EP3945950A1 - Planche à bijoux - Google Patents

Planche à bijoux

Info

Publication number
EP3945950A1
EP3945950A1 EP20711114.7A EP20711114A EP3945950A1 EP 3945950 A1 EP3945950 A1 EP 3945950A1 EP 20711114 A EP20711114 A EP 20711114A EP 3945950 A1 EP3945950 A1 EP 3945950A1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
plate
jewelry
holding means
plate according
recesses
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
EP20711114.7A
Other languages
German (de)
English (en)
Other versions
EP3945950C0 (fr
EP3945950B1 (fr
Inventor
Michael Ulbricht
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Publication of EP3945950A1 publication Critical patent/EP3945950A1/fr
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of EP3945950C0 publication Critical patent/EP3945950C0/fr
Publication of EP3945950B1 publication Critical patent/EP3945950B1/fr
Active legal-status Critical Current
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical

Links

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47GHOUSEHOLD OR TABLE EQUIPMENT
    • A47G29/00Supports, holders, or containers for household use, not provided for in groups A47G1/00-A47G27/00 or A47G33/00 
    • A47G29/08Holders for articles of personal use in general, e.g. brushes
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47FSPECIAL FURNITURE, FITTINGS, OR ACCESSORIES FOR SHOPS, STOREHOUSES, BARS, RESTAURANTS OR THE LIKE; PAYING COUNTERS
    • A47F5/00Show stands, hangers, or shelves characterised by their constructional features
    • A47F5/08Show stands, hangers, or shelves characterised by their constructional features secured to the wall, ceiling, or the like; Wall-bracket display devices
    • A47F5/0807Display panels, grids or rods used for suspending merchandise or cards supporting articles; Movable brackets therefor
    • A47F5/0815Panel constructions with apertures for article supports, e.g. hooks
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A45HAND OR TRAVELLING ARTICLES
    • A45CPURSES; LUGGAGE; HAND CARRIED BAGS
    • A45C11/00Receptacles for purposes not provided for in groups A45C1/00-A45C9/00
    • A45C11/16Jewel boxes
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47FSPECIAL FURNITURE, FITTINGS, OR ACCESSORIES FOR SHOPS, STOREHOUSES, BARS, RESTAURANTS OR THE LIKE; PAYING COUNTERS
    • A47F5/00Show stands, hangers, or shelves characterised by their constructional features
    • A47F5/08Show stands, hangers, or shelves characterised by their constructional features secured to the wall, ceiling, or the like; Wall-bracket display devices
    • A47F5/0884Show stands with clips or slits to attach articles
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47FSPECIAL FURNITURE, FITTINGS, OR ACCESSORIES FOR SHOPS, STOREHOUSES, BARS, RESTAURANTS OR THE LIKE; PAYING COUNTERS
    • A47F7/00Show stands, hangers, or shelves, adapted for particular articles or materials
    • A47F7/02Show stands, hangers, or shelves, adapted for particular articles or materials for jewellery, dentures, watches, eye-glasses, lenses, or the like

Definitions

  • the invention relates to a device for the clear storage of jewelry or a plate which is designed as a jewelry board for arranging and storing pieces of jewelry such as bracelets and necklaces, ribbons, rings and the like.
  • DE 20 201 1 005 126 U1 relates to a surface element consisting of a receiving device for objects of daily use, in particular for differently designed (jewelry) objects, comprising undercut or hook elements for these objects, including all undercut and Hook elements is formed from a single surface element, in which various material recesses are introduced.
  • the surface element makes a very technical impression and is therefore not necessarily an appealing sight, whether used or not. In addition, it is not very flexible, because certain Aufnah measuring devices are only suitable for certain jewelry.
  • the invention provides that the jewelry board is designed as a plate and on a vertical wall, preferably the Inside of a cabinet door, is attached and that on the exposed side of the plate at least one horizontal row of hooks for hanging chains and similar pieces of jewelry and at least one horizontally arranged, open-top receptacle are attached, with at least two adjacent foam blocks introduced into the receptacle are, between which rings, earrings and similar pieces of jewelry can be inserted.
  • the production of the jewelry board proves to be relatively complex and therefore relatively expensive.
  • the object of the invention is therefore to provide a convenient device for clear storage of jewelry that offers an aesthetically sophisticated design and the production is inexpensive.
  • This object is achieved with a plate of the type mentioned in that it is provided with a number of the plate penetrating recesses with holding means arranged therein for releasable attachment of the respective pieces of jewelry to the plate, wherein in the lower area of each recess an upward in the recess is designed as a holding means in front of the peg-like projection, and the plate has a rear spacer for maintaining a free space on a rear side of the plate, at least in the region of the recesses.
  • the plate designed as a jewelry board or its extension plane can be positioned largely vertically for its intended use, for example, hang on a wall or set up largely upright, so that the jewelry on the plate can be arranged next to and one above the other.
  • the largely vertical direction from the plate plane gives the pieces of jewelry, in particular chains, ribbons and the like, under the action of gravity without any action on the part of the user, a matching alignment.
  • Exactly one holding means can be assigned to each recess.
  • a large number of recesses then enables an equal or approximately similar number of pieces of jewelry to be added to the plate. This allows the number of recesses to determine the capacity of the plate as a storage device for jewelry.
  • a recess can offer several holding means.
  • a 1: 1 assignment of holding means and recesses is therefore not mandatory, so that it is not the number of recesses but rather the number of holding means that can define the capacity of the plate.
  • a high recording capacity can then also be achieved with one, two or a few cutouts or a plurality of cutouts.
  • a recess contains a plurality of holding means
  • the recess is regularly formed in a transverse format or in the plane of the plate with a greater extent in the transverse direction than in the height direction and takes the plurality of holding means usually next to one another.
  • an assignment of exactly one holding means to exactly one recess is assumed, even if other assignments are not intended to be excluded.
  • the design of the recesses as openings in the plate enables the user not only to use the front side, but also - albeit to a lesser extent - the hidden rear side of the plate for storage. Because conventional Hakenplat th, as they are known for example from the above DE 10 2012 102 805 A1, or plates With receiving pockets like the subject of US 2013 0026 1 19 A1, the potential of a plate as a storage location is only exploited on one side, without also using the material thickness of the plate itself and its back. In addition, the design of the recesses as breakthroughs allows their relatively simple production by drilling, milling, lasers or the like, depending on the material of the plate, but does not exclude other manufacturing options such as molding.
  • each recess at least one holding means for releasably attaching at least one piece of jewelry to the plate is arranged.
  • each recess thus offers a fastening option.
  • a recess is not necessarily assigned to exactly one piece of jewelry for storage on the plate. For example, several rings in a recess or a chain in several recesses can be releasably attached to a holding means.
  • an upwardly projecting pin-like projection is formed as a holding means in the lower region of each recess.
  • the lower region of the recess can be defined on the basis of the orientation of the plate as that region of the recess which is closest to a lower edge of the plate, for example its contact surface. From that lower region, in particular from a lower edge of the recess, the pin-like projection protrudes upwards, namely against gravity, but without protruding from the plate. It expediently extends in the plane of extent of the plate.
  • a pin-like projection is to be understood as a projection which is designed as an often cylindrical or cuboidal extension of a component which is used to connect the component to another component.
  • the projection connects the plate to the piece of jewelry, using the effect of gravity on the piece of jewelry. Gravity ensures that the piece of jewelery, once hung, remains on the upright projection.
  • the projection and possibly the recess also prevent undesired lateral displacement of the piece of jewelry.
  • the invention uses the knowledge that all that is required is a simple pin-like projection in order to store very different objects or pieces of jewelry such as rings, chains, bands and the like on the plate.
  • the plate also has at least one spacer for maintaining a free space on a rear side of the plate, at least in the area of the Recesses. It is regularly arranged on the rear side and can be designed selectively, for example, as a single pin or linearly, for example, as a bar.
  • the spacer creates an operating space that makes it easier for a user to bring a piece of jewelry on the projection or behind the projection viewed from the user.
  • the invention is based on the knowledge that a convenient attachment of a piece of jewelry to the plate is achieved in that the projection is accessible on its back at least at a depth corresponding to the width of the piece of jewelry to be fastened.
  • the spacer prevents that a piece of jewelry cannot be placed on the projection because a wall surface lying behind it is in direct contact with the rear of the plate or on the projection. From the stand holder facilitates or enables the successful and convenient attachment of a piece of jewelry to the plate.
  • the plate or its plane of extension can have an inclination with respect to the vertical in the vertical direction.
  • the inclination can in principle point in both directions, so that a user side of the plate can be inclined towards or away from the user in a direction viewed from its lower side to its upper side.
  • the inclination can on the one hand ensure the above-mentioned distance to a wall surface or the like when the plate is suspended. This is because even if one of the lower edges rests against the wall surface, a sufficient distance can remain in the area of the recesses if the recesses maintain a suitable distance from the lower edge. The distance from the lower edge will arise anyway for structural or optical reasons.
  • the inclination can ensure a defined position of the pieces of jewelry on the plate or on its user side, namely on the plate side facing the user:
  • in particular attached chains or bands can provide a distance get to the user side of the plate, which on the one hand hang straight down due to gravity without resting on other jewelry, even if they cover them seen in one viewing direction.
  • the arrangement of elongated pieces of jewelery such as chains or ribbons is given a rectified formation that leaves a more visually pleasing, namely neat impression.
  • An inclination in the opposite direction namely inclined away from the user in an upper area of the plate, on the other hand, can ensure that suspended elongated pieces of jewelry usually keep their chosen position and do not inadvertently lose, for example, through gusts of wind or the like because they are on the Can rest on the user side of the plate.
  • an exposure of the Pieces of jewelery with this tendency be cheaper, for example, for presentation purposes, because the pieces of jewelery cannot shade themselves in any case with an exposure that regularly falls from an upper side.
  • a suspendable plate can have a rear spacer already mentioned above, but which only supports the upper or only the lower edge of the plate at a distance on a wall surface.
  • the plate With a spacer attached on the top, the plate can be attached to a wall surface, a door or the like with a spacing on the top.
  • the plate In the absence of a spacer on the underside, the plate then has an incline in an upward direction towards the user. With a top attachment and a lower spacer on the plate, an oppositely directed inclination of the plate can be achieved. The only top or only bottom from the spacer then forms the tilt device mentioned above.
  • the inclination device of an erecting plate can consist of a rod which is attached in an upper region of the plate, for example by inserting it into a blind hole, at an angle to the plane of extension of the plate and placed on the same from the lower edge of the plate can.
  • at least one rod can also be attached in a lower region of the plate at an angle close to or exactly at right angles in the plate.
  • the inclination of the plate results in a direction from bottom to top viewed towards the user on that side of the plate on which the support is arranged.
  • the support then also represents the inclination device.
  • the inclination of the plate can also be achieved in that it is clamped with its lower edge in a base at an incline in one or the other direction of inclination.
  • a top spacer can also be functionally combined with a suitable suspension device, so that only a single device is required to achieve a distance on the one hand and to hang the plate on a wall surface on the other.
  • the plate can have breakthroughs for hanging on screws, screw hooks, nails, rope devices or the like.
  • the plate can advantageously be in one piece in an upper region have with her trained fastening means, such as spacing A hanging hook or such a hanging bar.
  • a hanging bar as a linear suspension device can protrude from the rear of the plate like a flange and, in addition to a large number of fastening options, also define a distance on the top of the plate.
  • the plate can each have an angled strip on an upper and a lower edge, which protrude on different sides, namely opposite from the plane of extent of the plate.
  • the angle bar attached to the back of the plate can represent a spacer, in the absence of a lower spacer, also a tilting device and at the same time a hanging device; the lower angle bar, which faces the user, can be used to store rings, earrings, etc.
  • the angle strips thus serve a different purpose. If they are identical, they give the panel a calm and pleasing side view.
  • the recesses can in principle be placed in any desired arrangement on the plate.
  • the recesses can be arranged in horizontal and / or vertical rows above and / or next to one another.
  • a regular arrangement can result in an attractive, "tidy" look.
  • the recesses can in principle have a border in any desired outline shape. As a rule, they have a rectangular or square shape, but can also be hexagonal, for example, and thus form a honeycomb pattern on the plate, they can be octagonal or diamond-shaped, for example to create a regional reference.
  • the recesses can preferably have an essentially circular edge, that is to say a circular edge. In this way, a pleasing design can be achieved with any plate shape, regardless of whether the plate itself is rectangular, square, irregularly angular or round, oval or circular.
  • the recesses and the holding means arranged therein are designed according to the same principle and thus enable simple operation, they can assume almost any shape within a plate.
  • the recesses together with the holding means of a plate be designed similar and in particular identical table.
  • Similar recesses and their retaining means have the same shape and proportions that correspond to one another, but have different dimensions.
  • a recess can be a reduction or enlargement of the adjacent recess.
  • the differently sized recesses and holding means can then be arranged on the plate, sorted by size, for example, so that, for example, the larger recesses are arranged on the outside and the smaller ones on the inside.
  • the recesses and their holding means are identical if they have the same dimensions in addition to matching the shape and identical proportions. Their arrangement can produce a uniform "calm" design of the panel that is unused or whose unused areas look like a decorative pattern. In addition, it can offer simpler manufacture.
  • the holding means themselves are used to releasably attach a piece of jewelry to the plate. They can be specially adapted for this purpose and inserted into the recess.
  • the plate can have holding means formed in one piece with the plate.
  • the holding means are produced in a common process step together with the cutouts, they can thereby be produced particularly inexpensively.
  • the Hal tesch can be worked out from the sheet material itself, for example by cutting, sawing or lasing.
  • a one-piece design of the holding means can also be achieved, for example, by molding.
  • the plate offers a particularly simple appearance, despite the large number of holding means due to the lack of unnecessary component edges between the holding means on the one hand and the plate on the other hand.
  • the spacer ensures good rear accessibility of the Hal teffens, so that a piece of jewelry can be conveniently and successfully put on.
  • the pieces of jewelry on the other hand, must be held reliably by the holding means on the plate.
  • the plate can therefore have a T-shaped, peg-shaped projection as a holding means.
  • the T-shaped holding means can thus offer bulky pieces of jewelery, for example large rings or stiffer leather bands, a better hold.
  • the T-shaped holding means can basically be designed like a nail with a head protruding over its shaft. Preferably, however, it lies completely in the plane of the plate because the T-shaped holding means can then be produced more easily.
  • the holding means can have a notch or recess machined into the rear, in particular a horizontal groove. It is easy to manufacture, does not affect the user-side appearance of the plate and still gives the jewelry a better hold.
  • the recesses in the plate have, inter alia, the purpose of opening an actuation space around the holding means for placing or attaching a piece of jewelry.
  • a visible area of the holding means can therefore occupy a maximum of a quarter or a fifth of the area of the recess that can be assumed without holding means.
  • the area of the recess that can be assumed without holding means is that area which the recess would occupy according to its basic shape without the holding means being arranged, that is to say an "undisturbed" area, for example square, rectangular, diamond-shaped, oval, circular or other area of the holding means by a quarter or a fifth on the surface of the recess, sufficient operating space is ensured around the holding means, which allows a convenient and successful attachment of a piece of jewelry to the plate.
  • the area occupied by the holding means within the recess can of course also be smaller.Tests have shown that even ratios of 1/8, 1/10, 1/12, 1/15 up to a ratio of 1/19 can be suitable, respectively depending on the basic shape of the recess.
  • the peg-shaped holding means can therefore extend from a lower edge of the recess up to a maximum of two thirds of its height. Even with these dimensions of recess and holding means, convenient operation, namely simple putting on and taking off of the piece of jewelry, can be achieved. With an extension of the holding means up to about half the height of the recess, a harmonious design of recess and holding means can also be achieved.
  • a further advantageous embodiment of the invention can comprise at least one separately designed hanging aid for jewelry that can be placed on a holding means, which has a ring section for placing on the holding means and a Includes hook section for hanging jewelry.
  • the filigree piece of jewelery can thus be attached indirectly to the plate.
  • the suspension aid is first attached to the plate by - like a piece of jewelry - is placed with its ring section on the holding medium.
  • the ring section does not need to include a geometrically closed ring, but only needs to be designed to be hooked onto the holding means.
  • it can also be U-shaped, for example, and each have a hook section at the free ends of the U-legs.
  • the plate can be designed to serve as a hanging device for textiles, such as for dishes or towels or for items of clothing such as jackets, coats, pants or skirts.
  • textiles such as for dishes or towels or for items of clothing such as jackets, coats, pants or skirts.
  • a regularly larger space requirement for their operation must be taken into account when dimensioning them.
  • hanging loops, especially on coats or heavy jackets are often thicker than filigree pieces of jewelry.
  • the fingers of the male operator's hands which are then also relevant, can also take up more space than the regularly slimmer fingers of female jewelry wearers.
  • the dimensioning of the holding means must also be adapted to the regularly higher exposure to textiles.
  • the plate can be attached to a largely vertical wall or a door like a conventional cloakroom device and extend predominantly horizontally. You can have one or a few superimposed Rei hen with recesses next to one another, which can preferably be arranged offset from one another in the transverse direction. The plate can also have only one or a few cutouts next to one another, but each of which offers several holding means.
  • Figure 1 a perspective front view of a first embodiment of an inventive jewelry board
  • FIG. 2 a detailed representation of an opening
  • Figure 3 a sectional view according to the section line III - III in Figure 2
  • Figure 4 a perspective front view of a second embodiment of a jewelry board
  • FIG. 5 a perspective front view of a third embodiment of a jewelry board
  • FIG. 6 an embodiment of a mounting aid.
  • FIG. 1 shows a perspective front view of a first embodiment of the jewelry board 1 according to the invention. It consists of a rectangular plate 10, a continuous first flange 12 protruding backwards on the top and a second flange 14 which protrudes substantially forward and is also continuous on the underside .
  • the plate 10 contains seventy-seven circularly edged openings 16 as recesses, which are arranged in fourteen rows R of alternating five or six pieces per row and thus offset from one another from row to row. This results in a uniform and optically pleasant pattern of the breakthroughs 16 on the plate 10.
  • the first flange 12 and the second flange 14 run largely parallel to one another. They are not perpendicular, but at an angle of slightly less than 90 ° and in opposite directions from the plate 10.
  • the first flange 12 has a regular rectangular cross-section with a thickness corresponding to the thickness of the plate 10, and has on its underside, not shown, blind holes as fastening aids, in which, for example, screw hooks can engage, the board for fastening the jewelry in a not wall shown are turned.
  • the first flange 12 ensures a downwardly decreasing distance A between a back side 18 of a plate and a wall behind it as soon as the jewelry board 1 has been hung as intended.
  • the second flange 14 is thicker than the plate 10 and carries a V-shaped channel 20 on the top for storing small pieces of jewelry.
  • On the rear side 18 of the plate 10 it continues in a flat strip 22, which also ensures a minimal distance a from a vertical wall in the bottom row R.
  • the Plate 10 can also be designed to be extended in a downward direction in order to produce the same distance a there.
  • the first flange 12 represents both a fastening means and - in connection with the second flange 14 - an inclination device of the jewelry board 1, because the jewelry board 1 can only be hung inclined on a vertical wall. It can therefore only be hung inclined towards the user in one direction upwards. Longer jewelry items, such as necklaces or jewelry ribbons, possibly with trailers that are attached to the jewelry board 1, thereby also get a distance from the jewelry board 1, which increases in a downward direction. So that longer Schmuckge objects are not on the jewelry board 1 and fasten in the rows R underneath on their jewelry, so that mutual entanglement is excluded.
  • the jewelry board 1 consequently not only offers a clear and visually appealing storage option for jewelry items, but also their convenient operation.
  • Figure 2 shows a detailed representation of an opening 16. It has a circular outline 24 with a radius r. From the lowest point of the outline 24, a pin 26 as a holding means stands upwards radially into the opening 16, up to about halfway or up to about the level of the center of the opening 16. A height H of the pin 16 can therefore be approximately that The radius r of the opening 16 corresponds to or remains below it.
  • the pin 26 has a rounded head 28 on the top, which makes it particularly pleasing.
  • FIG. 3 shows a sectional view according to the section line III - III in FIG. 2, i.e. perpendicularly through the pin 26 and orthogonal to the plane of extension of the plate 10.
  • the pin 26 has a notch 32 on the rear side 18 of the plate 10, which begins approximately in its foot section at the transition to the outline 24 and extends to below the head 28. In this way it can be achieved that pieces of jewelry that have been attached to the pin 26 do not slide off the pin 26 again and fall down, for example due to a certain rigidity and their weight. If they are in the notch 32, they can be prevented from accidentally slipping.
  • the pin 26 can have at least the thickness of the plate 10 over its entire height H and can be thickened on the rear side of its head 28 so that the thickened head protrudes beyond the plane of the rear side 18.
  • the jewelry board 1 can therefore be attached to the first flange 12 on a largely vertical wall. Due to its greater distance A in the area of the first flange 12 and its smaller distance a in the area of the second flange 14, the rear side 18 maintains a distance from the wall over the entire surface of the plate 10 and does not lie against it. Thus, the pins 26 remain accessible to the extent that jewelry objects over them and on the back of them can be attached to the pin 26 without hindrance.
  • the radius r of the openings 16 is dimensioned such that two fingers of one operator's hand, regularly the thumb and the index finger, can easily attach and remove a piece of jewelry on the pin 26.
  • the height H of the pin also plays a role for convenience. It is dependent on the radius r of the opening 16, as a smaller radius r means a smaller opening 16 and thus less space for the fingers to attach a piece of jewelery to the pin 26. In this respect, a ver relatively lower height H of the pin 26 is more favorable, that is, a height H which, for example, corresponds to only two-thirds of the radius r. In the case of larger openings 16, on the other hand, the height H can correspond to the radius r or up to about four-thirds of its size.
  • Figure 4 shows a perspective front view of a second embodiment of a jewelry board according to the invention 2. It has a cuboid outline shape that has only four of the six side surfaces of a cuboid, namely a rectangular front plate 40, a rectangular top plate 42 and two rectangular side plates 44.
  • the front plate 40 is oriented transversely and contains five openings 16 lying next to one another in a row R in the configuration described above with regard to FIGS. 2 and 3.
  • the top plate 42 carries a channel 46 on the top for the storage of smaller objects. On the underside, it contains blind holes (not shown) for attaching the jewelry board 2, for example, to screw hooks that are screwed into a wall.
  • the side panels 44 then support the mounted jewelry board 2 or its front panel 40 at a distance A from the wall, so that a free space remains between it and the wall on a rear side 48 of the front panel 40.
  • the jewelry board 2 can be operated largely identically to that of FIG.
  • the openings 16 allow pieces of jewelery to be conveniently attached to the fen 26 (FIG. 2) or their removal from the pegs 26.
  • the top plate 42 and the side panels 44 ensure the distance A between the rear side 48 of the front panel 40, so that a rear side of the pegs 26 is also easily accessible for items of jewelery to push over it.
  • the distance A also ensures that jewelry bands, necklaces or the like hang down freely so that they can remain out of contact with the wall. Smaller jewelry items, for example ear studs, can be placed in the channel 46 on the top.
  • the device shown in FIG. 4 can also be used as a hanging device for textiles such as hand towels, dish towels or bath towels or items of clothing such as coats, jackets, trousers, skirts or the like. which have a separate hanger or a hanger that can be used as such.
  • textiles such as hand towels, dish towels or bath towels or items of clothing such as coats, jackets, trousers, skirts or the like. which have a separate hanger or a hanger that can be used as such.
  • the breakthroughs 16 and the pin 26 so in particular the radius r ( Figure 2) of the opening 16 and proportionally the height H and the thickness of the pin 26 (not designated) to adapt, namely to the larger required operating space also for less slender fingers and thicker hangers for the textiles as well as the regularly higher weight of textiles.
  • Figure 5 shows a perspective front view of a third embodiment of a jewelry board 3. It consists of an inclined rectangular front plate 50 and a base plate 52, which protrudes at a lower edge 54 from a rear side 56 of the front plate 50, so that it and the base plate 52 have an acute-angled L-shape.
  • the front plate 50 is consequently slightly inclined in the direction of the base plate 52, so that there is a free space on its back 56.
  • the front panel 50 also has the above-described openings 16, in three rows R one above the other. They are located in an upper section of the plate 50, so that an underlying lower region 58 remains free of openings.
  • the jewelry board 3 can assume different dimensions in the surface direction, so that more or less openings 16 in more or fewer rows R can be placed on it.
  • the jewelry board 3 is suitable as a display, for example on a counter or on a shelf, for example for the presentation of individual or a smaller collection of jewelry.
  • at least its visible surface 60 can be covered with velvet, for example, in order to convey a more valuable impression or a better contrast, in particular on the lower area 58 without perforations, to the presented pieces of jewelry.
  • FIG. 6 shows two embodiments for suspension aids 4, 5. They each include a ring section 70, 72 with which they can be placed like a piece of jewelry on the pin 26 of an opening 16 (FIG. 2).
  • a hook section 74, 76 adjoins the ring section 70, 72 and projects at an angle from the plane of extension of the respective ring section 70, 72. On the hook portion 74, 76 smaller pieces of jewelry can be attached that are too small to be placed on the pin 26. This means that even very small pieces of jewelry can be attached to the jewelry boards 1, 2, 3 without having to be placed in the grooves 20, 46.

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Abstract

L'invention concerne une plaque conçue comme planche à bijoux (1; 2; 3) pour disposer et stocker des bijoux tels que des colliers, des bracelets ou des bagues, pourvue d'un certain nombre d'évidements (16) traversant la plaque (10; 40; 50) et dans lesquels sont intégrés des moyens de retenue (26) pour fixer de manière amovible les bijoux respectifs sur la plaque, d'une protubérance en forme de tenon faisant saillie vers le haut dans l'évidement dans la zone inférieure de chaque évidement (16) en tant que moyen de retenue et d'un intercalaire (12; 44; 52) de la plaque (10; 40; 50) pour maintenir un espace libre (A; a) sur une face arrière (18; 48; 56) de la plaque (10; 40; 50) au moins dans la zone des évidements (16).
EP20711114.7A 2019-04-02 2020-03-10 Planche à bijoux Active EP3945950B1 (fr)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE102019108615.9A DE102019108615A1 (de) 2019-04-02 2019-04-02 Schmuckbrett
PCT/EP2020/056375 WO2020200667A1 (fr) 2019-04-02 2020-03-10 Planche à bijoux

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP3945950A1 true EP3945950A1 (fr) 2022-02-09
EP3945950C0 EP3945950C0 (fr) 2024-06-05
EP3945950B1 EP3945950B1 (fr) 2024-06-05

Family

ID=69810832

Family Applications (1)

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EP20711114.7A Active EP3945950B1 (fr) 2019-04-02 2020-03-10 Planche à bijoux

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US (1) US20220167759A1 (fr)
EP (1) EP3945950B1 (fr)
CN (1) CN113710127A (fr)
DE (1) DE102019108615A1 (fr)
WO (1) WO2020200667A1 (fr)

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USD1005022S1 (en) * 2019-04-12 2023-11-21 Michael Ulbricht Jewelry stand

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Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
WO2020200667A1 (fr) 2020-10-08
US20220167759A1 (en) 2022-06-02
EP3945950C0 (fr) 2024-06-05
DE102019108615A1 (de) 2020-10-08
CN113710127A (zh) 2021-11-26
EP3945950B1 (fr) 2024-06-05

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