US1271783A - Display-counter. - Google Patents

Display-counter. Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1271783A
US1271783A US12925016A US12925016A US1271783A US 1271783 A US1271783 A US 1271783A US 12925016 A US12925016 A US 12925016A US 12925016 A US12925016 A US 12925016A US 1271783 A US1271783 A US 1271783A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
pockets
counter
display
pocket
customer
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.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US12925016A
Inventor
William G Sherer
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
Priority to US12925016A priority Critical patent/US1271783A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1271783A publication Critical patent/US1271783A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • 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
    • A47F3/00Show cases or show cabinets

Definitions

  • My invention relates to improvements in display counters and has for one object to provide a new and improved type of display counter, wherein the front of the counter is covered by a series of separate display pockets, all of which are visible to the customer as she or he stands at the counter. Another object is to provide such a counter with a series of inclined transparent front display pockets so arranged that they are each of them equally visible and appear to the eye of the customer to be each of them of the same size. Another object is to provide a display counter with inclined display pockets so arranged that each pocket, no matter how high or how low, will subtend at the customers eye as he stands at the counter an angle measured in a vertical plane, equal to the angle subtended by any other. Other objects of my invention will appear from time to time in the specification.
  • Fig. 2 is a similar section through fied form
  • A is a top of a counter having an end wall A seen from the inside in this view.
  • a A are horizontal partitions contained therein and adapted to support the usual type of drawers A A which slide therealong, the drawers of course moving, to open toward the rear of the counter.
  • the front of the counter is made up of a series of removable display pockets of any suitable size or shape supported on the front of the counter. They are normally provided with transparent walls whereby the contents of the pockets are visible.
  • B is the bottom, B the side walls of the display pockets. It has at its front a transparent window B surrounded by, and held in position in a frame B It has at the rear a partition B*, the parts all cooperating to form a thin deep pocket in which material may be held for display.
  • the side walls B are notched as at B to engage the holding strips B, B and B on the counter front.
  • the lower part B is provided with a ledge B forming a groove with 'the lower part of the frame B to engage the holding strips B B, B on the front of the counter.
  • Fig. 2 I have shown a generally similar arrangement, wherein all the display pockets are parallel and all of'them inclined, but I have shown them so arranged that the upper inner edge of each of the counters is in. the same or a common vertical plane parallel with the front of the counter.
  • this arrangement there is a greater vertical gap between the pockets but the woodwork visible to the eye of the customer, looking along the dotted lines, is even less conspicuous than in the preferred form in Fig. 1, for in the case of the subject matter of Fig. 2 absolutely the only woodwork visible is the lower frame of each pocket, the upper frame of each pocket being completely covered either by the lowerframe of the one above it or by the top of the counter.
  • the particular arrangement of the pockets may be varied to suit different conditions, and I have only shown and described a particular suitable form of pocket.
  • the essential thing is that the eye of the customer gain the impression that the pockets are all of the same width. This impression might be given to the customer by a large number of different arrangements, but I prefer to give this impression by making these pockets, all parallel, all inclined, and by varyino their width in proportion to their distance from the eye of the customer.
  • I have shown diagrammatically the eye of the customer with lines drawn from it to the boundaries of the pockets whereby it will be evident that the angle of vision of each pocket is the same.
  • a display counter having a series of display pockets mounted on the front thereof one above the other and inclined to the vertical, all of said pockets being parallel, each pocket being higher than-and having its upper edge slightly behind the lower edge of the one above it.
  • a display counter having a series of display pockets mounted on the front there of in a series of horizontal rows, the pockets 1n each row being parallel with all the others, and higher than and having their" upper edges arranged slightly behind the lower edges of those in the row above it.
  • a display counter having a series of display pockets on the front sides thereof, all of said pockets being inclined to the vertical and being parallel one with another, the height of the pockets being such that the angle subtended by each pocket at the eye of tical, the height of the pockets being such that the angle subtended by each pocket at the eye of a customer standing at the counter is substantially the same.
  • a display counter having a series of display pockets on the front sides thereof of varying vertical dimensions, the size of the pockets being such that each pocket subtends the same vertical angle at the eye of a customer as the other pockets above and below it.
  • a display counter having a series of display pockets on the front side thereof in varying vertical dimensions said pockets extending across the front in a plurality of separate groups one above the other the sizes of the pockets being such that each pocket subtends the same vertical angle at the eye of the customer asthe other pockets above and below it.
  • LAUREL M. DOREMUS, MINNIE M. LINDENAU.

Landscapes

  • Display Racks (AREA)

Description

Patented July 9, 1918. I
. Z%7/67Z2f07" 77ZZiam CZ fiizerer W G. SHERER.
DISPLAY COUNTER.
APPLICATION FILED NOV. 3. 1916.
W. G. SHERER.
DISPLAY COUNTER.
APPLICATION FILED NOV. 3. 1916.
Patented July 9, 1918.
2 SHEETSSHEET 2- Invenor 74% ZZzam GT /6/&67"67 0.. wnsmm: mm. D. c.
WILLIAM G. SHEREB OF CHICAGO, ILLINOIS.
DI$PLAY-COUNTEB.
Specification of Letters Patent.
Patented July 9, 1918.
Application filed. November 3, 1916. Serial No. 129,250.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, WILLIAM G. SHERER, a citizen of the United States, residing at Chicago, in the county of Cook and State of Illinois, have invented a certain new an useful Improvement in Display-Counters, of which the following is a specification.
My invention relates to improvements in display counters and has for one object to provide a new and improved type of display counter, wherein the front of the counter is covered bya series of separate display pockets, all of which are visible to the customer as she or he stands at the counter. Another object is to provide such a counter with a series of inclined transparent front display pockets so arranged that they are each of them equally visible and appear to the eye of the customer to be each of them of the same size. Another object is to provide a display counter with inclined display pockets so arranged that each pocket, no matter how high or how low, will subtend at the customers eye as he stands at the counter an angle measured in a vertical plane, equal to the angle subtended by any other. Other objects of my invention will appear from time to time in the specification.
My invention is illustrated more or less diagrammatically in the accompanying drawing wherein- Figure l is a section through the'forward part of a display counter embodying the preferred form of my invention;
Fig. 2 is a similar section through fied form;
Fig. 3 a section through a still further modification Like parts are indicated by like characters in all of the figures.
A is a top of a counter having an end wall A seen from the inside in this view. A A are horizontal partitions contained therein and adapted to support the usual type of drawers A A which slide therealong, the drawers of course moving, to open toward the rear of the counter.
The front of the counter is made up of a series of removable display pockets of any suitable size or shape supported on the front of the counter. They are normally provided with transparent walls whereby the contents of the pockets are visible.
Since it is desirable that the customer who stands at the counter shall see as little of the frame-work and construction of the a modicounter as possible, and as much of the con tents of the display pockets as possible, I arrange my pockets all of them parallel, and all of them inclined. In the preferred form they are stepped back slightly,'however, so that the top of each pocket is inside and below the bottom of the one above it. The result of this is that the customer as he stands at the counter and looks down, will see the wooden or metal framework at the bottom of each pocket, but will see little if any of the framework at the top of the one below, because that will be more or less covered by the framework of the pocket above. Of course this situation does not prevail when the customer is at a great distance from the counter, but when at a great distance he only gets a general birds-eye view and the dis play pockets are not so important. When standing at the counter, however, it is very import-ant that the customers see the contents of the pocket with as little interference as possible. By my arrangement this result is obtained.
However, if that were all, the result would not be satisfactory, because, with the customer standing erect at the counter, he is much farther from the lower pockets than he is from the upper, and the angle subtended at his eye by the lower pocket, will be much smaller than the angle subtended by the upper, unless the lower pocket is wider than the upper, and for this reason I make these pockets of progressively increasing width, that is, the tier of pockets at the top is of certain predetermined width, the neXt lower tier is still wlder, the third lower tier is wider yet, the increase in width being such that an ordinary customer standing at ordinary height, will, when looking at these display pockets, seem to see them all of equal width. The result is that the display articles in one pocket will be as well displayed as the articles in another.
Referring specifically to the preferred form in Fig. l, B is the bottom, B the side walls of the display pockets. It has at its front a transparent window B surrounded by, and held in position in a frame B It has at the rear a partition B*, the parts all cooperating to form a thin deep pocket in which material may be held for display. The side walls B are notched as at B to engage the holding strips B, B and B on the counter front. The lower part B is provided with a ledge B forming a groove with 'the lower part of the frame B to engage the holding strips B B, B on the front of the counter.
In Fig. 2 I have shown a generally similar arrangement, wherein all the display pockets are parallel and all of'them inclined, but I have shown them so arranged that the upper inner edge of each of the counters is in. the same or a common vertical plane parallel with the front of the counter. In this arrangement there is a greater vertical gap between the pockets but the woodwork visible to the eye of the customer, looking along the dotted lines, is even less conspicuous than in the preferred form in Fig. 1, for in the case of the subject matter of Fig. 2 absolutely the only woodwork visible is the lower frame of each pocket, the upper frame of each pocket being completely covered either by the lowerframe of the one above it or by the top of the counter.
Referring now to the subject matter I shown in Fig. 8, I have shown all the pockets in the same inclined plane. In this case the woodwork is comparatively conspicuous, but because the width of the pocket is varied in accordance with the distance of the pocket from the eye of the customer, the angles are the same, and each counter pocket looks to the eye of a customer, glancing along the dotted lines, as if it were the same size.
Of course the particular arrangement of the pockets may be varied to suit different conditions, and I have only shown and described a particular suitable form of pocket. The essential thing is that the eye of the customer gain the impression that the pockets are all of the same width. This impression might be given to the customer by a large number of different arrangements, but I prefer to give this impression by making these pockets, all parallel, all inclined, and by varyino their width in proportion to their distance from the eye of the customer. In order to illustrate this I have shown diagrammatically the eye of the customer with lines drawn from it to the boundaries of the pockets whereby it will be evident that the angle of vision of each pocket is the same.
I claim: v
1. A display counter having a series of display pockets mounted on the front thereof one above the other and inclined to the vertical, all of said pockets being parallel, each pocket being higher than-and having its upper edge slightly behind the lower edge of the one above it.
2. A display counter having a series of display pockets mounted on the front there of in a series of horizontal rows, the pockets 1n each row being parallel with all the others, and higher than and having their" upper edges arranged slightly behind the lower edges of those in the row above it.
3. A display counter having a series of display pockets on the front sides thereof, all of said pockets being inclined to the vertical and being parallel one with another, the height of the pockets being such that the angle subtended by each pocket at the eye of tical, the height of the pockets being such that the angle subtended by each pocket at the eye of a customer standing at the counter is substantially the same.
6. A display counter having a series of display pockets on the front sides thereof of varying vertical dimensions, the size of the pockets being such that each pocket subtends the same vertical angle at the eye of a customer as the other pockets above and below it.
7. A display counter having a series of display pockets on the front side thereof in varying vertical dimensions said pockets extending across the front in a plurality of separate groups one above the other the sizes of the pockets being such that each pocket subtends the same vertical angle at the eye of the customer asthe other pockets above and below it.
In testimony whereof, I affix my signature inthe presence of two witnesses this 31st day of October, 1916.
WILLIAM G. SI-IERER.
Witnesses:
LAUREL M. DOREMUS, MINNIE M. LINDENAU.
Copies of this patent may be obtained for five cents each, by addressing the Commissioner of Patents,
Washington, D. G.
US12925016A 1916-11-03 1916-11-03 Display-counter. Expired - Lifetime US1271783A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US12925016A US1271783A (en) 1916-11-03 1916-11-03 Display-counter.

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US12925016A US1271783A (en) 1916-11-03 1916-11-03 Display-counter.

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1271783A true US1271783A (en) 1918-07-09

Family

ID=3339409

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12925016A Expired - Lifetime US1271783A (en) 1916-11-03 1916-11-03 Display-counter.

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1271783A (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2765206A (en) * 1952-06-05 1956-10-02 Modern Metal Products Company Canned oil display and can draining cabinet
USD1014155S1 (en) * 2021-04-21 2024-02-13 Humberto Carbajal, Jr. Display shelf

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2765206A (en) * 1952-06-05 1956-10-02 Modern Metal Products Company Canned oil display and can draining cabinet
USD1014155S1 (en) * 2021-04-21 2024-02-13 Humberto Carbajal, Jr. Display shelf

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US1902566A (en) Display rack
US1739730A (en) Display cabinet
US348164A (en) Frederick henry judson
US1271783A (en) Display-counter.
US1238275A (en) Display-stand.
US570972A (en) Bottle-display case
US1817062A (en) News stand structure
US2211113A (en) Display counter
US985924A (en) Store-fixture.
US1913231A (en) Display cabinet
US1694520A (en) Shelving
US2192243A (en) Magazine stand
US1222687A (en) Display-counter.
US1261455A (en) Display-cabinet.
US1955370A (en) Store fixture
US362207A (en) Heinrioh dechent
US112272A (en) norris
US1958520A (en) Display equipment
US298183A (en) Terence f
US1045317A (en) Filing-cabinet.
US1024323A (en) Counter display and storage case.
US960342A (en) Hat display and stock cabinet.
US1689134A (en) Display case
US1380161A (en) Display-counter
US2115538A (en) Counter display change tray