US1261846A - Collar-pouch. - Google Patents

Collar-pouch. Download PDF

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Publication number
US1261846A
US1261846A US19270617A US19270617A US1261846A US 1261846 A US1261846 A US 1261846A US 19270617 A US19270617 A US 19270617A US 19270617 A US19270617 A US 19270617A US 1261846 A US1261846 A US 1261846A
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United States
Prior art keywords
pouch
body strip
mouth
strip
side pieces
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Expired - Lifetime
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US19270617A
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George Lewis Osgood
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Individual
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65DCONTAINERS FOR STORAGE OR TRANSPORT OF ARTICLES OR MATERIALS, e.g. BAGS, BARRELS, BOTTLES, BOXES, CANS, CARTONS, CRATES, DRUMS, JARS, TANKS, HOPPERS, FORWARDING CONTAINERS; ACCESSORIES, CLOSURES, OR FITTINGS THEREFOR; PACKAGING ELEMENTS; PACKAGES
    • B65D33/00Details of, or accessories for, sacks or bags
    • B65D33/16End- or aperture-closing arrangements or devices
    • B65D33/18End- or aperture-closing arrangements or devices using adhesive applied to integral parts, e.g. to flaps
    • B65D33/20End- or aperture-closing arrangements or devices using adhesive applied to integral parts, e.g. to flaps using pressure-sensitive adhesive

Definitions

  • This invention has for its object to pro vide a holder for laundried collars, adapted to securely confine curved collars in a compact bundle, and to be stored in a drawer, traveling bag, or other receptacle, without occupying unnecessary space.
  • Figure l is a side view .of a collar pouch embodying the invention, the pouch being opened.
  • Fig. 2 is an edge view of the same.
  • Fig. 3 is a side view showing the pouch closed.
  • Fig. i is a top view showing the pouch opened, the flap and lining hereinafter referred to being removed.
  • Fig. 5 is a top view of the pouch as shown by Fig. 4, the pouch being closed.
  • My improved pouch includes an elongated U-shaped body strip which is flexible, so that its ends may be drawn toward each other to close the pouch, as indicated by Fig. 3, and separated to open the pouch, as indicated by Fig. l.
  • the body strip is preferably stiffer than the side pieces hereinafter described, so that it offers suitable resistance to pressure tending to bend it crosswise.
  • the body strip is somewhat wider than the collars, and its relative stiffness enables it .to aid in resisting pressure tending to bend it crosswise.
  • the side pieces 13 are stitched to the opposite edges of the body'strip.
  • the side pieces 13 are a piece of flexible material, such as cloth or thin leather, the side pieces being preferably more flexible than the body strip.
  • Each side piece hassubstantially straight and parallel edge portions, and an intermedlate arcuate edge portion.
  • the body strlp has parallel longitudinal edges which are stitched to the said edges of the side pieces, so that when the mouth portion of the pouch is expanded, and the side pieces are substantially flat, the body strip, confined by the side pieces, has an arcuate central portion and end portions which are substantially straight and parallel with each other.
  • the arcuate central portion of the body strip is adapted to conform to a portion of" the periphery of a roll composedof a starched collar or collars.
  • the parallel end portions of the body strip projecting above said arcuate portion are adapted to limit the expansion of said roll, so that the ends of the collars are not liable to spring upward into the mouth portion of the pouch.
  • a roll of collars compactly formed'beforeinsertion into the pouch is retained, therefore, in substantially the same compactform by the parallel end portions of the body strip while the mouth portion of the pouch is being closed upon said roll, as hereinafter described.
  • each side piece is creased so that when. the pouch is open,
  • the upper edges of the side pieces havethe zig-zag formation shown by Fig. 4e, and are prepared for conversion into the bellows folds, shown by Fig. 5, by the operation of drawing the ends of 'thebody strip toward each other; This operation, therefore, closes the mouth of the pouch upon a roll of collars, the displacement of the side pieces being inward so that the width of the pouch is not increased by the operation of closing its mouth.
  • I provide means for detachably connecting the end portions of the body strip to hold the mouth closed, said means being preferably embodied in a flexible flap 14 attached to oneend of the body strip and provided with socket members 15 of ordinary snap fasteners, and stud members 16 of said fasteners attached to the body-strip near the end opposite that to which theflap is attached;
  • the socket members 15 are adapted to engage the stud members 16 and thus confine the pouch in the conditions shown by Fig. 3.
  • the pouch may be conveniently closed by a drawstring 18 bearing on one end portion of the body strip, and'passing through a pair of eyelets 19 at said end, a pair of eyelets 20 at the opposite end of the body strip, and
  • the draw string may be knotted or tied as at 18 Fig. 5, to hold the pouch closed, so that the flap 14 may be dispensed with.
  • the drawstring and flap the string being employed to close the mouth of the pouch and its extended portion left loose and'partly covered by the flap, and confined between the fastening members, as shown by Fig. 3, said members being spaced apart to permit said extended portion to depend and be confined between them.
  • the pouch' may be provided with a lining 23 of suitable fabric such as silk, formed as a bag stitched at its mouth to the mouth of the pouch and hanging loosely within the pouch.
  • suitable fabric such as silk
  • Additional stud members 1e may be provided between the members 16 and the adjacent end of the body strip to engage the members 15 on the flap, when the pouch is filled to substantially its maximum capacity.
  • the end portions. of the body strip constitute relatively stifi parallel guides adapted to direct a rollof collars to a bearing on the arcuate central portion of the body strip, when the mouth of the pouch is expanded, and relatively stili roll-confining members adapted to hold the roll against the said arcuate portion, when the mouth of the pouch is contracted.
  • the body strip 12 forms the bottom of the pouch and its end portions form two opposed relatively narrow pouch walls.
  • the side pieces 13 form two opposed wider walls.
  • A. collar pouch having an expansible and contractible mouth portion, said pouch comprising flexible side pieces having substan tially straight and parallel edge portions and intermediate arcuate edge portions, a rel atively stiff body strip having parallel edges united to and confined by the side pieces, so that the said strip has an arcuate central portion and end portions which are substantially straight and parallel with each other when'the mouth portionis expanded, whereby the body strip is adapted to prevent the uni-oiling of a roll of collars resting on said central portion, the upper edge portions of the side pieces being creased to form bellows folds when the mouth portion is contracted,
  • the body strip being provided ateach of its end portions with a pair of eyelets, and the upper edge portions of the side pieces belng provided with rows of eyelets, a draw-string bearing on one end portion of the body strip and passing through said eyelets, portions of said string being extended outwardly from the opposite end of the body strip and adapted to be manipulated to draw the end portions of the body strip toward each other and contract the mouth portion of the pouch, and a flap attached to one end of the body strip, the free end of said flap and the opposite end portion of the strip being provided with pairs of spaced apart complemental fastening members whereby the fiap may be caused to connect the end portions of the body strip and maintain the contraction of the mouth portion of the pouch, the extended portions of the draw-string beingadapted to depend between said fastening members when the mouth portion is contracted.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Purses, Travelling Bags, Baskets, Or Suitcases (AREA)
  • Bag Frames (AREA)

Description

Patented Apr. 9, 1918.
f/EJ- /N\/ENTUR- 5, 1
GEORGE LEWIS OSGOOD, 0F AYER, MASSACHUSETTS.
COLLAR-POUCH.
Specification of Letters Patent.
Patented Apr. 9, 1918.
Application filed September 22, 1917. Serial 1Y0. 182,796.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, Gnonon Lnwrs OsGooD, a citizen of the United States, residing at Ayer, in the county of .Middlesex. and State of Massachusetts, have invented new and useful Improvements in Collar-Pouches, of which the following is a specification.
This invention-has for its object to pro vide a holder for laundried collars, adapted to securely confine curved collars in a compact bundle, and to be stored in a drawer, traveling bag, or other receptacle, without occupying unnecessary space.
The invention is embodied in the improvements which I will now proceed to describe and claim.
Of the accompanying drawings forming a part of this specification,
Figure l is a side view .of a collar pouch embodying the invention, the pouch being opened.
Fig. 2 is an edge view of the same.
Fig. 3 is a side view showing the pouch closed.
Fig. i is a top view showing the pouch opened, the flap and lining hereinafter referred to being removed.
Fig. 5 is a top view of the pouch as shown by Fig. 4, the pouch being closed.
The same reference characters indicate the same parts in all of the figures.
My improved pouch includes an elongated U-shaped body strip which is flexible, so that its ends may be drawn toward each other to close the pouch, as indicated by Fig. 3, and separated to open the pouch, as indicated by Fig. l. The body strip is preferably stiffer than the side pieces hereinafter described, so that it offers suitable resistance to pressure tending to bend it crosswise. I prefer to make the body strip of at least two layers 12 and 12 the external layer 12 being of any suitable material, such as thin cloth or leather, and the internal layer 12 being preferably of a stiffer material, such as buckram, which may be treated with a stiffening composition.
1 The body strip is somewhat wider than the collars, and its relative stiffness enables it .to aid in resisting pressure tending to bend it crosswise.
To the opposite edges of the body'strip are stitched the side pieces 13, each of which is a piece of flexible material, such as cloth or thin leather, the side pieces being preferably more flexible than the body strip.
Each side piece hassubstantially straight and parallel edge portions, and an intermedlate arcuate edge portion. The body strlp has parallel longitudinal edges which are stitched to the said edges of the side pieces, so that when the mouth portion of the pouch is expanded, and the side pieces are substantially flat, the body strip, confined by the side pieces, has an arcuate central portion and end portions which are substantially straight and parallel with each other. The arcuate central portion of the body strip is adapted to conform to a portion of" the periphery of a roll composedof a starched collar or collars. The parallel end portions of the body strip projecting above said arcuate portion are adapted to limit the expansion of said roll, so that the ends of the collars are not liable to spring upward into the mouth portion of the pouch. A roll of collars compactly formed'beforeinsertion into the pouch is retained, therefore, in substantially the same compactform by the parallel end portions of the body strip while the mouth portion of the pouch is being closed upon said roll, as hereinafter described.
The upper edge portion of each side piece is creased so that when. the pouch is open,
the upper edges of the side pieces havethe zig-zag formation shown by Fig. 4e, and are prepared for conversion into the bellows folds, shown by Fig. 5, by the operation of drawing the ends of 'thebody strip toward each other; This operation, therefore, closes the mouth of the pouch upon a roll of collars, the displacement of the side pieces being inward so that the width of the pouch is not increased by the operation of closing its mouth.
I provide means for detachably connecting the end portions of the body strip to hold the mouth closed, said means being preferably embodied in a flexible flap 14 attached to oneend of the body strip and provided with socket members 15 of ordinary snap fasteners, and stud members 16 of said fasteners attached to the body-strip near the end opposite that to which theflap is attached; The socket members 15 are adapted to engage the stud members 16 and thus confine the pouch in the conditions shown by Fig. 3.
The pouch may be conveniently closed by a drawstring 18 bearing on one end portion of the body strip, and'passing through a pair of eyelets 19 at said end, a pair of eyelets 20 at the opposite end of the body strip, and
portion of the body strip having the eyelets 20, and are adapted to be grasped and pulled by the operator. The arrangement of the eyelets and string is such that when the ex tended portion of the string is pulled upwardly from the osition shown by Fig. 1, the end portions 0 the body strip are drawn toward each other and bellows folds are formed in the upper edge portions of the side pieces, as shown by Fig. 5. V
The draw string may be knotted or tied as at 18 Fig. 5, to hold the pouch closed, so that the flap 14 may be dispensed with. I prefer, however, to employ both the drawstring and flap, the string being employed to close the mouth of the pouch and its extended portion left loose and'partly covered by the flap, and confined between the fastening members, as shown by Fig. 3, said members being spaced apart to permit said extended portion to depend and be confined between them. V
The pouch'may be provided with a lining 23 of suitable fabric such as silk, formed as a bag stitched at its mouth to the mouth of the pouch and hanging loosely within the pouch.
To avoid confusion, the lining is omitted from Figs. 4 and 5.
Additional stud members 1e may be provided between the members 16 and the adjacent end of the body strip to engage the members 15 on the flap, when the pouch is filled to substantially its maximum capacity.
The end portions. of the body strip constitute relatively stifi parallel guides adapted to direct a rollof collars to a bearing on the arcuate central portion of the body strip, when the mouth of the pouch is expanded, and relatively stili roll-confining members adapted to hold the roll against the said arcuate portion, when the mouth of the pouch is contracted.
The body strip 12 forms the bottom of the pouch and its end portions form two opposed relatively narrow pouch walls. The side pieces 13 form two opposed wider walls.
the upper ends of said walls form an oblong mouth, permitting the convenient insertion of a roll of collars, said mouth being normally held open by the stiffness of the body strip. The depth of the pouch from mouth to bottom is greater than'the length Copies of this patent may be obtained for five cents each, by addressing the Commissioner of Patents,
of the mouth,so that the upper portion of a roll deposited on said bottom is below the mouth. Provision is therefore made for contracting the month by inclining the end por tions of the body strip toward each other. This operation causes the formation of the inwardly projecting bellows folds on the creased upper portions of the side pieces. as indicated by Fig. 5, said folds being wholly between the end portions of the body strip, so that they are protected against wear by chafing contact with other articles in a bag in which the pouch may be placed.
Iclaim:
A. collar pouch having an expansible and contractible mouth portion, said pouch comprising flexible side pieces having substan tially straight and parallel edge portions and intermediate arcuate edge portions, a rel atively stiff body strip having parallel edges united to and confined by the side pieces, so that the said strip has an arcuate central portion and end portions which are substantially straight and parallel with each other when'the mouth portionis expanded, whereby the body strip is adapted to prevent the uni-oiling of a roll of collars resting on said central portion, the upper edge portions of the side pieces being creased to form bellows folds when the mouth portion is contracted,
the body strip being provided ateach of its end portions with a pair of eyelets, and the upper edge portions of the side pieces belng provided with rows of eyelets, a draw-string bearing on one end portion of the body strip and passing through said eyelets, portions of said string being extended outwardly from the opposite end of the body strip and adapted to be manipulated to draw the end portions of the body strip toward each other and contract the mouth portion of the pouch, and a flap attached to one end of the body strip, the free end of said flap and the opposite end portion of the strip being provided with pairs of spaced apart complemental fastening members whereby the fiap may be caused to connect the end portions of the body strip and maintain the contraction of the mouth portion of the pouch, the extended portions of the draw-string beingadapted to depend between said fastening members when the mouth portion is contracted.
In testimony whereof I have afiixed my signature. r
GEORGE nwrs oseoo'n Washington. D. G.
US19270617A 1917-09-22 1917-09-22 Collar-pouch. Expired - Lifetime US1261846A (en)

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Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2510186A (en) * 1946-10-18 1950-06-06 Vincent J Marsico Shopping bag
US2563616A (en) * 1951-08-07 Commodity bag
US2766797A (en) * 1955-07-11 1956-10-16 George T C Cowen Gathering device
US3225806A (en) * 1962-06-07 1965-12-28 Atlantic Prod Corp Carrying bag construction
US3993016A (en) * 1975-08-04 1976-11-23 Pulaski Eugene A Protective enclosure and position warning device for outdrive engines
US4036363A (en) * 1974-01-18 1977-07-19 Action Packaging Corporation Automatic filling of bags
US4578814A (en) * 1984-02-01 1986-03-25 Thermal Bags By Ingrid, Inc. Thermally insulated food bag
US4802233A (en) * 1984-02-01 1989-01-31 Thermal Bags By Ingrid, Inc. Thermally insulated food bag
US4988216A (en) * 1989-04-21 1991-01-29 Lyman Philip C Insulated container insertable into a backpack
US6880702B1 (en) * 2001-03-20 2005-04-19 Juancarlos Colorado Firefighter's rope bag and rapid deployment system
US20060029297A1 (en) * 2004-07-20 2006-02-09 Mrs. Kimberly Demorotski The Birdie Helmet Bag
US20090249676A1 (en) * 2008-04-02 2009-10-08 Davis Donald D Rain Activated Mineral Filtration Bag and Method
US20130092283A1 (en) * 2011-10-12 2013-04-18 Thomas F. Votel Pole weight and method for filling the same
US20150128867A1 (en) * 2013-11-12 2015-05-14 Chance Daniel KEITH Feeding Apparatus, Method, and System

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2563616A (en) * 1951-08-07 Commodity bag
US2510186A (en) * 1946-10-18 1950-06-06 Vincent J Marsico Shopping bag
US2766797A (en) * 1955-07-11 1956-10-16 George T C Cowen Gathering device
US3225806A (en) * 1962-06-07 1965-12-28 Atlantic Prod Corp Carrying bag construction
US4036363A (en) * 1974-01-18 1977-07-19 Action Packaging Corporation Automatic filling of bags
US3993016A (en) * 1975-08-04 1976-11-23 Pulaski Eugene A Protective enclosure and position warning device for outdrive engines
US4578814A (en) * 1984-02-01 1986-03-25 Thermal Bags By Ingrid, Inc. Thermally insulated food bag
US4802233A (en) * 1984-02-01 1989-01-31 Thermal Bags By Ingrid, Inc. Thermally insulated food bag
US4988216A (en) * 1989-04-21 1991-01-29 Lyman Philip C Insulated container insertable into a backpack
US6880702B1 (en) * 2001-03-20 2005-04-19 Juancarlos Colorado Firefighter's rope bag and rapid deployment system
US20060029297A1 (en) * 2004-07-20 2006-02-09 Mrs. Kimberly Demorotski The Birdie Helmet Bag
US20090249676A1 (en) * 2008-04-02 2009-10-08 Davis Donald D Rain Activated Mineral Filtration Bag and Method
US20130092283A1 (en) * 2011-10-12 2013-04-18 Thomas F. Votel Pole weight and method for filling the same
US20150128867A1 (en) * 2013-11-12 2015-05-14 Chance Daniel KEITH Feeding Apparatus, Method, and System

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