Shirt manufactured with placket stays, placket stays, and kit to retrofit shirt with placket stays
Shirt manufactured with planar or non-planar plastic placket stays to reduce or eliminate placket droop and are positioned within said shirt during the manufacturing of said shirt, and where a portion of said stays may extend beyond said plackets behind the front panel(s) of said shirt to prevent placket rollover, and a kit to retrofit shirt to the make same.
The present invention relates to shirts, and more particularly to partial button-down shirts, full button-up shirts, and full button-down shirts having a collar with collar band having at least one button and buttonhole and said shirt having two adjacent front plackets with at least two buttons and buttonholes, and even more particularly to these shirts having a placket stay incorporated in these shirts at time of manufacturing the shirt and the placket to prevent or reduce placket droop and placket rollover while shirt is worn.
BACKGROUND OF INVENTIONFor decades there has been an inherent problem with collared shirts of the type known as partial button-down pullover shirts, and full button-down shirts, or full button-up shirts all having two front plackets in that the weight of the collar and collar band weighs upon the shirt plackets and when the shirt's collar band button and the first placket button is unbuttoned the weight of the collar can collapse the placket resulting in what is commonly called or referred to as placket droop. This, in the past, has not been that severe of a problem because the shirts, particularly dress shirts for men, have been made out of sturdy heavyweight cotton fabric that resists placket droop. To help prevent placket droop the user or dry cleaner has sprayed the placket area with considerable starch on the cotton fabric to stiffen the plackets.
In recent years the trend in shirt manufacturing has been away from heavyweight cotton material or fabric to new lightweight knit and woven polyester fabrics which significantly increases this problem of placket droop, when at least the first placket button is unbuttoned which gives the appearance to others that the wearer is unkempt.
The Covid-19 pandemic has greatly impacted the business world including that in particular of those men employed in the ‘white-collar business world’. While in the past most men in the business office environment have worn a shirt and tie, with their collar band buttoned and hidden behind a suit tie, where they have not had to deal with the placket droop in that event. Now many office employees during this pandemic period have found themselves working from home, or working in a less formal office environment, where they are no longer wearing their suit jacket and tie, but are still wearing their full-button up shirt, or full button-down shirt, and now are having to experience this problem of placket droop when the collar band button and the first placket button is unbuttoned. Usually, the only time anyone buttons the collar band button is when the wearer wears a necktie. To have the top button buttoned without a necktie makes others think the wearer to be different, eccentric, or unusual in today's norm. If the wearer has the first and second placket button unbuttoned the placket droop is considerable and others think the wearer to be overtly macho or unkempt. If the wearer has the first placket buttoned, to prevent placket droop, others thinks wearer lives with his mother as revealed by this famous quote from the popular TV sitcom ‘Seinfeld’, where Jerry states in the opening dialogue of season one: “Seems to me, that button is in the worst possible spot. [talking about George's shirt] The second button literally makes or breaks the shirt, look at it: it's too high! It's in no-man's-land, you look like you live with your mother” This reference to the second button includes the collar band button, which in present application is, technically, the first placket button. This famous quote has to do with one thing and that is “placket droop”. Most men would not button the first button placket button, because it is too high, if they did not have to contend with the problem of “placket droop”.
Now more than ever before, due to the very lightweight polyester shirts, there is a need to solve this problem and as a result the present invention is needed and timely.
While there has been numerous patents grants over the last several decades regarding ‘shirts made with collar stays’ or ‘collar stays’, there has been fewer patents granted regarding ‘garments or shirts with placket stays’ or ‘placket stays or stiffeners’, but none granted for a shirt manufactured with a placket stay. The present invention offers a solution to manufactured shirts with placket stays as well as a kit for the consumer or user to quickly and easily modify or retrofit their existing shirt without placket stays to shirts with placket stays.
There has existed in the past a similar problem with shirt collar flap droop and this has been addressed and resolved in the past by the shirt manufactures adding a slot or cut in the fabric underneath the collar flap to accept a planar stay which has been inserted into a slotted collar stay area. Initially the shirt manufactures designed said slotted stay area so that the stay could be removed prior to the shirt being laundered or dry cleaning for fear of damaging the stay. In recent years the technology in making plastic collar stays has improved to where today they are molded of durable plastic that will not bend, damage, or take shape different from its molded shape during laundering, or dry cleaning, or use, of these shirts. However, to date there does not appear to be any shirt manufacturer making shirts, or having made shirts, with placket stays. All patents in this area are concerned with or directed to modifying an existing shirt to have placket stay or stiffener.
As a result, the applicant/inventor believes there is a substantial need, for the present invention, for a manufactured shirt that includes placket stays to address and reduce or eliminate the problem of placket droop. Furthermore, there is a need to manufacture shirts with placket stays made of plastic that are planar or non-planar that maintain its molded shaped when positioned in the placket and is not be subject to being ‘user-shapeable’ by the user. Further there is a need for a manufactured shirt with placket stays that are interchangeable where the consumer or user can determine what shape, contour, or length of stay he wishes to have in his plackets which will allow the wearer or user to determine how he wants his placket to look, or be contoured, and how much placket droop, if any, he wishes to permit below said collar band. This can be accomplished by the manufacturer of the shirt including a placket stay opening in the back layer of the placket, at the time the shirt is manufactured.
The present patent application addresses the need for a kit, containing the necessary tools and components, so that the user can quickly and easily retrofit or modify their existing shirts to have placket stays which will solve this inherent problem of placket droop. It is the intention of the present application that said kit includes everything necessary for the user to retrofit or modify said existing shirts to have placket stays, with the exception of a household iron or press heat. This problem of shirt placket droop relates mostly to males rather than females as males tend to where shirts with plackets. Few men are equipped at home to deal with tailoring or retrofitting their shirts, but most have a household iron.
Most patents issued or patent applications published, regarding this subject matter, direct our attention to a stay or stiffener for a garment or shirt, and fewer for a garment or shirt being altered after manufacturing to have a stay or stiffener, but no one has invented, to the inventor's/applicant's knowledge, a shirt manufactured with a placket stay or a kit to provide the user with want he needs to retrofit a shirt with a placket stays.
Again, there exist in the marketplace a substantial need for a manufactured collared partial button-down shirt or a collared full button-down shirt with placket stays of the type described in the present application. But, even more importantly there are billions of existing shirts in home closets that need to be modified or retrofitted to include placket stays of the type described in the present application. This great need has not been addressed by anyone or any company thus far, as far as the applicant can find, and the only way to resolve this problem is, through the present invention, by offering the consumer or user a kit that includes all necessary items and tools, with the exception of a hold house iron, to retrofit their existing shirts.
The applicant would, now, like to draw attention to four patents in particular that are relative, but substantially different, to the present invention.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,001,619 granted to Baehring on Aug. 23, 2011 discloses: A shirt stiffening device made of clear layer that has a self-adhesive layer capable of being non-permanently attached to a shirt fabric, which is outside the placket. This invention differs substantially from the present invention for obvious reasons.
Another patent, that being, U.S. Pat. No. 9,204,671 by Kessler, III published Dec. 8, 2015 cites: “A stiffener member is contained within each passage, and extends into the upper neck area of the front panel and downwardly therefrom within the closed passage so as not to be removable from within the passage.” This patent specifically claims: “a stiffener member contained within each front passage, wherein each stiffener member includes a lower portion disposed within one of the front passages and an upper portion that extends upwardly from the upper end of the front panel edge area and that is positioned within the collar passage, wherein the stitches extend through the stiffener member, and wherein the stiffener member is fixed in position by the stitches and is not removable from the passage, and wherein the stiffener members are configured and arranged so as to maintain the front panels apart from each other in front of the neck of the user.” Meaning that the stiffener or stay is positioned in the both the collar or collar band and the placket and it is stitched into place across where the collar band meets the placket. This, the present applicant believes, is not desirable for the user as the planar placket stay that goes into the collar band and the placket where it is stitched into place makes the collar band and placket have a planar shape together, when it most desirable to have the collar band to be at an angle of approximately 20 to 45 degrees relative to that of the placket so that the top of the collar band does not rub against the users neck, but is at an angle similar to the angle between the normal angularity of most shirts with a collar band and neck of the wearer. The present applicant believes that the patent should be titled: COLLAR AND PLACKET STIFFENER, rather than “PLACKET STIFFENER” because that is what it is and that is what it does. The current invention and application is about a shirt with placket stay. The Kessler patent further states: “It is also contemplated that the stiffeners may be applied to the shirt 20 in a retrofit manner. In an arrangement such as this, a stiffener 36 is positioned between a retrofit panel and the inside of each placket. Representatively, the stiffener has a width that does not interfere with the buttonholes. The retrofit panel is then secured to the back of the placket so as to secure the stiffener in position within a peripherally closed space the corresponds to and is slightly larger than the peripheral configuration of the stiffener. The stiffener preferably is positioned so as to extend up to and behind the collar, as explained previously. The retrofit panel may be secured to the inside surface of the shirt behind the placket in any satisfactory manner, such as by adhesive, stitching, etc.”. Herein, it is clear that this patent calls for, in the case of retrofitting a shirt to accept their placket stiffener that the “stiffener 36 is positioned between a retrofit panel and the inside of each placket” and “the retrofit panel is then secured to the back of the placket”. The Kessler invention differs significantly from the present invention.
The applicant would like to draw attention to the published patent application no. 20140173809 by Partsch, IV filed Dec. 23, 2013, which relates to application No. 61/848,170, filed Dec. 26, 2012 and which relates to U.S. Pat. No. 9,622,512 issued Apr. 18, 2017 as filed Dec. 23, 2014 and was granted was to Partsch, IV and titled: “Fashion and functional garments stays”, where the patent has numerous changes from the filed published patent application including within the claims. The patent title refers to “garment stays”, however, Claims 1 through 11 specifically refers to a “garment” not “garment stays”, while Claims 12-19 refer to “placket stay”. Independent Claim 12 of the patent identifies the type of stay invented by stating: “stay comprises: a main body; a first appendage coupled to the main body; a second appendage coupled to the main body, and wherein the second appendage is longer than the main body; a cut-out channel disposed between the first and the second appendages.” The present application has no similar stay to that which is described herein in claims 12-19. While Partsch, IV patent and patent application differs considerably, the drawings in both are the same. Many drawings refer to external stays (FIGS. 15, & 16 and stays for the collar (FIGS. 17, 19, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29) and collar magnets (FIG. 26), none of which are cited in any claims of this patent. In the many drawings of this Partsch, IV patent it shows collared shirt and collarless shirts where the plackets end at the neck hole. There is no reference to a collar band within this patent and Claim 1 and independent Claim 12 specifically states in this patent: “wherein the left and right placket regions each has a top terminal end terminating at a neck hole of the garment”. Figures in FIGS. 6, 7, 9, 11, 12, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 20) show shirts with placket “terminating at the hole of the garment”. In the present invention and application it states under Claim 1: “having a total of two adjacent front plackets, wherein said plackets have a top terminal end terminating at said collar band”. Claim 1 of the Partsch, IV patent further states: “wherein the at least one stay is entirely planar and has an upper distal end which is disposed at the top terminal end of the left or right placket regions” where Claim 1 defines that as: “wherein the left and right placket regions each has a top terminal end terminating at a neck hole of the garment”. Wherein the present patent application states under Claim 1: “(g) said plackets, during time of manufacturing said shirt and said plackets, receiving at least one stay (1) between said front layer and back layer and or elongated passageway, that is or will become a placket, and (2) below the top terminal end of the placket, but where the top of said stay is not more than 2½ inches below the collar band and where the bottom of said stay is less than 15 inches below the collar band,”. Partsch, IV patent further states under Claim 1: “wherein the at least one stay is entirely planar and has an upper distal end which is disposed at the top terminal end of the left or right placket regions”. In Claim 1 of U.S. Pat. No. 9,622,512 it states, in part: “A garment with a user-shapeable contour of material, wherein at least one stay is attached internally for purposes of providing a user-desirable shape to said garment”. It is important to note that in the present invention the top of said stay may be as much as 2½ inches below said collar band because the user or wearer may desire the look and feel of a shirt with a lower stay as to not have the collar or collar band rub against his neck as in the present invention said stay is molded of plastic that is not “user-shapeable” as opposed to the Partsch, IV patent that is made “with a user-shapeable contour of material” wherein the stay “terminating at a neck hole of the garment” can be substantially bent away from the wearer's neck, as the Partsch, IV patent states: “For pliable, bendable stays of the contemplated embodiments, these types of stays can be shaped by a user simply by hand when the stay is inside of the garment”. As stated there appears to be numerous changes between the patent application, filed on Dec. 26, 2013 and the Apr. 18, 2017 issued patent. Under the DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION section the applicant covers numerous reasons why the inventor has chosen a “bendable” stay, where it specifically states: “The type of stay used here is contemplated to be 4″-12″ in length, flat, but bendable enough to provide a user-shapeable contour with the garment . . . The purpose of this stay is to reduce the crease in the outer, vertical front surface of the lapel caused by its wearer if he or she is barrel-chested.” In claim 1 it states: “A garment with user-shapeable contour of material” and under FIG. 1 it covers as to why the inventor has chosen a “bendable” stay, wherein the present invention and application specifically cites within claim 1: (A) injection-molding to produce a plastic non-planar shaped stay having a thickness between 0.030 inch and 0.175 inch, or (B) sheet-extrusion molding to produce a plastic planar shaped stay, having a thickness of between 0.008 inch and 0.050″ inch which is then die-cut, or laser-cut, or water-jet cut to size; and where said either molded stay is made of plastic molded material that maintains its molded shape, and is not ‘user-shapeable’, but which maintains its molded non-planar or planar shape, configuration, or contour. In the present application it is important that user being given the opportunity to purchase a manufactured shirt with a placket stay that is not “user-shapeable”, but has the opportunity to exchange the shirt's placket stays of different lengths so they can decide what degree of placket droop they prefer. When the plackets are made by the manufacturer and include placket stays and then the plackets are stitched closed on all sides, the only way to remove or exchange stays is by the shirt manufacturer including a stay-slot, preferably on the back placket panel to allow the user to exchange stays of various length shape and contour. This stay-slot would not be required if the stays in the present application were made to be “user-shapeable”. Because the stays referenced in the present application are not “user-shapeable” a stay-slot is desirable to allow the user to determine the type of stay best suited for control of placket droop. The Partsch, IV patent goes on to state in Claim 1: “wherein at least one of said left or right placket region has an opening leading to said internal compartment, and to receive said stay to pass therethrough”. In Claim 1 of the of present application it specifically states: “A shirt manufactured with placket stays” meaning that said stays are incorporated into said shirt during manufacturing of said shirt and where said stays are placed within the plackets or what may become the plackets and or said elongated passageway at time the plackets are being made which does not require “an opening leading to said internal compartment, and to receive said stay to pass therethrough” as in the Partsch, IV patent requires. If the manufacturer of said shirt chose to stitch all four perimeters of said placket closed and chose to include said stay in said shirt he would do so at time of making the shirt and the plackets, and would not require the manufacturer to make “an opening leading to said internal compartment, and to receive said stay to pass therethrough”. The Partsch, IV patents states: “Preferably, the garment is an off-the-shelf garment requiring no additional modification to receive these stays”. There are numerous stated differences between the Partsch, IV patent and the present invention and application.
Lastly, the applicant would like to draw attention to U.S. Pat. No. 10,842,200 by Colon published Nov. 24, 2020 titled: “Removable stiffener elements for an open collared shirt” and where the abstract states: “A stiffener assembly for a shirt with an open collar includes a pair of stiffener pockets, and a pair of removable stiffener inserts to be inserted into the pair of stiffener pockets to hold the open collar of the shirt in a desired shape. Each stiffener pocket includes an outer pocket panel, and an inner pocket panel aligned with the outer pocket panel. The outer and inner pocket panels each have a top, a bottom and sides extending between the top and bottom. Stitching couples together the outer and inner pocket panels along the sides and bottom thereof so as to form a passageway extending between the outer and inner pockets panel. The top of the outer and inner pocket panels are not stitched so as to form a stiffener pocket opening. The removable stiffener inserts are inserted into the passageways of the stiffener pockets through the stiffener pocket openings.” This the applicant feels is a costly solution to adding a stay to a shirt in that this method requires the modification of the shirt to include “a pair of stiffener pockets” in which to insert the stays and where the pockets have to be applied to the back of the panel or placket using adhesive or stitching when the present invention makes use of the existing plackets as what can be referred to as the “pockets” to received said stays without the additional expense of adding external pockets as called for in the Colon patent.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF INVENTIONThe present invention is directed to a shirt manufactured with placket stays to reduce or eliminate placket droop with the shirt being of the type known as collared partial button-down or collared full button-down or collared button-up shirts each having a collar band with at least one button and buttonhole, or like attachment devices, having front panel(s) with a total of two plackets each having a plastic stay below the collar band that is not ‘user-shapeable’ but which maintains its plastic molded shape and a kit to retrofit a shirt to have the same.
Various objects, features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description of preferred embodiments of the invention, along with the accompanying drawings.
There exists a tremendous demand for shirts to be manufactured with plastic placket stays, that would not only prevent or reduced placket droop, but would or could reduce or prevent placket rollover. By adding a placket stay or placket stiffener the problem of placket droop may be resolved, but that does not prevent placket rollover which occurs when the stiffened placket actually rollovers and onto the front panel of said shirt, which would be an annoyance and makes the wearer look unkempt. The invention of a stay with and extension or appendage from the main body of the elongated stay could be positioned in the placket where a portion of the stay extends beyond the inner placket edge and to behind the shirt's front panel which would reduce or eliminate placket rollover. By the shirt manufacturer offering shirts manufactured to have different placket stays of various lengths, molded shapes and contours, and the means to offer the wearer or user the opportunity to change out the placket stays the wearer or consumer would find the best choice for himself to prevent placket droop and placket rollover.
In describing the embodiment of the invention which is illustrated in the drawings, specific terminology will be resorted to for the sake of clarity. However, it is not intended that the invention be limited to the specific terms so selected and it is to be understood that each specific term includes all technical equivalents which operate in a similar manner to accomplish a similar purpose. For example, the word connected, attached, or terms similar thereto are often used. They are not limited to direct connection but include connection through other elements where such connection is recognized as being equivalent by those skilled in the art.
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For purpose of clarity, when the word placket is used, herein, it is meant to mean the portion of the front of the shirt that is connected to or part of at least one front panel of the shirt, wherein the placket has at least two layers, at least a front layer and a back layer, where at least two buttons or buttonholes, or like attachment devices, are affixed to at least the front layer and the back layer of the placket.
Claims
1. A shirt manufactured with placket stays to prevent or reduce placket droop comprising: (a) a back panel, with or without a yoke, and (b) two sleeve panels, and (c) a collar having a collar band with at least one affixed button and buttonhole, or like closure devices, and (d) one or two front panel(s) having a total of two adjacent front plackets, wherein said plackets have a top terminal end terminating at the bottom of the collar band, and (e) said plackets having at least a front layer and a back layer where between exists at least one elongated passageway within said plackets, each having at least an outer edge and an inner edge within said placket and (f) said plackets having at least two buttons and buttonholes, or like closure devices, affixed to at least a front layer and back layer of said plackets wherein a passageway is created between the affixed buttons or buttonholes and at least said outer edge of said placket, and (g) said plackets, during time of manufacturing said shirt and said plackets, receive at least one stay in each placket: (1) between said front layer and back layer and or elongated passageway, that is or will become a placket, and (2) below the top terminal end of the placket, but where the top of said stay is not more than 2½ inches below the collar band and where the bottom of said stay is less than 15 inches below the collar band, and where at least a portion of said stay is positioned within the placket between the first placket button or buttonhole, or like attachment devices, and or the second placket button or buttonhole, or like attachment devices, and where said stay is further contained by (3)(a) stitching, heat-sealing using thermoplastic adhesive, or ultrasonically welding said stay directly to said front layer and or said back layer and or at least one elongated passageway, and or (b) by stitching, and or heat-gluing, and or ultrasonically welding, said front layer and said back layer together and or said at least one passageway together within said placket to form a stay-stop, outside of said stay, to prevent said stay from moving lower or beyond said stay stop, and or (c) by said stay, or a portion thereof, catching the first and or the second placket button or buttonhole to prevent said stay, or a portion thereof, from moving past or lower within said placket, and or (d) by the stay being designed such that a portion of said stay traps said stay between the second and third button or buttonhole to contain its movement of said stay; and where said placket stay is made using: (A) injection-molding to produce a plastic non-planar shaped stay having a thickness between 0.030 inch and 0.175 inch, or (B) sheet-extrusion molding to produce a plastic planar shaped stay, having a thickness of between 0.008 inch and 0.050 inch which is then die-cut, or laser-cut, or water-jet cut to size; and where either said stay is made of plastic molded material that maintains its molded shape, and where said stay is not ‘user-shapeable’, and where said stays maintain their molded non-planar or planar shape, configuration, or contour.
2. A shirt manufactured with placket stays of claim 1, wherein the shirt is a pull-over partial button-down shirt, or a full button-down shirt, or a full button-up shirt having a collar and collar band with at least one button and buttonhole, and two front plackets with at least two buttons and buttonholes, or like attachment devices.
3. A shirt manufactured with placket stay of claim 1, wherein said “like closure devices” consists of any of the following devices: male buttons snaps and female button snaps, or hook and loop devices.
4. A shirt manufactured with placket stays of claim 1, wherein the length of said stays are between 3 inches and 15 inches in length.
5. A shirt manufactured with placket stays of claim 1, wherein said stays have a thermoplastic heat-activated adhesive on at least a portion of at least one side where said stay is bonded to the inside of said placket, between the front layer and back layer, and or elongated passageway using a heat and pressure at time of manufacturing said shirt.
6. A shirt manufactured with placket stays of claim 1, wherein the stay has at least one hole in at least one stay which is used to stitch the said stay to or within said placket.
7. A shirt manufactured with placket stays of claim 1, wherein said stitching, or heat-gluing, or ultrasonically welding at least a portion of said front and back layers and or the elongated passageway of said placket together to form a stay-stop, below or around said stay, so as to prevent said stay from moving beyond said stay stop, where at least a portion of said stay-stop is located on, or within, at least one placket between 4 inches and 15½ inches below said collar band.
8. A shirt manufactured with placket stays of claim 1, wherein said shirt is manufactured of manmade fabric consisting of at least 80 percent polyester, and which permits heat-gluing and or ultrasonic welding of said front layer and or back layer, and or elongated passageway, and or said stay, together.
9. A shirt manufactured with placket stays of claim 1, wherein said stay is contained between said front layer and said back layer of said placket and which is further contained in position by a least one button or one buttonhole, or like attachment devices that is affixed to at least said front layer and said back layer of said placket.
10. A shirt manufactured with placket stays of claim 1, wherein said stays have at least a portion of said stays that extends beyond the inner placket edge to end behind said front panel by at least ⅛ inch, but not more than 2½ inches beyond said inner placket edge, between the first and second placket button or buttonhole affixed to at least said front layer and said back layer of said placket, to prevent or reduce placket rollover.
11. A shirt manufactured with placket stays of claim 1, wherein said plackets each have a placket slot opening between 1/16 inch and 2 inches below the collar band and said placket slot opening is between 3/16 inch and 1 inch in width on said back layer of said placket where said stay can be removed and or replaced from said placket.
12. A placket stay to prevent or reduce shirt placket droop, comprising: an injection-molded non-planar plastic placket stay having an elongated main body having a length of between 4 inches and 15 inches, and a thickness of between 0.050 inch and 0.175 inch, and a minimum width not including its non-planar curvature of 0.080 inch, or a sheet-molded planar plastic placket stay die-cut, or water-jet cut, or laser-cut to size having an elongated main body having a length between 4 inches and 15 inches and a thickness of between 0.008 inch and 0.050 inch and a minimum width of 0.185, either being made of plastic material which when molded will retain its molded shape where said placket stay is not ‘user-shapeable’, where both the injection molded non-planar plastic placket stay and the sheet-molded planar cut plastic placket stay has one or more appendage integral with the main elongated body that are shorter than the elongated main body and where said one or more appendage is designed to abut at least one button or buttonholes, or their attachment to the inner and or outer layer of the placket, where appendage acts as a stay-stop to restrict or stop movement of said stay in said placket.
13. A shirt placket stay of claim 12, wherein two appendages integral to the main elongated body of stay are each designed to abut at least one buttons or buttonholes, or the attachment to the inner and or outer layer of the placket, where appendages each act as a stay-stop to restrict or stop movement of said stay within said placket.
14. Shirt placket stay of claim 12, wherein said one or more appendage integral with the main elongated body of the stay is designed to extend beyond inner placket edge to end behind the front panel of the shirt where the appendage extends beyond the placket edge by at least ⅛ inch but not more than 2½ inches behind said front panel to prevent or reduce the chance of placket rollover.
15. A kit to retrofit shirt with placket stays having the necessary components to retrofit an existing collared partial or full button-down shirt with one or two front panels with a total of two front plackets without placket stays to a shirt having placket stays to prevent or reduce placket droop, comprising: (a) at least one thread cutter, or scissors, or fabric cutting snips for the user to cut opening(s) in the plackets to allow insertion and placement of said stays within cut fabric openings, and (b) at least two planar or non-planar placket plastic stays, having a length between 3 inches and 15 inches to address placket droop, where said stays are inserted into said cut fabric openings within said plackets by the user, and (c) at least two heat-activated adhesive patches for the user to place over said cut fabric openings on said plackets, after user inserts said stays within said cut fabric openings of said plackets, for the purpose (1) to prevent the cut fabric threads from unraveling, and (2) to conceal said cut fabric opening from view of others while the shirt is worn; where the user using a household iron or heat press can permanently apply said heat-activated adhesive patches to cover said cut fabric openings, and (d) kit packaging and printed instructions on or within said kit packaging.
16. A kit of claim 15, wherein said kit also includes a needle and thread that is black, white and or at least one color for the user to at least stitch the stay in position or to stitch a stay-stop to prevent said stay from moving past said stay-stop within said placket.
17. A kit of claim 15, wherein said kit also includes at least two heat-activated adhesive patches to be placed over said cut fabric opening and that are made with a slot-opening in the patches to allow said stay to be inserted and removed from within said placket through said slot-opening.
18. A kit of claim 15, which also includes at least two placket stays that have heat activated adhesive on at least a portion of at least one side of each stay where the user can heat-bond the stay within said plackets using a household iron or heat press.
19. A kit of claim 15, wherein heat-activated adhesive strips or pieces are included for the user to apply to the surface of said stays to heat-bond stays within said plackets using a household iron.
20. A kit of claim 15, wherein at least two stays each has at least one hole going through said stay for user to sew or stitch said stays to said plackets.
21. A kit of claim 15, wherein at least two additional plastic molded stays of various length, or contour, or shape, or configuration are included in said kit.
22. A kit of claim 15, wherein said stay and or patches includes: a name, or trademark, or logo, or graphic design on the stays and or said heat-active adhesive patches.
23. A kit of claim 15, wherein said kit contains at least two plastic placket stays where a portion or appendages of said stays are designed to be positioned between: (1) the first and second button or buttonhole on said placket to prevent the placket stays from moving up or down within the placket by more than one inch, or (2) the second and third button or buttonhole on said placket to prevent the placket stays from moving up or down within the plackets by more than one inch.
24. A kit of claim 15, wherein said kit contains at least two plastic placket stays where a portion or appendages extend off the main body of said placket stays and are designed to extend beyond the inner placket edge, between the first placket button or buttonhole and the third button or buttonhole on the placket, where the extended portion or appendages end behind the front shirt panel for the purpose of reducing or eliminating the chance of placket rollover.
25. A kit of claim 15, wherein said kit includes at least two plastic collar stays and at least two heat-activated adhesive patches to cover collar stay openings.
26. A kit of claim of 15, wherein said kit packaging and or said instructions includes a QR Code which directs the user to an internet connection that includes display or instructional video concerning said kit, or the use, or installation of the kit components.
Type: Application
Filed: Jul 6, 2021
Publication Date: Jan 12, 2023
Inventor: Gregory John Wenkman (Naples, FL)
Application Number: 17/367,732