US1705289A - Container - Google Patents

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US1705289A
US1705289A US139965A US13996526A US1705289A US 1705289 A US1705289 A US 1705289A US 139965 A US139965 A US 139965A US 13996526 A US13996526 A US 13996526A US 1705289 A US1705289 A US 1705289A
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Prior art keywords
collar
envelope
collars
container
article
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US139965A
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Joseph B Gregg
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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
    • B65D75/00Packages comprising articles or materials partially or wholly enclosed in strips, sheets, blanks, tubes, or webs of flexible sheet material, e.g. in folded wrappers
    • B65D75/52Details

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  • My invention relates to containers and more particularly to that type of containers and envelopes in which collars, bow-ties and various other articles whch are made up in different sizes are put out by manufacturers and sold to the trade and the public.
  • Collars, and particularly soft and the socalled semi-soft collars are manufactured in great quantities and sold to thetrade and at retail in individual containers or envelopes.
  • These envelopes are in general long and narrow and are made of suitable cheap flexible materials, usually of paper where opaque envelopes are desired, and of the material known as glassine where t 'ansparent envelopcs are desired.
  • WVindow envelopes that is, envelopes whch are formed mostly of opaque materal, but which are provided with transparent portion or windows,-1n1ght also be employed for this purpose.
  • the envelopes are open at one end only where each is usually provided with a loose flap, and the collars after being folded lengthwise upon themselves with the inner surfaces of the folded portions thereof opposed, are inserted into their individual envelopes through the 'said open ends.
  • Theioperation of placing the collars in the envelopes in a factory is performed by employees who do nothing else.
  • the collars are provided with their size numbers or 4 ne'ckbands thereof, while the envelopes or containers for the collars bear no designations whatever of the collar sizes. It is the custom at collar factories in placing the collars in their envelopes to handle only collars of one size during a certain period of time, then to change to collars of ano'ther size, and soon, The collars with the envelopes nto which they have'been placed during such a period designations only on the inner surfaces of the,
  • the principal object of myinvention is to provide an improved container or envelope of the character described which enables the size of any sized collar or otherlike article when disposed therein, to be quickly and readily.
  • My invention as applied toenvelopes or containers for soft and semi-soft collars is based in part onth'e facts that such-envelopes being very quickly and accurately performed the drawing accompanying and forming a by automatic machinery.
  • described my invention as designed for use with collars resides in providing such an envelope with a suitable scale visible from without, the calibrations or graduations of the scale corresponding to the various sizes in which collars are made and the scalebeing so arranged and calibrated with respect to the closed end of the envelope, that when the folded collar occupies a position within the envelope in which the transverse fold midway between the ends of the body portion thereof engages said closed end, a certain well-defined point of the collar remote from said transverse fold, and preferably either endof the longitudinal fold.
  • the envelope will register with that calibration or graduation of the scale corresponding to the size of the collar. If the envelope is transparent or that portion thereof bearing the scale is transparent, the size of the said collar can then be observed directly, and if the envelope is opaque the size can be determined merely by bending the mate rial of the envelope about one end of the longitudinal. fold or top edge of the body portion of the collar, and the bend thus formed will occur at or coincide with that graduaton of the scale corresponding to the size of the collar. r
  • FIG. 1 is a plan view partly broken away, of a transparent collar envelope orcontainer in accordance with my invention, with folded collar disposed therein;
  • V Fig. 2 is a view in side elevation of an en velope similar to that shown in Fig. 1. except that it is opaque, looking toward the side edge corresponding to the edge l of the can velope of Fig. 1, a folded collar being positioned in the envelope in engagement wit-lithe closed end of the latter and the envelope bein shown as bent about an end of the longitudinal fold or top edge of the maiirbody portion.
  • the envelope 1 is V rectangular in shape, long and narrow, and
  • the envelope is also closed at its opposite side edges 4 and 5.
  • the envelope shown in More specifically 1 is formed of suitable and preferably flexible transparentmaterial, such as glassinc and has therein a softor semi-soft collar collar 6 at the fold 7 thereof, and the collar which is disposed loosely in the envelope, may readily be positioned with the said fold so the abutment as by shaking the envelope or bytapping the closed end thereof when held in a more or less upright position, against the palm of the hand, or other surface.
  • the envelope is provided adjacent the open end thereof with a scale l0 visible from the outside, this scale being graduated in the length sizes in which collars, or in the.
  • the scale 10 is so positioned and calibrated with respect to the closed end 2 that when.
  • the collar or other article occupies aposit-ion in engagement with the abutment ror closed end 2, a certain edge or well defined point of the article remote from said closed end, in the case of the collar 6 shown each end of the longitudinal fold ll in the main body portion thereof, will exactly register with that graduation of scale 10 corresponding with the size of said article.
  • the envelope 1 of transparent material as in Fig. l. the size of the article may then be immediately ascertained. merely by observing the point of graduation of the scale when this registration occurs.
  • the size of the article is then ascertained by merely folding the material of the envelope about a definite point or edge of the article remote, from the closed end 2, in the case-of the collar 6 about one end of the longitudinal fold ll formed in the main body portion thereof, as shown in Fig. 2; and the line of the resulting bend, indicated at 12 in Figsl and 2 will coincide with that graduation of scale 10 corresponding with the size'of the article.
  • the size of the collar or other article disposed therein may, of course, also be ascertained in'the same manneras that just described in connection with the envelope formed of opaque material.
  • a container for an article made in different sizes said container having a closed end and a scale so applied thereto as to be adapted when any such article occupies a position in the container in which it engages said end, to cooperate with the article to indicate from without the container the size of within the container in which it engages said,
  • the container is then bent about a certain edge of the article remote from the abutment, the bend so formed occurs at that calibration of saidscale corresponding to the size of said article.
  • a container for an article made in different sizes said container having an abutment and a transparent portion provided with a scale, the scale being so calibrated and the transparent portion and scale being so positioned relative to said abut-ment that when any such article occupies a position within the container in which it engages said abutment, a definite point in the article remote from the abutment will be visible through the said transparent portion and will register with that calibration of the scale corresponding to the size of said article.
  • a flexible container for an article made in different sizes said container having an open end through which such an article is adapted to be inserted into the containerand having its opposite end closed, the container also having a scale visible from without the container, the graduations of such scale being calibrated wlth respect to such closed end in' the sizes in which said article is made.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Details Of Rigid Or Semi-Rigid Containers (AREA)

Description

AgMarch 12, 1929. REG 1,705,289
CONTAINER Filed Oct. 7, 19
. I a {I /4 (f INVE TO J34 ATTORNEY Patented Mar. 12, 1929.
.rosnrn B. GREGG, on NEW YORK, N. Y."
CONTAINER.
Application filed October 7, 1926. Serial No. 139,965.
My invention relates to containers and more particularly to that type of containers and envelopes in which collars, bow-ties and various other articles whch are made up in different sizes are put out by manufacturers and sold to the trade and the public.
To illustrate my invention I shall specifically describe the same in its application to the collar industry, although it is to be distinctly understoodthat it is capable of being used in connection with many articles, in addition to collars, which are made up in different sizes, especially those made up in different length sizes, such as dress and bowties, belts, etc. I
Collars, and particularly soft and the socalled semi-soft collars are manufactured in great quantities and sold to thetrade and at retail in individual containers or envelopes. These envelopes are in general long and narrow and are made of suitable cheap flexible materials, usually of paper where opaque envelopes are desired, and of the material known as glassine where t 'ansparent envelopcs are desired. WVindow envelopes, that is, envelopes whch are formed mostly of opaque materal, but which are provided with transparent portion or windows,-1n1ght also be employed for this purpose. The envelopes are open at one end only where each is usually provided with a loose flap, and the collars after being folded lengthwise upon themselves with the inner surfaces of the folded portions thereof opposed, are inserted into their individual envelopes through the 'said open ends. Theioperation of placing the collars in the envelopes in a factory is performed by employees who do nothing else. The collars are provided with their size numbers or 4 ne'ckbands thereof, while the envelopes or containers for the collars bear no designations whatever of the collar sizes. It is the custom at collar factories in placing the collars in their envelopes to handle only collars of one size during a certain period of time, then to change to collars of ano'ther size, and soon, The collars with the envelopes nto which they have'been placed during such a period designations only on the inner surfaces of the,
viously essential that the various boxes for the collars which make up the retailers stock I shall at all times contain only collars of the sizes corresponding to the respective size numbers appearing on the boxes. Much time is wasted by retailers, especiallythose doing a large business,in securing this result, for in the course of serving his customers, collars of various sizes become scattered over a busy retailers counters, and because of the fact that the collar envelopes orcontainers bear no designation of the collar sizes, itis necessary v before each such collar can be replaced inits proper box to remove the collar from its en velope, to then unfold the collar to ascertain -its size and to then refold the same and return it to its envelope. Collar manufacturers appreciate this t-rouble and annoyance which retailers experience and recognize the fact that it would be highly desirable for the purpose of avoiding the same to have the individual collar envelopes or containers referred to, respectively bear designations of the sizes of the collars contained or placed therein. However, such manufacturers have found it to be impracticable in putting up their collars for shipment, to place the same in en velopes or containers marked with or hearing the respective size numbers or designations of the collars, because of the confusion which would result inthe method by which this op- V eration is necessarily performed and the additional expense which would be incurred due to the need of additionalemployees. Such method necessitates the use of envelopes which are uniform for all sizes of collars, and
heretofore, insofar as I am aware, no envelope .of the character described, has been designed which enables one to expeditiously ascertain the size of'any collar; or like article which may be disposed therein.
The principal object of myinvention is to provide an improved container or envelope of the character described which enables the size of any sized collar or otherlike article when disposed therein, to be quickly and readily.
ascertained without ren'ioving the same from such container or envelope, and which therefore renders it possible to use envelopes which are in every Way dentical for collars or the like of different sizes, and at the same time avoid the abovenoted trouble and annoyance now experienced by retailers of such articles.
My invention as applied toenvelopes or containers for soft and semi-soft collars, is based in part onth'e facts that such-envelopes being very quickly and accurately performed the drawing accompanying and forming a by automatic machinery. described my invention as designed for use with collars, resides in providing such an envelope with a suitable scale visible from without, the calibrations or graduations of the scale corresponding to the various sizes in which collars are made and the scalebeing so arranged and calibrated with respect to the closed end of the envelope, that when the folded collar occupies a position within the envelope in which the transverse fold midway between the ends of the body portion thereof engages said closed end, a certain well-defined point of the collar remote from said transverse fold, and preferably either endof the longitudinal fold. or top edge of the body portion thereof, will register with that calibration or graduation of the scale corresponding to the size of the collar. If the envelope is transparent or that portion thereof bearing the scale is transparent, the size of the said collar can then be observed directly, and if the envelope is opaque the size can be determined merely by bending the mate rial of the envelope about one end of the longitudinal. fold or top edge of the body portion of the collar, and the bend thus formed will occur at or coincide with that graduaton of the scale corresponding to the size of the collar. r
Further objects and features of my invention will be hereinafter more fully described and claimed.
In order that my invention may be more clearly understood, attention is directed to part of this specification, and in which Figure 1 is a plan view partly broken away, of a transparent collar envelope orcontainer in accordance with my invention, with folded collar disposed therein; and V Fig. 2 is a view in side elevation of an en velope similar to that shown in Fig. 1. except that it is opaque, looking toward the side edge corresponding to the edge l of the can velope of Fig. 1, a folded collar being positioned in the envelope in engagement wit-lithe closed end of the latter and the envelope bein shown as bent about an end of the longitudinal fold or top edge of the maiirbody portion.
Referring to the drawing the envelope 1 is V rectangular in shape, long and narrow, and
has the one end 2 closed and the opposite end open and provided with a loose folded fiap ctl.
The envelope is also closed at its opposite side edges 4 and 5. The envelope shown in More specifically 1 is formed of suitable and preferably flexible transparentmaterial, such as glassinc and has therein a softor semi-soft collar collar 6 at the fold 7 thereof, and the collar which is disposed loosely in the envelope, may readily be positioned with the said fold so the abutment as by shaking the envelope or bytapping the closed end thereof when held in a more or less upright position, against the palm of the hand, or other surface. The envelope is provided adjacent the open end thereof with a scale l0 visible from the outside, this scale being graduated in the length sizes in which collars, or in the.
sizes in which any other'articles for which the envelope may be designed, are made.
The scale 10 is so positioned and calibrated with respect to the closed end 2 that when.
the collar or other article occupies aposit-ion in engagement with the abutment ror closed end 2, a certain edge or well defined point of the article remote from said closed end, in the case of the collar 6 shown each end of the longitudinal fold ll in the main body portion thereof, will exactly register with that graduation of scale 10 corresponding with the size of said article. -l-iccordingly when the envelope 1 of transparent material, as in Fig. l. the size of the article may then be immediately ascertained. merely by observing the point of graduation of the scale when this registration occurs. If the envelope is of opaque material, however, the size of the article is then ascertained by merely folding the material of the envelope about a definite point or edge of the article remote, from the closed end 2, in the case-of the collar 6 about one end of the longitudinal fold ll formed in the main body portion thereof, as shown in Fig. 2; and the line of the resulting bend, indicated at 12 in Figsl and 2 will coincide with that graduation of scale 10 corresponding with the size'of the article. When the envelope is of transparent material or that portion thereofbearing the scale is transparent, the size of the collar or other article disposed therein may, of course, also be ascertained in'the same manneras that just described in connection with the envelope formed of opaque material. It is to be noted that while collars are made in inch sizes, the spacebetween the graduations of the scale 10 on anenvelope embodying nay-invention and designed for collaiv should be of an inch, this because of thefact that each collar is folded on itself before being placed in its envelope.
From the foregoing it will be apparent that my invention enables manufacturers of collars or like articles to use envelopes or con tainers for such articles which are in every way identical and uniform for all sizes of these articles, without the disadvantages above set forth, which result from the use of envelopes of this type heretofore e1nployed.
It is to be understood that the specific forms of my improved envelope or container shown and described herein, aresubject to various changes and modifications without departing from thespirit of the invention and the scope of the appended claims.
Having now described my invention, what,
I claim as new and desire to protect by Letters Patent is as follows:
1. 'A container for an article made in different sizes, said container having applied thereto a scale adapted when any such article occupies a certain position within the container to cooperate with the article to inclicate from without the container the size of" such article.
2. A container for an article made in different sizes, said container having a closed end and a scale so applied thereto as to be adapted when any such article occupies a position in the container in which it engages said end, to cooperate with the article to indicate from without the container the size of within the container in which it engages said,
abutment and the container is then bent about a certain edge of the article remote from the abutment, the bend so formed occurs at that calibration of saidscale corresponding to the size of said article.
4. A container for an article made in different sizes, said container having an abutment and a transparent portion provided with a scale, the scale being so calibrated and the transparent portion and scale being so positioned relative to said abut-ment that when any such article occupies a position within the container in which it engages said abutment, a definite point in the article remote from the abutment will be visible through the said transparent portion and will register with that calibration of the scale corresponding to the size of said article.
5. A flexible container for an article made in different sizes, said container having an open end through which such an article is adapted to be inserted into the containerand having its opposite end closed, the container also having a scale visible from without the container, the graduations of such scale being calibrated wlth respect to such closed end in' the sizes in which said article is made.
6. Aioontainer for an article made in different sizes, said container having an open"
US139965A 1926-10-07 1926-10-07 Container Expired - Lifetime US1705289A (en)

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Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2537417A (en) * 1949-04-08 1951-01-09 Lawrence J Merske Hose size indicator wrapper
US2750033A (en) * 1952-10-07 1956-06-12 Joseph B Pickens Napkin packaging
US3286831A (en) * 1964-12-08 1966-11-22 Begy Soc Europ De Bas Sans Cou Packings for stockings and like articles
US3310166A (en) * 1965-09-23 1967-03-21 Bestt Rollr Inc Prefab flexible bag for articles of varying lengths

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2537417A (en) * 1949-04-08 1951-01-09 Lawrence J Merske Hose size indicator wrapper
US2750033A (en) * 1952-10-07 1956-06-12 Joseph B Pickens Napkin packaging
US3286831A (en) * 1964-12-08 1966-11-22 Begy Soc Europ De Bas Sans Cou Packings for stockings and like articles
US3310166A (en) * 1965-09-23 1967-03-21 Bestt Rollr Inc Prefab flexible bag for articles of varying lengths

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