part of a planar panel, roughly in the form of horizontal ‘L’, the top section of which is movable horizontally through apertures cut at the front and back of the tube just above the cutaway section, to carry the downward facing arm to close parallel to, and between the said ridges as the upper horizontal section is pushed into the apertures above the cutaway.
In one embodiment, the arm is compressed and locked between the parallel ridges of the cutaway by means of a lever-piece being inserted vertically into a right-angled aperture cut into the outer end of the sliding panel, and turned horizontal against the back outer wall of the tube to force the arm into the cutaway section of the lower tube, and locking, to trap any garment held between the jaws. A third embodiment replaces the lever with a hoop, fitted over the gripper and pushed downwards at the front over the top of the arm to force the sliding section further against the tube, thereby pushing the drop-down arm between the two ridges of the cutaway.
In another embodiment, the gripper consists of a tube where parallel crevices have been cut on opposite sides of the tube from one end, partway along the length, and which may have on either edge of each of the said crevices, features such as teeth, curves, contours or texture cut into them to increase resistance as fabric or a garment is forced into the open end of the crevices to be gripped by the edges of said crevices by the natural spring-resistance inherent in the structure of the tube. The tubes may be deployed on a bar in a similar manner to any other gripper.
In another aspect of the present invention, a substantially planar clothes hanger has been designed, consisting of two or more identical or similar planar layers, which may either be joined surface to surface, or be separated by one, or by a series of intervening panels, said panels being formed from out of the body of one or more of the profiles, formed on the edge of the profile, or attached as separate elements, to be set between two or more of the hanger profiles as pedestals conjoining facing surfaces of two or more aligned hanger profiles, to form a clothes hanger with increased depth from front to back of the hanger. A further aspect of this method of construction, allows such a hanger to acquire a curve across the width of the hanger, i.e., bringing the shoulder-ends slightly forward of the center, by supporting the outer ends of the shoulders at a higher level from the surface upon which the hanger is laid flat, creating a void below the central section of the hanger, into which the central section of the hanger is depressed by the application of pressure during the setting of the adhesive joining the layers, or prior to any other method of fixing the profiles to each other, providing the finished hanger with a permanent curve.
In another aspect of the present invention, a method is provided whereby a substantially planar clothes hanger may be provided with a curve to bring the outer ends of the hanger, slightly forward of the centre, mimicking the posture of the human shoulders, in order to provide a closer resemblance to the way a garment might look when worn, and to increase the depth, from the back to the front, of the top surface of the hanger.
In another aspect, use is made of a characteristic inherent in most fibrous or nature-based materials, for example, wood, paper, fiber of any kind, and cardboard. When a piece of such material is wetted, the first reaction is that it will bend away from the wet surface. However, after a short time as the material dries, it bends back in the opposite direction, sometimes further than prior to when it received the wetting, creating a significant curve. In the present embodiment, when a water-based bonding material is used to join a relatively thick profile to another of substantially less thickness, the first reaction of the profiles is to bend away from the surface upon which he thinner layer has been attached, as the heavier profile will curve with more energy than the thin profile, carrying the thin profile with it. Later, however, as the two profiles dry out, they bend backwards in the direction of the thinner profile, and slightly further than the substantially flat format they have prior to wetting. As the bonding material hardens, the two profiles lock each other within the curve, and the curve therefore remains permanent.
In yet another aspect of the present invention, a method is provided whereby a substantially planar clothes hanger is designed to include a curve by the method of conjoining two similarly-shaped profiles either by gluing, or by any other method, and prior to or during that process confining the two profiles within a forming apparatus which may simply consist of resting the outer ends of the hanger profile on a higher plane than the center and placing a weight at the central panel to depress said panel to a lower level than the outer ends of the profiles while either the glue hardens, or while the panels may be pinned or stapled in that position. Such a method creates a hanger with a substantially permanent curve.
In yet another aspect of the present invention, a clothes hanger, in this case, of a substantially planar format, has been provided on the central section of the hanger, with a strut formed between two parallel channels, or slots, which in the present embodiment have been cut vertically to extend downwards from either side of the of the top edge of the hanger, on either side of the point at which the hook is attached, and stopping just below the point where the base of the hook-shank is attached to the hanger. Over this strut may be placed a sleeve, formed from any suitable flexible material, configured in a loop format which may be of any circular or polygonal section, but which in the present embodiment has been made in a rectangular section, exposing surfaces front and back and to the sides, to slide over the said strut, and to carry information of any kind, in the form of text, graphics, symbols or the like, and additionally to cover the join between the hanger and the hook. The sleeve may either, be extended downwards or upwards, front and back, to cover the central area of the hanger, to provide more space for any further information, imagery or graphics, or used as a ‘collar’ to hold different types of ‘drop-over’ or additional panels to the hanger, covering front, back or both central surfaces. Additionally, another small rectangular module, which may be created in a similar manner to the sleeve, has been drilled with two small holes allowing it to slide down the hook and locate at its base on top of the central section of the hanger.
In a yet further aspect of the present invention, a hanger is provided comprising a suspending hook attached to one or more panels, has been designed for the purpose of holding garments, e.g., underwear, in a way which displays the form of the garment across a front panel, and held in tension from behind said panel by any one of a series of spikes or piers extending either from the front panel or from an additional panel mounted behind said front panel, which, being attached either centrally, or at one end, or along one edge, allows the spikes to be lifted a short distance from the back of the front panel, so as to facilitate attaching the garment around any one of the spikes according to the size of the garment.
According to the various aspects and embodiments described herein, the materials used are paper based (e.g. derived from wood pulp in a papermaking process and including cellulose fibres).
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
First Embodiments
Second Embodiments
(
Third Embodiments
Fourth Embodiments
Fifth Embodiments
The third gripper 3 is substantially the same except for the way the apparatus 3 is compressed and locked. In this gripper, a hoop 3C has replaced the lever 2C in the previous version, and works by being placed around the tube 3B and located at the back of the tube 3B by being inserted within the channel C-C cut into the horizontal section 34 as the section 34 of the panel 3A is being pushed through the apertures 24, 25 of the tube 3B above the ridges X9, X10 of the cutaway section of the lower part of the tube 3B. Pushing downwards on the hoop 3C locks the jaws 30, X9, X10 trapping any garment placed within them. The apparatus has been equipped with slots 26, 27 to attach to a standard hanger 11.
In the fourth gripper 35 (
According to the present invention therefore,
(
According to the present invention therefore,
Finally, a small rectangular ‘box’ 10, made in a similar way to the sleeve 3 (
In
Claims
1. A clothes hanger comprising:
- a first planar hanger profile piece including first and second hanger arms extending oppositely from a central portion and including respective pedestal portions folded upon the first and second hanger arms and the central portion;
- a second planar hanger profile piece including first and second hanger arms extending oppositely from a central portion;
- the first and second planar hanger profile pieces being attached to one another with the planar pedestal portions disposed therebetween, the planar pedestal portions serving to space the first and second planar hanger profile pieces from one another.
2. The clothes hanger of claim 1, the first planar hanger profile piece including end pedestal portions at each end of the first and second hanger arms, a central pedestal portion at the central portion of the first planar hanger profile piece.
3. The clothes hanger of claim 2, comprising a hanger bar hooked on the end pedestal portions.
4. The clothes hanger of claim 1, comprising a hook piece attached to at least one of first and second planar hanger profiles at the central portion thereof.
5. The clothes hanger of claim 1, wherein the clothes hanger is bent to follow a convex shape when viewed from one planar face of the clothes hanger whereby the central portions of the first and second planar hanger profiles pieces bulge forward and the ends of the first and second hangers arms of the first and second planar hanger profile pieces recede backward.
6. The clothes hanger of claim 5, wherein the convex shape is formed by applying a pressure differential between the central portions and the ends of the first and second hanger arms of the first and second planar hanger profile pieces, which causes a lasting convex profile.
7-11. (canceled)
12. A clothes hanger, comprising:
- at least two planar hanger profiles disposed in face to face relation and attached to one another, each hanger profile comprising first and second hanger arms extending oppositely from a central portion;
- wherein each of the first and second arms of one of planar hanger profiles includes a row of spaced teeth that are free to pinch a garment against another one of the planar hanger profiles facing the row of teeth.
13. The clothes hanger of claim 12, comprising first, second and third planar hanger profiles disposed in face to face relation and attached to one another.
14. The clothes hanger of claim 12, wherein the at least two planar hanger profiles are made from one piece of planar material and folded on each other.
15. The clothes hanger of claim 12, wherein one of the at least two planar hanger profiles includes a hanger hook.
16. The clothes hanger of claim 12, wherein the first and second arms of the one of planar hanger profiles are attached to the first and second arms of the another one of the planar hanger profiles along and above the rows of teeth so that the rows of teeth are free to separate from the facing another one of the planar hanger profiles.
17. The clothes hanger of claim 12, wherein the central portion of the one of planar hanger profiles is attached to the central portion of the another one of the planar hanger profiles and the first and second arms including rows of teeth are free to separate from the facing another one of the planar hanger profiles.
18. The clothes hanger of claim 12, wherein each of the first and second arms of at least one of the at least two planar hanger profiles includes an indent at an end edge distal from the central portion.
19-28. (canceled)
29. A clothes hanger, comprising:
- a hanger profile comprising first and second arms extending oppositely away from a central section, wherein first and second channels extend downwardly from an upper edge of the central section; and
- a display collar comprising front and back regions including display information and side regions respectively located in the first and second channels.
30. The clothes hanger of claim 29, wherein the display collar is formed by folding a planar piece of material.
31. (canceled)
32. The clothes hanger of claim 29, wherein the clothes hanger comprises a separate hook that is attached to the central section between the first and second channels or wherein the clothes hanger comprises an integral hook integrated with the central section and extending thereform.
33. The clothes hanger of claim 32, wherein the separate hook comprises a hook collar at a lower end for attaching the separate hook to the central section and the display collar is disposed over the hook collar.
34. The clothes hanger of claim 29, wherein the display collar includes at least one of front and back flaps extending downward from the front and back regions of the display collar and integrated therewith.
35. The clothes hanger of claim 29, comprising an extended display piece including at least one of extended front and back display panels and a top panel, the extended display piece disposed over the central section such that the top panel is seated on the upper edge of the central section, wherein the extended display piece is at least partly held in place by the display collar being positioned over the extended display piece.
36. The clothes hanger of claim 29, comprising a display box formed by folding a planar piece of material, the display box including opposed holes that allow the display box to be threaded over a hook of the clothes hanger extending upwardly from the central section.
Type: Application
Filed: Jul 15, 2019
Publication Date: Sep 2, 2021
Applicant: Initiate GRP Ltd (London)
Inventor: Norman Fraser Mackenzie (London)
Application Number: 17/260,207